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March 05, 1993 - Image 32

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1993-03-05

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

Stabbing Spree
Provides Setback

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Jerusalem (JTA) — A bloody
stabbing spree by a Palestin-
ian from the Gaza Strip that
left two Jews dead has once
again brought home to
Israelis the bitter conclusion
that they are limited in what
they can do to combat terror-
ism.
Hours after the attack in a
busy commercial neighbor-
hood of southern Tel Aviv,
Prime Minister Yitzhak
Rabin appeared before a
Knesset committee and
promised to take action. But
Mr. Rabin also conceded
there is little one could do as
long as the present political
stalemate in the ad-
ministered territories con-
tinues.
The Israeli army announc-
ed it was sealing off the Gaza
Strip temporarily, but Mr.
Rabin said a permanent ban
on Palestinian laborers
entering Israel proper would
only fuel more unrest in the
Gaza Strip.
The Arab attacker, iden-
tified as Ziad Salame, 18, of
Gaza, came to Tel Aviv in a
car bringing laborers to the
city. He emerged from the
vehicle brandishing two
knives, then ran down a
street and stabbed nine
pedestrians, two of them
fatally.
Mr. Salame was chased
and beaten up by incensed
witnesses before being taken
into custody by police.
A spokesman for the mili-
tant Islamic Jihad group in
Damascus claimed Mr.
Salame acted as a member of
that organization. But
Israeli police said he ap-
peared to have been acting
on his own, without any po-
litical affiliation.
However, police did say
Mr. Salame was an Islamic
fundamentalist and that his
brother had been imprisoned
for a year on account of
membership in Islamic
Jihad, an illegal terrorist
organization.
Police said Mr. Salame had
no previous police record and
had a valid police permit to
enter Israel proper to seek
work.
Mr. Salame told police that
he had entered Israel proper
from Gaza to seek work and
had decided to "kill Jews"
because he had not been able
to find work despite daily
trips to Tel Aviv.
Police said Mr. Salame
told them under interroga-
tion he had bought a corn-

mando knife in Gaza and
also brought with him a kit-
chen knife from home.
Police said they thought he
might have been inflamed
by sermons he heard in Gaza
mosques at the start of the
monthlong Ramadan holi-
day.
The two killed in Mr.
Salame's attack were
Gregory Abramov, 27, of Tel
Aviv, an unemployed recent
immigrant from the former
Soviet Union, and Natan
Azariya, 28, of Holon, who
was killed outside the barber
shop he owned on Ha'aliyah
Street.
Tel Aviv's Ichilov Hospital
reported that four other vic-
tims of the attack were being
operated on for deep stab
wounds, with one of them in
serious but stable condition.
Three others had been sent
home after treatment for
minor wounds.
In the last two weeks,
Israel has seen a fatal stabb-
ing in a residential neigh-
borhood of eastern

He appeared to
have been acting
on his own.

Jerusalem and rockets laun-
ched by Hezbollah forces in
Lebanon landing in a kib-
butz in northern Israel.
In his address to the
Knesset committee, Mr.
Rabin said the only lesson to
be learned from the new cy-
cle of violence was the need
to intensify the peace efforts,
while continuing to take all
possible measures against
terrorism.
"But in the end, without
coming to a political solu-
tion," Mr. Rabin said, the
reality of mixing Palestin-
ians from the territories
with Jews inside Israel
proper "has within it the
potential that a murderous
madman like this will rise
up.
Mr. Rabin rejected
demands from several
Knesset members to bar all
Palestinians from entering
Israel.
Cutting the Palestinians
for anything longer than a
short period time would only
leave residents without
work and a source of income
he argued. Such a mov
would not solve the securi

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