Tel Aviv, Israel – Unusual Shooting Attack Sets Off Panic In Israeli Heartland

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    An Israeli man cleans outside a pub on Dizengoff Street  in central Tel Aviv, on January 04, 2016, a few days after two people were killed in a shooting at the bar and several injured. Israeli security forces are still searching forthe shooter who disappeared in the Tel Aviv area. Photo by Ben Kelmer/Flash90 Tel Aviv, Israel – For all its years of strife, Israel has rarely seen anything quite like this: an armed, wanted Arab killer on the loose, spreading fear across the land.

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    Even the most stoic are keeping their children home from school following the deadly daytime shooting at a popular bar on a busy Tel Aviv street that has become among the most unsettling attacks in a three-month wave of violence.

    Israelis are used to quickly resuming their daily routines following attacks because assailants are typically captured or killed. But the frantic search for this gunman, whose attack on Friday afternoon was caught on security cameras, has sent jitters across this seaside city.

    The unusual escape of the accused gunman, Nashat Milhem, an Arab from northern Israel who is considered to be armed and dangerous, is one of many elements of a case that has left Israelis on edge.

    “Everything about this is characterized by uncertainty,” said Yossi Melman, a prominent security analyst, adding that the level of planning and sophistication were closer in style to those of Islamic State attackers in Brussels, Paris and California.

    “I’m not familiar with an event like this, with an unclear nature that has lasted this long,” he said.

    The shooting on Tel Aviv’s busy Dizengoff Street, which killed two Israeli men and wounded six other people, was recorded on security cameras at a health food store next door.

    In the footage, a man with short dark hair, glasses and a black bag over his shoulder is seen scooping up nuts from the shop’s bulk food section, putting them in a plastic bag, then emptying them back. He then walks to the store entrance, places his backpack on a shopping cart and takes a gun out of it before stepping outside and opening fire into the bar. He then runs away.

    Police say that after tossing his cellphone, Milhem hailed a cab that took him to northern Tel Aviv, where he killed the driver and escaped in the taxi before abandoning it and going off the grid.

    Authorities got their first lead when Milhem’s father, Mohammed, recognized his son from the closed circuit footage aired on TV. Milhem apparently obtained the licensed semi-automatic weapon he used by stealing it from his father, a security guard. The father condemned the killing and called on his son to turn himself in. Residents of their Arab town, Arara, also quickly denounced the attack.

    The brazen shooting comes amid more than three months of almost daily Palestinian attacks against Israeli civilians and soldiers. On the Israeli side, 21 people have died, mostly in stabbings and car-ramming attacks. At least 130 Palestinians have been killed by Israeli fire, 90 of them identified by Israel as assailants.

    Israel has accused Palestinian leaders and social media sites of inciting the violence. Palestinians say the attacks are the result of frustration over five decades of Israeli military occupation.

    Whereas most attackers have been Palestinians from the West Bank or east Jerusalem, Milhem is one of just a handful of Arab citizens of Israel accused of such violence. And, he comes from a family that was well integrated into Israeli society.
    FILE - In this Saturday, Jan. 2, 2016, file photo, an Israeli woman holds her dog next to a bus station shattered by bullets at the scene of a deadly shooting attack, in Tel Aviv, Israel. For all its years of strife, Israel has rarely seen anything quite like this: an armed, wanted Arab killer on the loose who is spreading fear across the land. Even the proudly stoic are keeping children home from school as they brace for another potential attack after the weekend's deadly daytime shooting at a Tel Aviv bar in what has become the most baffling event in a three-month wave of violence. (AP Photo/Oded Balilty, File)
    Police say they found a Quran in his bag, hinting at Islamic inspiration, though family members say he was emotionally unstable and traumatized after a cousin was shot dead in a 2006 police arrest raid that reportedly was carried out because the cousin was storing weapons in his home.

    Milhem served time in an Israeli prison for allegedly attacking a soldier and trying to steal his weapon to avenge his cousin’s death. But he was also described by residents of the upscale Tel Aviv neighborhood where he worked as a grocery store delivery man as being so trusted that customers gave him their house keys to make deliveries when they were out.

    “I knew him like the back of my hand. He ate and drank and worked with us,” a local Israeli vegetable salesman who was not identified told Channel 10 TV. “He was a normal guy. … People really liked him. And I liked him too.”

    The suspect’s picture is plastered across newspapers and television screens, and police say they are on “heightened alert,” with stepped-up security in Tel Aviv, as they conduct their investigation.

    With the search stretching into its fourth day, Tel Aviv Mayor Ron Huldai implored residents to return to their routines. But the city remained subdued Monday, and attendance at many schools was sparse.

    Oren Helman, a resident of Tel Aviv’s upscale Ramat Aviv neighborhood, where the search has focused, said he sent his two young daughters to school, but there were few other parents dropping children off. The few who came to school were not allowed to play outside in the playground.

    “The parents who send their kids to school are worried. Those who don’t are scared,” he said.

    Helman said the heightened security in the neighborhood helped put him at ease, and he didn’t want to cave in to violence or cause panic with his children. But he said there were heated discussions among parents on social media over whether their children were safe. Repeated rumors that the gunman has been seen also added to the unease, he said.

    Assaf Zamir, a deputy mayor of Tel Aviv, said some neighborhoods reported only 50 percent school attendance but he expected the numbers to rise.

    “From our experience as days go by, the numbers will fill up and everyone will come back to school,” he said. “We have always bounced back.”


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    5 Comments
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    8 years ago

    Remember what Rabbi Meir Kahane said about Arabs not belonging in Israel before he was murdered by an Arab Muslim Islamic terrorist?

    8 years ago

    This article focuses on one psycho Israeli-Arab; however, the article does not mention that every year in EY, there are 150-200 murders among Israeli Jews. There have been cases of shopkeepers being held up and killed by Israeli Jews. There was an American-Israeli retiree in Jerusalem, who was stabbed to death by some Israelis, for cigarettes. Not too long ago, the Israeli police engaged in a gun battle in the streets, with members of Israeli organized crime. There are thus heinous crimes which occur in Israel, which rarely get mentioned in the media. I think that media is focusing too much time on this one psycho Arab, who will eventually be caught, dead or alive.

    8 years ago

    To #4 - It is absolutely correct; there are between 150-200 homicides per year in EY. Many of them are perpetrated by Israeli Jews. You can check those statistics with the Israeli police, which maintains crime statistics. Those heinous crimes are committed by Israeli Jews of all classes, and all socio-economic backgrounds. You may not want to believe it, but facts are facts. As Sgt. Joe Friday used to state “Just give me the facts”.