Jerusalem – Israel Continues To Search For Nashat Milhem, 31, Identified As Suspected Gunman In Tel Aviv Attack

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    Tel Aviv – Israeli police continued their manhunt Saturday for a gunman who killed two people and wounded several others when he opened fire at a bar in Tel Aviv the day before.

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    Police say they are investigating possible motives for the shooting, which came amid more than three months of near-daily Palestinian attacks against Israeli civilians and soldiers. On Saturday they allowed his identity to be published.

    Relatives of the suspected shooter, Nashat Milhem from the Arab village of Arara in northern Israel, told media they recognized the man from CCTV footage aired on news reports. Family members said he was a troubled man who was “traumatized” after a cousin was killed by police in 2006, and who had served time in an Israeli prison after allegedly grabbing an officer’s gun. They said he acted on his own and called on the man to turn himself in. Milhem’s father, Mohammed, said he was deeply sorry for what happened and wished the victims a speedy recovery. “I did not educate him this way,” he said.

    More than 24 hours after the attack, the shooter was still at large.

    Police spokeswoman Luba Samri said police remained on “heightened alert” Saturday and a large-scale manhunt is underway.

    Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu visited the scene of the attack Saturday evening. “The brutality was incomprehensible,” Netanyahu said. He said that while many Muslims in Israel speak out against violence and aspire to uphold law and order in their communities there is “wild incitement by Islamic extremists against Israel in the Arab sector, incitement in mosques, and incitement in the education system and incitement on social media. We are acting aggressively against that incitement.”

    He said there are “lawless enclaves” with “Islamist incitement” and weapons. Police forces will be beefed up in Arab areas, he said.

    “I am not willing to accept two states within Israel, a state of law for most of its citizens and a state within a state for some of its citizens. That era is over,” he said.

    “Whoever wants to be Israeli must be Israeli all the way,” Netanyahu said.
     A bullet hole in a bus stops advertising panel in front of the cafe in central Tel Aviv, Israel, 02 January 2016, where an Israeli-Arab man opened fire with an automatic weapon killing two people on 01 January 2016. EPA
    Israel’s Arabs, who make up a fifth of the country’s 8.4 million people, enjoy full rights but have long complained of unfair treatment in areas such as housing and employment opportunities. Many identify more with their Palestinian brethren in the West Bank and Gaza and with Palestinian nationalism rather than with Israel.

    Throughout the day, well-wishers lit candles in commemoration for the victims outside the bar.

    The attack comes amid months of Palestinian attacks that have killed 21 Israelis, mostly in stabbings, shootings and car-ramming attacks. That figure does not include the victims in Friday’s attack as the motive for that attack hasn’t officially been determined yet.

    During that time, at least 131 Palestinians have been killed by Israeli fire, 90 of them identified by Israel as assailants. The rest died in clashes with security forces.

    Israel says the violence is being fanned by a Palestinian campaign of incitement. The Palestinians say it is rooted in frustrations stemming from nearly five decades of Israeli occupation.
    Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu (C) arrives at the scene of a shooting attack at the entrance of the cafe in Tel Aviv, Israel, 02 January 2016.
    The father of the Israeli Arab suspected of carrying out the attack was questioned by authorities on Friday and Saturday. 

    “I am a law-abiding Israeli citizen. I heard that my son did what he did, but that is not how I raised him, I am sorry,” said the suspect’s father. “I went to the police and assisted security services. I join in the sorry of the families and wish a speedy recovery to the wounded.”

    The father of the suspect reportedly contacted police after recognizing his son in security footage broadcast on television following the attack.

    The father told police that he received an anonymous phone call from someone who told him to check if his licensed firearm, which he uses as a guard in a security firm, was in possession at his home. He checked and found his firearm but then realized that it may have been his son, the suspected shooter, who made the anonymous call.

    Following a security assessment Saturday morning, police and Shin Bet (Israel Security Agency) officials enhanced deployment and continued searches for the gunman who fled from the scene of the shooting, which left two killed and eight others wounded on Dizengoff street in central Tel Aviv.

    The possibility remained that the attacker, who was still at large, was assisted in fleeing Tel Aviv. However, police had not discounted the possibility that the attacker was still in the city. Security forces were searching abandoned warehouses and construction sites.

    An Israeli looks at a bullet hole in a bus stops advertising panel in front of the cafe in central Tel Aviv, Israel, 02 January 2016, where an Israeli-Arab man opened fire with an automatic weapon killing two people on 01 January 2016. EPA


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    2 Comments
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    Boochie
    Boochie
    8 years ago

    You see what his family is saying……Israeli tactics are working ….they need to step it up

    8 years ago

    Baloney. The father is just afraid Israel might raze his house!