Service :
13 March 2017 - 21:23
News ID: 428124
A
Witnesses:
Rasa - Israeli police shot and killed a 25-year-old Palestinian near the Lion’s Gate entrance to occupied East Jerusalem's Old City on Monday after allegedly stabbing two Israeli police officers, who were lightly and moderately injured.
Israel Palestine

RNA - The slain man was identified as Ibrahim Mahmoud Matar, a resident of the Eastern Jerusalem neighborhood Jabal al-Mukabbir, located South of the Old City, Ma'an reported.  

 

The shooting happened  as worshipers were headed to the Al-Aqsa Mosque for prayers inside the Old City.

 

Witnesses told Ma'an they saw a dispute inside an Israeli police post located near Lion’s Gate between an Israeli policeman and a Palestinian "who was carrying a stick.”

 

Israeli police then forced the young man outside of the enclosure and “executed” him at point blank range with four bullets, leading to his immediate death, witnesses said.

 

Referring to the dispute that lead up to the shooting, eyewitnesses told Ma’an that Israeli police were “controlling the situation” and could have easily detained Matar without using lethal force.

 

However, a statement released by Israeli police alleged that Matar entered the police post with a knife and stabbed two Israeli police officers before a third police officer shot and killed him immediately.

 

Following the killing, Israeli forces were heavily deployed in and around Lion’s Gate and prevented many Palestinians from reaching Al-Aqsa Mosque to pray, with witnesses saying the lockdown lasted from 4:30 until 6 a.m.

 

Later on Monday, Israeli forces raided Matar’s home in Jabal al-Mukabbir and detained his brother, parents, and his uncle, according to locals and Israeli police.

 

Israeli police detain Ibrahim Mahmoud Matar's brother after the shooting.

 

The incident came as Palestinians in the occupied West Bank and besieged Gaza Strip were placed under temporary blockade for the duration of the Jewish holiday, with the Israeli army imposing a closure on all travel, with the exception of "humanitarian and special cases".in and out of the occupied territory from between midnight on Friday and until midnight on March 13 between Monday night and Tuesday morning.

 

Israel often implements massive closures on the Palestinian territory during Jewish holidays. Last year during Purim, Israel shut down all checkpoints between the occupied West Bank and Israel and occupied Jerusalem, and all checkpoint crossings with the Gaza Strip.

 

Palestinians were also restricted access to the Al-Aqsa Mosque compound, the third holiest site in Islam, in East Jerusalem with all Palestinian men younger than 50 denied entry to the site.

 

Restrictions at the mosque compound during a succession of Jewish holidays in September 2015 played a major role in triggering a wave of unrest that has since left some 250 Palestinians and 35 Israelis killed.

 

Amid the unrest, rights groups have disputed Israel's version of events in a number of cases, denouncing what they have termed as a "shoot-to-kill" policy against Palestinians who did not constitute a threat at the time of their death, or who could have been subdued in a non-lethal manner, amid a backdrop of impunity for Israeli forces who have committed the killings.

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