Terrorist in Jerusalem shooting turns himself in to police
Police announce arrest of perpetrator of attack that left 7 hurt, 2 of them seriously, following overnight manhunt; gunman named as East Jerusalem resident Amir Sidawi
Police on Sunday morning announced the arrest of the terrorist who wounded seven people, including two seriously, in a shooting attack outside Jerusalem’s Old City overnight.
Following an hours-long manhunt, police said in a statement that the assailant turned himself in along with the gun apparently used in the shooting. A photo of the weapon released by police showed a pistol on the floor of a car.
According to Hebrew media reports, the gunman is an East Jerusalem resident who took a cab to a police station where he turned himself in. He was identified as Amir Sidawi, 26.
The police statement did not specify where he turned himself in. Security forces had been carrying out searches in the Silwan neighborhood outside the Old City, where the gunman allegedly fled after firing on a bus and cars close to a parking lot near the Western Wall.
Reports said he had no previous security record, but had been jailed for five years for criminal offenses. He was believed to have acted alone in Sunday’s attack.
Public Security Minister Omer Barlev hailed the arrest.
“Israel will pursue those who seek its downfall anywhere and at any time, and will get its hands on them. They won’t have a moment of quiet,” Barlev said.
The Walla news site reported that three of the gunman’s relatives were arrested, including his mother.
Prime Minister Yair Lapid spoke with Barlev and police brass following the arrest, according to his office.
“Let all those who wish us evil know that they will pay a price for any harming of civilians,” he said in a statement earlier Sunday.
“Jerusalem is our capital and a center of tourism for all religions. Police forces and the IDF are working to restore calm and the feeling of security to the city,” the premier added, while wishing a speedy recovery to the wounded.
Those wounded in the attack included a 35-year-old pregnant woman who was shot while sitting in a nearby car, Hebrew media reported. Her abdominal injury was described by doctors as “complex” and her life was said to be in danger. Shaare Zedek hospital said she had undergone an emergency delivery and that the newborn was in serious but stable condition.
Also among the injured were reportedly four members of a Satmar Hasidic family who came from the United States as tourists on Wednesday. The parents, son and daughter were waiting for a taxi at a bus stop when they were shot near King David’s Tomb. The family’s father was said to be in serious condition, sedated and on a respirator, while the mother was in moderate condition.
The perpetrator had reportedly waited for the bus’s arrival and fired the shots while passengers were boarding, then fled on foot to Silwan.
Palestinian terror group Hamas, which rules the Gaza Strip, was quick to praise the attack, branding it “heroic” and saying it was “a natural response to the occupation’s daily crimes against our people, our country and major Muslim and Christian sites.”
The incident happened a week after a three-day intense round of fighting between Israel and Palestinian Islamic Jihad (PIJ), an Iran-backed terror group that is also based in Gaza and is considered more hardline than Hamas. Over 1,000 rockets were fired at Israeli cities, as the Israel Defense Forces conducted airstrikes aimed at PIJ targets in the Strip. Gazan authorities say 49 Palestinians were killed, many of whom Israel says were killed by misfired PIJ rockets that landed inside Gaza.
Since March, 19 people — mostly Israeli civilians inside Israel — have been killed in attacks, mostly by Palestinians. Three Arab Israeli attackers were also killed.
AFP contributed to this report.