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Palestinian Stabs At Least 11 Israelis Aboard Tel Aviv Bus

Israeli police officers secure the scene of a stabbing attack in Tel Aviv, Israel, on Wednesday.
Oded Balilty AP
Israeli police officers secure the scene of a stabbing attack in Tel Aviv, Israel, on Wednesday.

A Palestinian man stabbed at least 11 people on a bus in central Tel Aviv today, wounding three of them seriously, before he was shot in the leg by Israeli police who took him in for questioning.

The Associated Press, citing a hospital spokeswoman, said 11 people had been stabbed. But the Haaretz newspaper, citing the ambulance service, put the number at 12.

Haaretz identified the Palestinian as 23-year-old Hamza Mohammed Hasan Matrouk from the West Bank city of Tuklarem. He had entered Israel illegally. He was taken to hospital for treatment and for, the newspaper reported, further questioning by police and Shin Bet, Israel's internal security service. The newspaper quoted unnamed sources as saying the man did not belong to any Palestinian group.

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But Mickey Rosenfeld, an Israeli police spokesman, described Matrouk as a "terrorist" and the stabbings as a "terrorist attack." The AP quoted police as saying Martouk had confessed, saying the attack was in response to last year's Gaza war and tensions surrounding a sacred site in Jerusalem that the Jews call Temple Mount and the Muslims the Noble Sanctuary.

Haaretz has more: "The attack took place on Bus number 40 on Menachem Begin Road, a major thoroughfare in Tel Aviv, near the Ma'ariv Bridge. Three other people were moderately wounded, and five of the casualties were in light condition, according to Magen David Adom emergency services. A further five were suffering from shock."

News reports say Matrouk boarded the bus at the Old Central Bus Station and began stabbing people, including the driver, after the bus had passed two stops. He mananged to get out and run before being chased down and shot in the leg. He will be taken to court in the city of Ariel.

The AP described the incident as the "latest in a series of 'lone-wolf' Palestinian attacks that have plagued Israel in recent months, killing about a dozen people, including five people killed with guns and meat cleavers in a bloody assault on a Jerusalem synagogue."

Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu blamed Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas for today's attack, saying Abbas "is responsible for ... the incitement."

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Hamas, the Palestinian militant group that controls the Gaza Strip, praised the attack, but did not claim responsibility.

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