Tuesday, May 21, 2024 | Last Update : 07:47 PM IST

  Top Israel rabbi: Knife wielders should be killed

Top Israel rabbi: Knife wielders should be killed

AFP
Published : Mar 14, 2016, 4:13 am IST
Updated : Mar 14, 2016, 4:13 am IST

An Israeli chief rabbi said that knife-wielding attackers should be killed, after a call by the head of the armed forces to not use excessive firepower in combating a wave of Palestinian violence.

An Israeli chief rabbi said that knife-wielding attackers should be killed, after a call by the head of the armed forces to not use excessive firepower in combating a wave of Palestinian violence.

“If a terrorist comes at someone with a knife, it is a (religious) duty to kill him — he who comes to kill you, kill him first,” Chief Sephardi Rabbi Yitzhak Yosef said on Saturday.

“Don’t get all afraid of the courts, or if some chief of staff says something else,” Yosef said in a televised weekly sermon. This was an apparent reference to Lt. Gen. Gadi Eisenkot, who angered some right-wing politicians in remarks he made last month that were interpreted as advocating a more lax approach to assailants.

“When there’s a 13-year-old girl holding scissors or a knife and there is some distance between her and the soldiers, I don’t want to see a soldier open fire and empty his magazine at a girl like that,” the general had said.

Yosef, however, stressed too that assailants who were disarmed and posed no threat were no longer under the “comes to kill you” category and should be jailed rather than killed.

Since October 1, a wave of violence has killed 188 Palestinians, 28 Israelis, two Americans, an Eritrean and a Sudanese.

Most of the Palestinians were killed while carrying out knife, gun or car-ramming attacks.

The United Nations and human rights groups have voiced concern that Israeli security forces are responding to attacks with excessive force, but Israel denies the charges.

Meanwhile, a second Gazan was found dead Sunday after the collapse of a tunnel on the Egypt border, the interior ministry in the Islamist Hamas-run enclave said.

On Thursday, rescue services said seven men had been trapped in the collapse. Five were rescued, but on Sunday the ministry said they had retrieved the body of Mohammed Abbas of Rafah, after announcing the death of a man named as Fadi Abu Dan.

Location: Israel, Jerusalem