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Man shot dead after snatching Jerusalem guard's gun

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  • Man shot dead after snatching Jerusalem guard's gun

    Man shot dead after snatching Jerusalem guard's gun
    By Eric Silver in Jerusalem

    The Independent/UK
    Published: 11 August 2007

    An Israeli security guard shot dead a young man in Jerusalem's Old City
    yesterday after he had stolen another guard's gun and wounded him in
    the shoulder. The dead man, aged about 20, carried no identification,
    but is believed to have been a Palestinian.

    The guard chased the thief along Christian Quarter Road, a pilgrims'
    shopping street above the Church of the Holy Sepulchre, and then left
    up a steep, high-walled lane leading to the Greek Orthodox
    Patriarchate. Witnesses said the fugitive was shot dead in an exchange
    of pistol fire.

    Nine Arab and Jewish bystanders were wounded, mostly by ricochets.
    Ambulances evacuated them to Israeli hospitals. Seven were said to be
    in serious condition. The incident occurred just before 11 a.m.. The
    private security men, hired by the Israeli government, were guarding a
    yeshiva seminary.

    Dudi Cohen, the national police commander, said after visiting the
    scene: "This was clearly a nationalistic incident. The terrorist wished
    to carry out an attack, and that's why he snatched one of the guards'
    weapons." Aharon Franco, the Jerusalem police chief, said the guard
    acted properly. Closed-circuit cameras showed him chasing the assailant
    and engaging in a gunfight.

    Police went on high alert as Muslim worshippers began making their way
    to Al Aqsa mosque for Friday prayers, but the Christian Quarter soon
    returned to business as usual as visitors trickled back.

    Armed police cordoned off the area where the dead man's body lay on its
    back, arms akimbo, for about an hour. It was eventually ferried to the
    police morgue by religious Jewish volunteers, who became a familiar
    sight on the scene of suicide bombings during the intifada. The body
    left a silhouette of blood on the paving stones.

    Daoud Khoury, 37, said he saw two men firing at each other outside his
    hardware shop below the patriarchate. "I ran inside and took cover in
    the loft. I've never seen anything like this before in all my life."
    Another witness, Fares Tahar, said: "I saw a woman shot in the leg. She
    was shouting 'Help me!' We took her to the Jaffa Gate and put her in an
    ambulance."

    Elie Kouz, 58, watched the chase from his hand-painted pottery shop on
    Christian Quarter Road. "Two men were firing single shots at each other
    as they ran. I saw an Armenian man I know who was injured. His daughter
    was crying. She had been wounded in the knee."
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