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6 killed by Palestinian gunmen in Jerusalem bus stop

 SIX people have been killed and eight others wounded by Palestin­ian gunmen in one of the deadliest shooting attacks in Jerusalem in the past few years.

Israeli police said “two terrorists arrived in a vehicle” and opened fire towards a bus stop at Ramot Junction, on the city’s northern outskirts. An off-duty soldier and a civilian returned fire, “neutralising” the attackers, it added.

Israeli media identified the dead as five men, aged between 25 and 79, and a 60-year-old woman. Local hospitals said two of the wounded were in a serious condition.

There was no immediate claim from any armed groups, although Hamas praised the attack.

During a visit to the scene, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu told reporters that Israel was in “an intense war against terrorism on several fronts”.

Israeli security forces had thwarted hundreds of attacks in the occupied West Bank this year, “but, unfortunately, not this morning”, he said.

“We are now engaged in pursuit and are cordoning off the villages from which the murderers came. We will apprehend whoever aided and dispatched them, and we will take even stronger steps,” he added.

The Israeli military said soldiers were encircling Palestinian villages on the outskirts of the West Bank city of Ramallah to “thwart ter­rorism and strengthen the defence effort”.

Monday’s attack took place at the end of the morning rush hour at the Ramot Junction.

Israeli police spokesman Lt Dean Elsdunne said: “The terrorists arrived by vehicle… and deliber­ately opened fire on a number of civilians who were waiting at that busy bus stop to start their day.

“A number of armed civilians who were at the scene acted imme­diately. They engaged by returning fire and they killed those two terror­ists on the spot.”

He added that officers had recov­ered “several weapons, ammunition and a knife” used by the attackers, who Israeli media said were be­lieved to have set out from the West Bank villages of al-Qubeiba and Qatanna, about 10km (6 miles) west of Ramot Junction.

Dashcam video shared by the Israeli foreign ministry showed doz­ens of men, women and children running from a bus shelter and a stationary bus as the sound of gunfire rang out.

The windscreen of a second bus behind shatters as the gunfire continues, before what appear to be armed civilians approach the scene.

“Suddenly I hear the shots start­ing… I felt like I was running for an eternity,” Ester Lugasi, one of the injured, told Israeli TV from hospi­tal. “I thought I was going to die.”

Daniel Katzenstein, a first re­sponder with the United Hatzalah emergency medical service, arrived shortly after the attack and treated one of the bus drivers at the scene.

“His name was Mohammed,” Mr Katzenstein told the BBC. “He also ran to help. This is not a battle of Islam versus Judaism, this is a battle between the people who wish to do harm, and the people who want to live life.”

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