Israeli driver killed after suspected stone throwing

Binyamin Netanyahu calls emergency meeting on penalties for stone throwing

A stone held by a Palestinian protester: Israeli prime minister Binyamin Netanyahu has called an emergency ministerial meeting to consider tougher penalties for stone throwing. Photograph: Alaa Badarneh/EPA
A stone held by a Palestinian protester: Israeli prime minister Binyamin Netanyahu has called an emergency ministerial meeting to consider tougher penalties for stone throwing. Photograph: Alaa Badarneh/EPA

An Israeli motorist was killed in a crash near Jerusalem on Sunday, apparently after someone threw a stone at his vehicle, police said. The death comes as Israeli-Palestinian tensions mount in the city over the Jewish New Year.

Hours later, Israeli prime minister Binyamin Netanyahu called an emergency ministerial meeting to consider tougher penalties for stone throwing, a tactic seen as a symbol of Palestinian resistance to Israeli occupation.

The driver lost control of his car on Sunday night and died of his injuries early on Monday, police said.

Police also arrested several Palestinians who they said had thrown rocks and iron bars at officers near Jerusalem’s al-Aqsa mosque, part of a compound revered by Muslims as the Noble Sanctuary and by Jews as the Temple Mount.

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Police had raided the site’s main plaza a day earlier, using tear gas and throwing stun grenades at Palestinian youths, in what they said was a bid to head off Palestinian attempts to disrupt visits by Jews and tourists for the Rosh Hashana holiday.

Mr Netanyahu said he would meet with senior ministers on Tuesday to try to find a way to eliminate stone throwing and fire bomb attacks in Jerusalem, according to an official in his office.

The prime minister, the official said, “plans to fight the phenomenon by all means, including making punishments more severe and enforcement.”

Israel last month said it would also allow harsher interrogations of suspected Jewish militants, following a deadly West Bank arson attack blamed on ultra-nationalists.

Israeli-Palestinian peace talks have been frozen since 2014. While violence in the West Bank and East Jerusalem has not approached the levels of past Palestinian uprisings, there has been a surge of Palestinian stone-throwing. – (Reuters)