Israeli father of 7 murdered by terrorists
An Israeli man was murdered in a terrorist drive-by shooting today.
Palestinian terrorists opened fire on a car near the West Bank settlement of Shavei Shomron, killing Meir Hai, a 45-year-old teacher. Shavei Shomrom in is northern Samaria, west of Nablus (the Biblical Shechem).
Hai, a father of seven, suffered gun shot wounds to the head. His car apparently flipped over after he was shot. He was driving a mini-van.
A Palestinian news agency reported that the Imad Mughniyeh Group, affiliated with Fatah’s Al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigade, had claimed responsibility for the attack. Fatah is the political party that runs the Palestinian Authority.
Ha’aretz reports:
Right-wing MK Michael Ben Ari said in response to the attack that “the path of capitulation, the opening of arteries, the [settlement] freeze and the release of [Palestinian] prisoners that [Prime Minister Benjamin] Netanyahu has brought down upon us signals to terrorists that Jewish blood is negligible. The terrorist probably thinks that he will be released in the next exchange.”
Over the last year, the number of attacks in the West Bank has dramatically decreased thanks mainly to efficient Shin Bet security service and Israel Defense Forces operations battling terror infrastructure in the area. However, IDF officials say that terror attempts continue, especially perpetrated by local individuals working alone.
Comments (1) »Thursday, December 24th, 2009 at 12:31 PM | Stand For Israel
Settlement? Shmettlement!: Gilo’s just a part of Jerusalem, where David’s flocks once grazed

New apartments going up in southern Jerusalem's Gilo neighborhood
Stand for Israel was in the Holy Land last week and couldn’t resist snapping a picture of the “very dangerous” building taking place in the southern Jerusalem neighborhood of Gilo, which caused a kerfluffle last month when the U.S. administration and even UN Secretary General Ban Ki-Moon decried the new apartments as expanding “settlements” and therefore imperiling the peace process.
(Is it just us or has the peace process been way beyond “imperilment” for years — pretty much since the Palestinian leadership decided that they’d choose terror campaigns over recognizing Israel’s right to exist as a Jewish state?)
People of good will can disagree about “settlements” — whether they’re “obstacles to peace” or not, but no one in Israel thinks that these apartments are in a settlement. Gilo is a sprawling neighborhood that runs along Jerusalem’s south-western side, between the Malcha area to the west (which has housing, a big, Western-style mall, and a large “technology park” that is home to many high-tech companies), the Arab neighborhood of Beit Safafa to the north, and the now built-up area around Kibbutz Ramat Rachel to the east.
To the south is the Arab town of Beit Jala which, during the intifada, was taken over by Fatah’s Tanzim militia who took over homes in the largely Christian village’s homes in order to turn Gilo’s outer edges into a shooting gallery. In fact, the new apartments aren’t far from Ha’anafa Street, a road whose beautiful views of Beit Jala and the valley it rests in next to Bethlehem turned their residents into sitting ducks. Eventually, the view–and the vulnerability–were obscured by a wall the Israeli government erected to block the shootings. Some 950 apartments had their windows reinforced at government expense (though another 700 unprotected ones were damaged as well).
Barricade to protect against gunfire being erected in Gilo in 2001
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Wednesday, December 2nd, 2009 at 5:05 PM | Stand For Israel
