Alexander Levlovich (alt.: Levlovitz) was an Israeli who was killed in Jerusalem on 13 September 2015, by Palestinians who hurled rocks at the car he was driving. He died in hospital the following day. Levlovich was the first casualty in the 2015-2016 wave of violence in Israeli-Palestinian conflict. [1] [2] [3] [4] The wave of violence began when Muslim youths gathered at the al-Aqsa Mosque, with the intention of blocking visits by Jews to the Temple Mount on the eve of the Rosh Hashanah holiday. The youths barricaded themselves inside the Mosque, hurling rocks and flares at police as the police used tear gas and threw stun grenades in an attempt to quell the violence. Social media campaigns rapidly spread news of the rioting, which quickly sparked rock-throwing and stabbing attacks in nearby neighborhoods. [5] [6]
Levlovich (64), the manager of a home for disabled persons, was attacked while driving through the Armon Hanatziv neighborhood in Jerusalem on his way home from a family Rosh Hashanah dinner. [7] [4] [8] [9] Stones hitting the car caused him to lose control and hit a utility pole. [9] His two daughters, also in the car, were badly injured. [10] [11]
Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu responded by going to the site of the killing and declaring "war" on rock and petrol bomb throwers; "Here, in the heart of Jerusalem, at a traffic island on a main road, a thug and criminal stands here, on a traffic island, takes a rock and throws again and again at the windshields of cars of Jerusalem residents until he manages to cause death - it did not kill, it murdered." [12] [10]
All 4 perpetrators confessed to having committed this crime. [10] 5 men were convicted of throwing the rocks that killed Levlovich. [13]
Abed Dawiat (Mahmoud Abed Rabbo Doiat), 19 at the time of the crime, was convicted of manslaughter for throwing rocks that resulted in death. [14] [15] [10] It was the longest sentence every given by an Israeli court for a stoning attack. [10] Dawiat claimed that as he threw the rocks that killed Levlovich, he was wearing a Hamas flag given to him at a demonstration in which he participated protesting Israel's banning of the activist group Murabitat from the Temple Mount. The signing of an order declaring the Murabitat illegal by Defense Minister Moshe Yaalon on 8 September 2015 is regarded as sparking the 2015-2016 wave of violence in Israeli-Palestinian conflict. [10]
Co-defendants Muhammad Abu Salah, 19, Fares Mostafa Walid Atrash, 19, and a fourth, whose name was not revealed because he was a minor, plead guilty and were found by the court to have participated in the stoning of Levlovich's car. [10] [15]
Dawiat has also been convicted of throwing firebombs at Israeli police in 2014. [15]
The family home of Abed Dawiat, (17,) who found by the court to have personally thrown the rocks that hit Levlovich's car, was demolished by order of the court. [16] [17]
As of march, 2018, Interior Minister Arye Deri was considering stripping Dawait of his right to reside in Jerusalem under a new law permitting the revocation of residency for individuals involved in terrorist activity. [18]
In the immediate wake of the killing, Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu announced that they would "use all necessary means" to "combat stone-throwers, those who hurl Molotov cocktails, and those who detonate pipe bombs and shoot fireworks with the aim of doing harm to police and civilians." Stating that "We will institute a system-wide change and set a new standard of deterrence and prevention." [12] [19] Levlovich's death caused Israel's Security Cabinet to act on the long-simmering issue of violent and deadly stone-throwing attacks by Palestinian youths. [20] On 24 September 2015, the Security Cabinet enacted new measures against the throwing of rocks and of Molotov cocktails. [20] The new regulations permit police to use Ruger rifles firing .22-caliber bullets, and to open fire when there is “an immediate and concrete danger” to civilians exists, or when the lives of security officers are threatened. [20] In addition, Israel will revoke child support benefits for underage youth serving time in prison. [20] [21]
In addition, legislation was proposed in September 2015 to impose minimum terms of four years in prison — with a maximum term of 20 years — on adults who throw rocks, throw firebombs, or who shoot fireworks aimed directly at human beings. Higher fines are to be imposed on youths between the ages of 14 and 18, and also on their parents. [20]
Arguing for passage of legislation that would enable courts to impose life sentences on terrorists, Justice Minister Ayelet Shaked pointed out that the killers who threw rocks at Alexander Levlovich's car on Rosh Hashana, were indicted for manslaughter, not murder, because existing law demands proof that a murder was premeditated. [22]
The October 2000 protests, also known as October 2000 events, were a series of protests in Arab villages in northern Israel in October 2000 that turned violent, escalating into rioting by Israeli Arabs, which led to counter-rioting by Israeli Jews and clashes with the Israel Police and ending in the deaths of 13 Arab demonstrators and 1 Israeli Jew.
Adei Ad is an Israeli outpost in the West Bank. Located near Shvut Rachel and Qusra, it falls under the jurisdiction of the Mateh Binyamin Regional Council. A resident of Adei Ad says that the outpost includes about 40 families. Adei Ad gained international attention in January 2015, when residents allegedly engaged in throwing rocks at a delegation from the U.S. embassy.
In 2009, clashes between Muslim Palestinians and Israeli police erupted on September 27, 2009, and continued to late October. Violence spread through East Jerusalem and parts of the West Bank, and included throwing of Molotov cocktails and stones at Israeli security forces and civilians. Israeli police responded with arrests of rioters and sporadic age-based restriction of access to the Temple Mount. Several dozen rioters, police and Israeli civilians have been injured.
The murders of Koby Mandell and Yosef Ishran occurred on 8 May 2001, when two Jewish teenagers, Yaakov "Koby" Mandell and Yosef Ishran, were killed on the outskirts of the Israeli settlement of Tekoa in the Israeli-occupied West Bank, where they lived with their families. The identity of the killers has never been determined, though Israel and a number of sources state that unidentified Palestinian terrorists were responsible.
The murder of Asher and Yonatan Palmer occurred on 23 September 2011, when a Palestinian stone throwing attack caused Asher, aged 24, to lose control of a vehicle he was driving near the Israeli settlement of Kiryat Arba in the West Bank, killing him and his infant son. Initially thought to be an accident, it was later deemed a terrorist attack by the Israel Police.
The 2014 Jerusalem unrest, sometimes referred as the Silent Intifada is a term occasionally used to refer to an increase in violence focused on Jerusalem in 2014, especially from July of that year. Although the name "silent intifada," appears to have been coined in the summer of 2014, suggestions that there should be or already is an incipient intifada had circulated among activists, columnists, journalists and on social media since 2011. Commentators speculated about the varying utility to the Palestinian and Israeli left, right, and center of not only of naming, but of asserting or denying that there is or is about to be a new intifada.
Palestinian stone-throwing refers to a Palestinian practice of throwing stones at people or property. It is a tactic with both a symbolic and military dimension when used against heavily armed troops. Proponents, sympathizers, as well as analysts have characterized stone throwing by Palestinians as a form of "limited", "restrained", "non-lethal" violence. The majority of Palestinian youths engaged in the practice appear to regard it as symbolic and non-violent, given the disparity in power and equipment between the Israeli forces and the Palestinian stone-throwers, with many considering it a method of deterring Israeli military forces and civilians from the occupation of Palestinian lands. The state of Israel considers the act to be criminal, on the grounds that it is potentially lethal. In some cases, Israelis have argued that it should be treated as a form of terrorism, or that, in terms of the psychology of those who hurl stones, even in defense or in protest, it is intrinsically aggressive.
This is a list of individual incidents and statistical breakdowns of incidents of violence between Israel and Palestinian dissident factions in 2014 as part of the Israeli–Palestinian conflict.
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Stone throwing or rock throwing, when it is directed at another person, is often considered a form of criminal battery.
Jewish Israeli stone-throwing refers to criminal rock-throwing activity by Jewish Israelis in Mandatory Palestine, Israel, the West Bank, the Gaza Strip and Jerusalem. It includes material about internecine stone-throwing, in which Haredi Jews throw stones at other Jews as a protest against what they view as violations of religious laws concerning Shabbat, modest clothing for women and similar issues, and material about stone-throwing by extremists in the settler movement.
List of violent events related to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict occurring in the second half of 2015.
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This is a Timeline of events related to the Israeli–Palestinian conflict during 2016.
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