Israel’s Security Cabinet Announces Steps To ‘Fight Terrorism’
A candlelight vigil at the site of the shooting attack in the Neve Yaakov neighborhood of Jerusalem on January 28, 2023. (Gil Cohen-Magen/AFP via Getty Images)

Israel’s Security Cabinet Announces Steps To ‘Fight Terrorism’

Israel’s Security Cabinet concluded a meeting late on Saturday night, announcing “a series of steps to fight terrorism and exact a price from terrorists and those who support them,” according to a statement issued at the end of the meeting.  Among the six steps announced in response to the attack in front of a synagogue in a Jerusalem neighborhood that left seven dead, including a 14-year-old boy and an immigrant from Ukraine, are “steps to strengthen settlement that will be submitted this week,”  taken “in response to the abhorrent attacks and the celebrations in their wake.”  No other details were provided.

The cabinet also announced that firearm licensing for civilians will be “expedited and expanded in order to enable thousands of additional citizens to carry weapons.” The steps also include sealing the home of the shooter in the Friday night attack ahead of imminent demolition; revoking national insurance rights and additional benefits for “the families of terrorists that support terrorism”; and legislation on the revocation of Israeli identity cards “of the families of terrorists that support terrorism.” The steps also include “reinforcement of military and police units, expanded arrests and focused operations to collect illegal weapons will be carried out.”

Following the meeting, the entrances to the home of the shooter in the Friday night attack, located in At-Tur neighborhood of east Jerusalem, were sealed by the Israel Police, Border Police, and Israeli military.

Also on Saturday night, an armed Palestinian man attempted to infiltrate the northern West Bank settlement of Kedumim, near Nablus, just minutes before midnight. The man, who was brandishing a handgun, was confronted by a settlement guard who shot and killed him. Some 5,000 settlement residents were ordered to remain in their homes until it was determined that there were no other gunmen.

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