A woman shouts slogans during a rally in Gaza City yesterday in support of Palestinian stabbing attacks against Israelis.
Agencies
Jerusalem/Stockholm
Israel condemned as “scandalous” yesterday what it deemed was a suggestion by the Swedish foreign minister that its forces had unlawfully killed Palestinians involved in a surge of street violence, and warned of a diplomatic rupture with Stockholm.
In the latest incident, in a Jewish neighbourhood in west Jerusalem yesterday, a Palestinian rammed his car into a passerby, slightly injuring him, and then got out of the vehicle and stabbed another man, who suffered superficial wounds, before security forces shot the attacker dead, police said.
Addressing Swedish lawmakers on Friday, Foreign Minister Margot Wallstrom denounced the almost daily Palestinian knife, gun or car-ramming attacks but urged Israel to avoid excessive force.
“The response must not be of the kind—and this is what I say in other situations where the response is such that it results in extra-judicial executions or is disproportionate in that the number of people killed on that side exceeds the original number of deaths many times over,” Wallstrom said.
Her remarks touched a nerve in Israel.
“I condemn the statements, the scandalous statements, made by the foreign minister of Sweden,” Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu told his cabinet in broadcast remarks.
“It seems she expects Israel’s citizens to bare their throats to those trying to stab them. This will not happen, and we will continue to protect the lives of Israel’s citizens.”
Deputy Foreign Minister Tzipi Hotovely said in a radio interview that she and Netanyahu, who also functions as foreign minister, would convene a meeting later in the day to decide on what she anticipated would be a “sharp response” to Wallstrom’s comments.
Hotovely hinted at a possible exclusion of the Swedish government from Israeli efforts to revive peacemaking efforts with the Palestinians that have been stalled since early 2014.
“Sweden has crossed all red lines in relations with Israel,” Hotovely told Army Radio. “This is defamation of Israel and the statements are distancing Sweden from the ranks of enlightened nations that can take part in the dialogue about rights in the region.”
A spokesman for Sweden’s foreign ministry yesterday denied that Wallstrom had accused Israel of conducting extra-judicial executions, describing her remarks as “a general statement”.
Wallstrom has drawn censure from the rightist Israeli government before; over Sweden’s recognition of Palestinian statehood last year and, following last month’s gun and bomb rampage by Islamic State militants in Paris, when she described the Palestinians’ plight as a factor leading to radicalisation.
Since October 1, almost daily attacks and clashes between Palestinians and Israeli soldiers and violence between Palestinians and Jewish settlers have killed 110 Palestinians (including an Israeli Arab), 17 Israelis, an American and an Eritrean, according to an AFP count.
Palestinians are frustrated by the failure of decades of peace talks, and many have also lost faith in their political leadership.