Beersheva bus station shooting | |
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Part of the 2015–2016 wave of violence in Israeli-Palestinian conflict | |
Native name | הפיגוע בתחנה המרכזית של באר שבע (2015) |
Location | Beersheva, Israel |
Coordinates | 31°14′33″N 34°47′48″E / 31.24250°N 34.79667°E |
Date | 18 October 2015 |
Attack type | Mass shooting |
Weapons | Pistol, IMI Galil |
Deaths | 3 (soldier, the perpetrator, civilian mistaken for second gunman) |
Injured | 11 |
Perpetrator | Muhand al-Okabi |
On 18 October 2015, a gunman shot and killed 19-year-old Israeli soldier Omri Levy in a bus station in Beersheba. After killing the soldier, he took his automatic rifle and fired into a crowd. When more security officers appeared, the gunman fled, but was killed by security personnel.
A 29-year-old Eritrean asylum seeker, Haftom Zarhum was mistaken for a second attacker. He was shot eight times by police and was kicked and beaten by four Israelis as he lay wounded, while bystanders shouted profanities at him.[1][2] Graphic footage of the lynching was filmed by a bystander and spread on social media.[3]
At least eleven people, including Zarhum, who died of his wounds a few hours later, and four police officers, were hospitalized. The gunman was the first Israeli Bedouin to be involved in an attack against Israelis.[4]
In response to the lynching, Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu warned that citizens should not take the law into their own hands.[5]