Three Israelis killed by Palestinian gunmen at Jerusalem bus stop
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Three Israelis were killed and several others injured when two Palestinian gunmen opened fire at a bus stop in West Jerusalem, Israeli police say.
Video showed the gunmen getting out of a car on a highway and shooting at people - in an attack claimed by Hamas.
Off-duty soldiers and a civilian at the scene killed the attackers, who police said were from occupied East Jerusalem.
Local media said a fourth civilian who had mistaken for an attacker and shot by the troops died later died.
In its statement saying that two assailants were its members, Hamas said Thursday morning's attack was a response to Israeli "crimes" in Gaza and elsewhere.
Israel launched a major military campaign in Gaza after an unprecedented cross-border attack by Hamas gunmen almost eight weeks ago, in which 1,200 people were killed and about 240 taken hostage.
Gaza's Hamas-run government says more than 15,000 people have been killed in the territory since the war began.
A deal mediated by Qatar has led to a pause in the fighting in Gaza since last Friday.
The Jerusalem attack came hours after the Palestinian armed group - which Israel, the UK, US and other Western powers class as a terrorist organisation - agreed with Israel to extend a truce in Gaza for a seventh day, and to allow another exchange of Israeli hostages for Palestinian prisoners.
Eight hostages were released from Gaza on Thursday. Two women - Mia Schem and Amit Soussana - were initially released, followed by a group of six others.
Qatar - a key mediator in the deal - said two Russian-Israeli women released on Wednesday had been included in the following day's tally, meaning the expected number of 10 was reached.
It reiterated that a further 30 Palestinians were due to be released from Israeli jails in return.
Talks have continued in an effort to further prolong the pause in the war. US Secretary of State Antony Blinken is on his third trip to the Middle East since fighting broke out with Hamas's deadly attack on Israel on 7 October.
In a press conference in Tel Aviv on Thursday evening, Mr Blinken called on Israel to put in place "safe" zones for Palestinian civilians in central and southern Gaza before resuming any military operations.
The point, he said, was to "minimise further casualties of innocent Palestinians".
Mr Blinken earlier commented on the attack in West Jerusalem, calling it a reminder "of the threat from terrorism that Israel and Israelis face every single day".
Israeli President Isaac Herzog told his American visitor that the incident was another example of an "endless war" Israel was fighting in "very complicated and challenging times".
In their account of the attack, Israeli police said they received reports of gunfire at Givat Shaul junction, on the main highway from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem, at about 07:40 on Thursday (05:40 GMT).
"A car approached with two armed terrorists - one with an M16 rifle and the other with a handgun," Jerusalem District Commander Doron Turgeman told reporters at the scene.
"At a bus stop they opened fire at people who were waiting there," he said. "The quick response of two soldiers and a civilian, who were close to the stop, neutralised the attackers."
A large amount of ammunition was later found by officers who searched the gunmen's vehicle.
Magen David Adom (MDA) ambulance service paramedic Moshe Hemed rushed to the scene.
"I saw a number of casualties... Some were lying and some were walking. Along with large numbers of MDA teams we assessed and treated them," he said.
"Unfortunately, we had to pronounce a 24-year-old female deceased, and evacuated a further eight casualties in varying conditions to hospitals across the city."
Later, police announced that two other victims of the attack had died and that three more were in a serious condition in hospital.
Israel media identified the 24-year-old woman as Livia Dickman, and the two others killed as Rabbi Elimelech Wasserman, 73, and Hana Ifergan, who was in her 60s.
Late on Thursday evening, reports said a fourth civilian had died - after being fired on by soldiers who mistook him for an attacker himself.
Haaretz reported that the unnamed civilian, in his 40s, was seen in security footage telling soldiers not to shoot, before he was shot. Israeli officials have not yet commented.
Police said the attackers were two brothers in their 30s from the Sur Baher area of East Jerusalem.
The Shin Bet security service named them as Murad and Ibrahim Namer, and said they were affiliated to Hamas and had previously served prison sentences for involvement in terrorist activities - according to Israeli media.
Visiting the site of the attack, far-right National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir said: "Hamas is speaking with two voices here.
"This event proves again how we must not show weakness, that we must speak to Hamas only through the [rifle] scopes, only through the war."
Mr Ben-Gvir also said the Israeli government would continue to ease regulations for issuing gun licences to citizens.
Hamas later confirmed that two members of its military wing had carried out the attack, calling it a "natural response to unprecedented crimes conducted by the (Israeli) occupation".
It cited the killing of Palestinians in the Gaza war and during Israeli raids in the occupied West Bank, as well as the treatment of Palestinian prisoners.
During Qatar-mediated truce, Hamas has freed dozens of Israeli women and children among its hostages, while Israel has released 210 Palestinian women and youths from its jails.
Twenty-three Thai hostages and one Filipino have also been released as part of a separate deal between Hamas and the Egyptian government.
Before the truce, four Israeli hostages had been released - and Israeli forces in Gaza had rescued one hostage and recovered the bodies of two others.
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