At around 8am [Tuesday] morning, a Palestinian man approached the Tapuach Junction in the West Bank, pulled out a knife and repeatedly stabbed an Israeli man. He then grabbed the man’s gun and began to open fire on the Border Guard post. Soldiers returned fire and the situation was stabilised. The victim, identified as 31 year-old father of five Eviatar Borovsky, died at the scene. His attacker, believed to be a Fatah operative from a village near Tulkarem, was treated at the scene by and taken to an Israeli hospital in Petach Tikvah. He is believed to have been released from prison less than six months ago, having been convicted three years ago for stone throwing.
A few hours later, at 10am, an Israeli Air Force air strike on northern Gaza killed a terrorist from the “Global Jihad”, the Salafist organisation responsible for a rocket attack on Eilat a few weeks ago. Nine rockets have been fired on Israel in the past ten days by global jihad organisations, who were the same thugs responsible for a rocket attack on Sderot during President Obama's visit back in March.
The two incidents are in absolutely no way linked, and yet they prompted a story in the LA Times entitled “2 killings shatter relative calm between Israelis, Palestinians”. The content of that article provides an interesting case study into the way in which the international media attempts to create a moral equivalence between the death of a terrorist and the death of an innocent civilian.
The opening sentence to the article says it all: “Tensions rose Tuesday between Israelis and Palestinians after two separate killings – one by each side – shattered what had been a period of relative calm in recent months”.
I’m not sure if the firing of rockets from Gaza into civilian areas constitutes as relative calm, but I suppose we are still living by that old adage, “it all began when Israel fired back”.
Meanwhile, the article reports that the Al Aqsa Martyrs Brigade, which is the military wing of Palestinian Authority Chairman Mahmoud Abbas’ Fatah, took responsibility for the brutal murder in the West Bank, calling it a “gift” to Palestinian prisoners and promising more of the same in the future.
The article then makes a somewhat interesting commentary on the number of Israeli deaths within the West Bank in recent history declaring “the killing was the first of its kind since September 2011. Last year was the first year in recent memory during an Israeli was not killed in the West Bank, a fact that was praised as a sign of progress by President Obama during his March visit to Israel and the West Bank”.
In light of the earlier statement of Fatah declaring they
will continue gifting Palestinian prisoners with these sorts of attacks, it is
interesting that the journalist felt given nobody had actually been killed in
the past year and a half, progress had been made. In fact, a similar stabbing
took place at the same junction back in January on a 17-year-old boy, who
sustained moderate wounds. Other attacks have taken place with no fatalities
but the incident that stands out in my mind is the story of 3-year-old Avigail Biton, who was in the car with her mother and
her sister back in March, when Palestinians began hurling rocks at cars
travelling on Route 5. Avigail’s mother Adva swerved the car, as did a truck
driver, which resulted in a collision between the two vehicles. Avigail
suffered a serious head injury and remains in a very critical condition in
hospital.
Given that Avigail is still alive, albeit attached to a number of tubes in an Intensive Care Unit, she does not contribute to a statistic of deaths, and therefore keeps this idea of “progress” in tack.
As Avigail’s mother said in an open letter to Ha’aretz journalist Amira Hass, “has she [Avigail] had a chance to cause anyone harm in the three years she has been alive?” The answer, to any moral person, should be no, but in the media’s game of tit-for-tat, of a “cycle of violence”, stories such as Avigail’s and of Eviatar Borovsky are just another link in the chain.
But at least the LA Times reported on both
incidents from yesterday. Locally, our Fairfax publications published a story
online entitled ‘Israel kills militant blamed for
Eilat attack’, where not surprisingly the murder of
Eviatar Borovsky did not even rate a mention. Given that Avigail is still alive, albeit attached to a number of tubes in an Intensive Care Unit, she does not contribute to a statistic of deaths, and therefore keeps this idea of “progress” in tack.
As Avigail’s mother said in an open letter to Ha’aretz journalist Amira Hass, “has she [Avigail] had a chance to cause anyone harm in the three years she has been alive?” The answer, to any moral person, should be no, but in the media’s game of tit-for-tat, of a “cycle of violence”, stories such as Avigail’s and of Eviatar Borovsky are just another link in the chain.
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