“He Was Smiling and Shooting.” Witnesses Describe Tel Aviv Terror Attack
By Jeremy Reynalds, Senior Correspondent, ASSIST News Service (jeremyreynalds@gmail.com )
TEL AVIV, ISRAEL. (ANS-Jan 3, 2016) --
"He was smiling. He was smiling when he was shooting,” Noa Keren said
on Friday, still trying to grasp being a witness to a shooting attack
that killed two people in Tel Aviv earlier in the afternoon.
According to a story published in the Jerusalem Post,
Keren had just sat down with her sister at a table inside the Sidewalk
café on the corner of Dizengoff and Gordon streets, when they heard what
sounded like a quick series of gunshots.
Moments later, a man wearing all black appeared at the window a few meters in front of them, raised his gun and opened fire.
All the while, he had a smile on his face, Keren said.
At
least two shots were fired into the café. One lodged into a table
against the front window just moments after a diner had left to go to
the bathroom, according to Keren and her sister.
The Jerusalem Post
reported witnesses said the shooter then continued on foot down Gordon
toward Rabin Square, vanishing before police arrived at the scene.
The
shooter has yet to be found, and the city of Tel Aviv greeted the New
Year with two dead and several wounded in the terrorist attack.
The
heart of the attack was a few doors down from Sidewalk at the Simta
pub, a bar busy with patrons braving the cold and rain for a birthday
party and a Friday afternoon drink.
It
was then, the Jerusalem Post said, that the shooter stepped out of the
grocery store next door, pulled a gun from his bag and began spraying
the bar’s patrons with bullets before making his way north on Dizengoff
to Gordon Street.
By
evening, after the police and the press had mainly cleared away, loved
ones and passers by continued to walk past the bar, lighting candles and
stopping to mourn.
Inside
the bar, life was suspended . Stools were still overturned and
half-empty beers on the tables gave testament to the lives stopped short
in an instant.
The
Jerusalem Post said one witness, Mor, was across the street from the
bar with her friends when they heard what sounded like gunshots and saw
people racing in their direction.
Mor
said they ran up Dizengoff and ducked inside a store, hiding inside of a
storeroom as panic consumed those on the street outside.
“We
waited inside and we didn’t know what to do. Even now, we want to go
home but we’re afraid because we don’t know if they found him or not.”
Police were far from finding the shooter, and confusion seemed to be the order of the day.
Plainclothes
detectives, anti-terrorism officers, special patrol units, and Shin Bet
(Israel Security Agency) officers ran up and down Dizengoff and the
surrounding streets, occasionally breaking suddenly into a run in one
direction or another before stopping.
The
police – including YASSAM special patrol officers in combat gear –
would huddle and then break, walking down the side streets with their
assault rifles, checking each apartment building.
At one point, the Jerusalem Post
said, a number of plainclothes officers could be seen hitching rides on
the back of bicycles ridden by Israeli civilians, as they raced north
on Dizengoff after a false alarm that a suspect had been seen on Nordau
Street.
The
police began to make their way back south toward Gordon Street. Along
the way, two detectives marveled at the cafes and restaurants just two
blocks north of the crime scene that were still full of patrons, even as
the shooter remained at large.
At
nightfall, the main mission of the police and the security services
working with them in the city remained finding the shooter as soon as
possible.
“We
are now on a manhunt with all of the police in the organization and the
Shin Bet taking part,” Yarkon police subdistrict commander (Dep.-Ch.)
Yehuda Dahan said on Friday evening, speaking to reporters outside city
hall.
“The
residents of Tel Aviv must remain aware of their surroundings and
listen to police warnings,” Dahan said, though he said there was no
police order for civilians to remain indoors, and repeated the usual
call for people to maintain their normal routine.
Photo captions: 1) Volunteers tend to a man wounded in the Tel Aviv shooting. 2) Jeremy and Elma Reynalds.
About
the writer: Jeremy Reynalds is Senior Correspondent for the ASSIST News
Service, a freelance writer and also the founder and CEO of Joy
Junction, New Mexico's largest emergency homeless shelter, www.joyjunction.org.
He has a master's degree in communication from the University of New
Mexico, and a Ph.D. in intercultural education from Biola University in
Los Angeles. His newest book is "From Destitute to Ph.D." Additional
details on "From Destitute to Ph.D." are available at www.myhomelessjourney.com. Reynalds lives in Albuquerque, New Mexico, with his wife, Elma. For more information contact: Jeremy Reynalds at jeremyreynalds@gmail.com .
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