Several stabbed at Jerusalem gay pride parade

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Israeli security forces reach for ultra-Orthodox Jew Yishai Schlissel attacking people with a knife during a Gay Pride parade Thursday, July 30, 2015 in central Jerusalem. Israeli police said several people were stabbed. (AP Photo/Sebastian Scheiner)
An ultra-Orthodox Jew allegedly stabbed six Gay Pride marchers in Jerusalem Thursday, gravely wounding one of them, just weeks after completing a 10-year sentence for a similar attack, police and medics said.
 
The assault occurred in Jerusalem\’s city centre, with witnesses describing terrifying scenes of an assailant, dressed in ultra-Orthodox garb, storming the parade with a knife.
The man was quickly arrested amid pandemonium at the scene, but the parade and its hundreds of marchers pushed ahead defiantly afterwards, even with blood on the road.
A police spokesman identified the suspect as Yishai Shlissel, who was released from jail three weeks ago after having served his sentence for wounding three marchers in an attack in 2005.
Media reported that Shlissel had posted a letter on the Internet speaking of the "abomination" of a Gay Pride parade in Jerusalem.
Television also broadcast extracts of an interview that he was said to have given to a radio station about 10 days ago in which he said "the fight continues against those who defile" God.
 
With questions being raised over whether authorities had adequately protected the march, a police spokesman said a large deployment had been assigned to the event.
One of the victims, a woman, was in "very serious condition," while two others were less seriously wounded, according to Magen David Adom, the Jewish equivalent of the Red Cross. Three others were lightly hurt.
At least two of those attacked were said to be men.
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu swiftly condemned the attack as "a despicable hate crime".
"In Israel everyone, including the gay community, has the right to live in peace, and we will defend that right," Netanyahu said in a statement.
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People help a wounded person after Yishai Schlissel, an ultra-Orthodox Jew, attacked people with a knife during a gay pride parade in Jerusalem on Thursday, July 30, 2015. AP
 
Israel\’s two chief rabbis also strongly condemned the incident, and the premier said he welcomed the "religious leadership\’s condemnation of this terrible crime" and called "on all those in positions of leadership to denounce this contemptible act."
 
Hundreds of police had been deployed to prevent violence breaking out in the highly conservative city during the annual march.
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Participants of the Gay Pride parade leave the march after six people were stabbed, in central Jerusalem on July 30, 2015 (AFP Photo/Thomas Coex)
In past years, ultra-Orthodox protesters have gathered in their Mea Shearim bastion to denounce homosexuality.
Organisers of Thursday\’s march avoided ultra-Orthodox districts to try to avoid incidents.
Israel\’s homosexual community was plunged into grief in 2009 when a gunman attacked a centre for young gays in Tel Aviv killing two people and wounding some 15 others.
That assailant has never been apprehended.
Israel is widely seen as having liberal gay rights policies, despite the ultra-Orthodox hostility towards homosexuals, particularly men.
The Jewish state repealed a ban on consensual same-sex sexual acts in 1988.
SOURCE: AFP
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