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ISRAEL

Germany’s Scholz ‘shocked’ by ‘terrible’ Jerusalem attacks

German Chancellor Olaf Scholz said on Saturday he was "deeply shocked" by the "terrible" attacks in Jerusalem.

Germany's Scholz 'shocked' by 'terrible' Jerusalem attacks
Photo: Tobias SCHWARZ/AFP

“There have been deaths and people wounded in the heart of Israel,” he said, referring to an attack on a synagogue on Friday that killed seven and another on Saturday morning in which two people were injured.

The shootings came after nine Palestinians were killed in an Israeli army operation in the Jenin refugee camp, in the occupied West Bank.

“My thoughts are with the victims and their families. Germany stands by the side of Israel,” Scholz tweeted.

Earlier, the German foreign ministry said it also deplored Friday’s “abominable” attack, which took place on International Holocaust Remembrance Day.

“A dialogue and cooperation between Israel and the Palestinian authorities are more necessary than ever in order to eliminate terror,” a spokeswoman for the ministry said.

“The spiral of violence that has already caused too many casualties on both sides this year must not continue.”

On Friday evening, a 21-year-old Palestinian man shot and killed seven people near a synagogue in east Jerusalem during Shabbat prayers, before being shot dead after a chase.

And on Saturday morning, two people, a father and his son were injured in east Jerusalem by a 13-year-old Palestinian boy.

On Thursday, Israeli forces killed nine Palestinians during a raid on the crowded Jenin refugee camp.

A panel of independent United Nations human rights experts said the death toll from Thursday’s raid marked “the highest number of people killed in a single operation in the West Bank since 2005”. 

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POLITICS

Namibia condemns former colonial ruler Germany over Gaza response

Namibia has condemned its former colonial ruler Germany's decision this week to reject accusations against Israel by South Africa of "genocide" at the International Court of Justice (ICJ).

Namibia condemns former colonial ruler Germany over Gaza response

South Africa launched an emergency case at the ICJ arguing that Israel stands in breach of the UN Genocide Convention, signed in 1948 in the wake of the Holocaust, and wants the court to “immediately” stop its military operations in Gaza which were launched after the October 7 Hamas attacks.

Namibia, a southern African country where the first genocide of the 20th century took place under German colonial rule, “rejects Germany’s support of the genocidal intent of the racist Israeli state”, the presidency said in a statement late Saturday.

Lamenting “Germany’s inability to draw lessons from its horrific history”, Namibian President Hage Geingob expressed “deep concern” for the German government’s decision Friday of having “rejected the morally upright indictment brought forward by South Africa”.

READ ALSO: Germany rejects UN ‘genocide’ charge against Israel

Geingob accused Berlin of “ignoring” the “deaths of over 23,000 Palestinians in Gaza” and defending in front of the ICJ “the genocidal and gruesome acts of the Israeli Government”.

The German government on Friday “decisively and expressly” rejected South Africa’s accusations against Israel, calling it a “political instrumentalisation” of the UN Genocide Convention with “no basis in fact”. 

Germany was responsible for the massacres of more than 70,000 Indigenous Herero and Nama people in Namibia between 1904 and 1908, which historians
widely consider the first genocide of the 20th century.

“The German Government is yet to fully atone for the genocide it committed,” the Namibian presidency said Saturday.

In May 2021, after more than five years of negotiations, Germany said it recognised it committed a “genocide” in the territory it colonised from 1884 and 1915 and pleged more than €1.1 billion ($1.2 billion) in development aid over 30 years to benefit the descendents of the two tribes.

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