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Jerusalem pride stabbings: Six people stabbed by ultra-Orthodox Jewish assailant at Israeli gay pride march

Police say the attacker had previously stabbed three people at the pride parade in 2005, and was recently let out of prison

Doug Bolton
Friday 31 July 2015 10:41 BST
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Plainclothes Israeli police detain an-ultra Orthodox Jew after he attacked people with a knife during a Gay Pride parade
Plainclothes Israeli police detain an-ultra Orthodox Jew after he attacked people with a knife during a Gay Pride parade (Sebastian Scheiner/AP)

An ultra-Orthodox Jewish assailant has stabbed six people at Jerusalem's annual gay pride march.

According to a paramedic at the scene, at least two of the six injured are in a serious condition.

Police spokeswomen Luba Samri said that a suspected ultra-Orthodox Jewish man had stabbed six of the marchers.

The suspect has been arrested and is currently being questioned by police.

Police arrest Yishai Schlissel, after he attacked people with a knife at Jerusalem's annual pride parade (Lior Mizrahi/Getty Images Europe)

Police say that the attacker is Yishai Schlissel, a man who carried out a similar attack when he stabbed three people at the parade in 2005.

He was sentenced to 12 years in prison, and was released recently.

A parade participant cowers as an Orthodox extremist attacks pride parade participants (ATEF SAFADI/EPA)

"I saw an ultra-Orthodox youth stabbing everyone in his way," said Shai Aviyor, a witness interviewed on Israel's Channel 2 television.

"We heard people screaming, everyone ran for cover, and there were bloodied people on the ground," Aviyor said.

In the past, the march has been a focal point of tensions between Israel's mostly secular population and the minority of ultra-Orthodox Jews in the area, who objehad carried out same attack 10 years ago ct to public displays of homosexuality.

Oded Fried, the head of a leading gay rights group, said the march would go on despite the attack. "Our struggle for equality only intensifies in the face of such events," he said.

Rioting broke out in an ultra-Orthodox neighbourhood before the 2006 parade, but the day itself passed without incident.

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