Israel: Soldier Abducted, Killed by Palestinian

Israel: Soldier Abducted, Killed by Palestinian

(AP) Israel: Soldier abducted, killed by Palestinian
By IAN DEITCH
Associated Press
JERUSALEM
A Palestinian lured an Israeli soldier to a village in the West Bank and killed him with the intention of trading the body for his jailed brother, Israel’s intelligence agency said Saturday.

The Palestinian man was arrested and confessed to the killing, the Shin Bet intelligence agency said.

The killing could deal a new blow to U.S.-led Mideast peace efforts, which resumed in July after a nearly five-year break in Israel-Palestinian talks. The deaths of several Palestinians in Israeli arrest raids in the West Bank intended to detain militants involved in attacks have further soured the atmosphere between the two sides.

The soldier was reported missing late Friday and Israeli forces began looking for him.

The search led the troops to Nidal Amar, a 42-year-old Palestinian from Beit Amin a village near the city of Qalqiliya in the northern West Bank.

Amar told the Shin Bet that he had killed the soldier, whom he knew because he worked together with him at a restaurant in the coastal city of Bat Yam in central Israel, the agency said.

According to Shin Bet, the Palestinian recounted how he had picked up the soldier in a taxi on Friday after convincing him to accept a ride.

After talking the soldier into joining him, Amar took the Israeli to an open field, killed him and hid his body in a well, the agency said.

Israeli forces raided Amar’s home early on Saturday based on intelligence information, and interrogated Amar and his brother.

Shin Bet said Amar had confessed to intending to trade the soldier’s body for another brother, in an Israeli jail since 2003 for his role in several terror attacks.

Amar showed the Israeli forces where the body was hidden Saturday afternoon after his arrest.

It is not the first case of Palestinians abducting Israeli soldiers, sometimes killing them afterward. The military has a long standing campaign warning soldiers not to accept rides from strangers.

It’s still unknown how Amar convinced the soldier to join him on the ride Friday.

In 2001 a Palestinian woman lured an Israeli teenage boy over the Internet to the West Bank where he was murdered by waiting Palestinian militants.

The woman, Amna Muna, was released along with over a thousand other Palestinian prisoners in exchange for a single Israeli soldier held captive in Gaza by Hamas-allied militants in 2011.

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