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AFP
Umm Al Heiran
Demolitions in an Arab Israeli village activists say has been targeted by racist policies sparked violence on Wednesday, with a policeman killed and the man accused of attacking him shot dead.
A prominent Arab Israeli lawmaker was also wounded in the confrontation in Umm Al Heiran in southern Israel, where activists have long sought to draw attention to what they call the unjust practice of demolishing Arab homes.
Police said the man killed, a local resident, was active in the Israeli Islamic Movement and may have been influenced by the Islamic State organisation -- a claim residents strongly denied, calling him a respected teacher."A vehicle driven by a terrorist from the Islamic Movement intended to strike a number officers and carry out an attack," police spokesman Micky Rosenfeld said in a statement.
"The officers responded and the terrorist was neutralised."
Later statements confirmed that the alleged attacker was dead and that a 34-year-old policeman, Erez Levi, was also killed.
Village activist Raed Abu al-Qiyan named the driver as Yacoub Abu al-Qiyan, a member of his Bedouin clan.
Residents said he was 47, the father of around a dozen children and owned one of five buildings being demolished on Wednesday.
"The Israeli narrative is a lie. He was a revered school teacher," he told AFP."He has no relations with the Islamic Movement."He was in his car and they shot at him from everywhere."
Injured lawmaker Ayman Odeh heads the Joint List, a coalition of mainly Arab parties and the third-largest bloc in parliament.
One of his aides said he was wounded by police, with photographs that spread online showing him with a bloodied head."They attacked the MP and other people -- demonstrators -- with stun grenades, tear gas directly in people's faces," Odeh's aide, Anan Maalouf, told Israeli army radio.
"There was no car-ramming attack here. There were no clashes here between the demonstrators and police."
One activist said residents had moved their cars to the entrance of the village at around 5:00 am (0300 GMT) in a bid to block the demolition operation. Police then forced their way in and fired flares, lighting up the pre-dawn sky, according to the activist, Isaac Kates Rose, who was there at the time.
Shooting could later be heard and the sound of a car crashing, he said.
At some point later, Odeh was caught up in the confrontation and wounded, activists say.
Five excavators were later seen entering the village, with demolitions beginning at around 11:15 am (0915 GMT).
Security forces took up positions on rooftops and guarded the area around the demolitions, keeping residents away.
Residents gathered around the village's mosque, with women wailing as the demolitions started.
Israeli authorities regularly carry out demolitions of Bedouin homes they deem to have been built illegally.
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19/01/2017
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