PA daily: Terrorist who attempted to stab Israeli border policemen was “executed“ and “died as a Martyr”
Headline: "The occupation executed student Dania Arshid in Hebron and settlers invaded the Al-Aqsa [Mosque]"
"Yesterday [Oct. 25, 2015] student Dania Arshid, 17, died as a Martyr (Shahid) next to the Ibrahimi Mosque (i.e., Cave of the Patriarchs) after occupation soldiers, gathered near the doors of the mosque, shot at her during another [Israeli] crime of execution.
Local sources noted that the occupation forces stopped the girl, who was a student, when she went through the military checkpoint near the main gate of the Ibrahimi Mosque, and asked her to take a knife out of her bag. The girl could do nothing but refuse as she didn't have any sharp object in her bag, which caused the soldiers to shoot her on the spot."
Click to view bulletin
Dania Arshid - 17-year-old Palestinian terrorist who when asked to identify herself at a military checkpoint near the Cave of the Patriarchs in Hebron on Oct. 25, 2015, refused and ran towards the Israeli border policemen with a drawn knife. She was shot and killed by them.
"Yesterday [Oct. 25, 2015] student Dania Arshid, 17, died as a Martyr (Shahid) next to the Ibrahimi Mosque (i.e., Cave of the Patriarchs) after occupation soldiers, gathered near the doors of the mosque, shot at her during another [Israeli] crime of execution.
Local sources noted that the occupation forces stopped the girl, who was a student, when she went through the military checkpoint near the main gate of the Ibrahimi Mosque, and asked her to take a knife out of her bag. The girl could do nothing but refuse as she didn't have any sharp object in her bag, which caused the soldiers to shoot her on the spot."
Click to view bulletin
Dania Arshid - 17-year-old Palestinian terrorist who when asked to identify herself at a military checkpoint near the Cave of the Patriarchs in Hebron on Oct. 25, 2015, refused and ran towards the Israeli border policemen with a drawn knife. She was shot and killed by them.
» View analysis citing this item