Masked Arab men stopped a car driven by a Jewish man and pulled him out of the vehicle Sunday in an Arab town in central Israel in what seems to be an attempted lynch. The man managed to escape the scene with the help of local residents who pulled him away in the nick of time, and the perpetrators then set the abandoned vehicle on fire.

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A witness told Ynet that "I was at the scene, there were almost 20 people there protesting, some were masked. They stopped the car in which the Jewish man was traveling and began pelting it with stones and fireworks. They took out the driver and began beating him and shouting 'Allah Akhbar'. Then a group of people pulled him out from under the mob, they claim he said: 'I saw death, I never thought I'd make it out alive.'"

Car set ablaze after attempted attempted lynch

The man, in his 40s, was visiting friends in the town and was on his way home when he was attacked. "I have worked with people from the Arab sector all my life, I have good relations with so many of them. I cannot believe something like this can happen. It was very scary. I can only hope this doesn't happen again, to anybody."

'I hope this never happens again' (Photo: Omer Rabiya)

Police went on heightened alert Sunday following protests across the country over the fatal shooting of a 22-year-old Arab Israeli who appeared in video footage to be retreating from police, Prime Minister Netanyahu vowed a tough response to any further unrest.

Forces attempt to block Arab protesters in Kfar Kanna (Photo: AP)

Thousands of Arabs took to the streets Saturday to protest the shooting, with many hurling rocks and firebombs at police. The protests continued Sunday with a general strike called by Arab Israeli community leaders and demonstrations outside universities and other institutions, and massive clashes throughout Israel. Violence continued to spread throughout the north, Jerusalem and the West Bank.

In the West Bank, a car carrying a mother and her five children was pelted with stones and a firebomb while traveling to her home from the settlement of Maale Shomron and Al Matan; damage was caused to the car, but no harm came to the family.

Meanwhile, dozens of Arab youths threw stones at cars passing by the entrance to Kfar Turuan, in the Galilee; three were arrested.





Over 25 people, including youth as young as 12, were arrested in Kfar Kanna, the scene of the fatal shooting of Khair Hamdan, while thirty youths set tires on fire at a central junction in Nazareth.

Dozens of protesters in Kafr Kanna were hurling stones at police, setting tires on fire, blocking the entry road to the town and waving Palestinian flags. Protests were also reported in Kafr Qasim.

Violence in Kfar Kanna (Video: Mohammed Shinawi) (צילום: מוחמד שינאווי)

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The tensions add to those already raging in Jerusalem, where Palestinians from the eastern part of the city have been clashing almost daily with police over access to a disputed holy site.

A number of masked Palestinian youths pelted police and Border Patrol forces with stones and firebombs in East Jerusalem's a-Tur neighborhood Sunday evening and masked men hurled stones at police forces in Isawiya on Sunday. The police dispersed the rioters using crowd control measures and no damages were reported.

Bus hit with stone on Route 1

Stones were also thrown in Jerusalem, reportedly hitting a bus along the central Route 1 – the main road to Jerusalem – and in Beit Hanina, lightly wounding one. In another incident a stone was thrown at the Jerusalem Light Rail, also in East Jerusalem's Beit Hanina. No injuries were reported, but light damage was caused to the train.

Police shooting

The video footage showing police fatally shooting Khair Hamdan after he retreated has raised serious questions regarding the measures used by police to arrest civilians.

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The police procedure, which was revised in 2007, deems it illegal to use a firearm when conducting an arrest, unless the perpetrator endangered his own or any other person's life during the arrest, or if the arrest is for a crime in which the act itself endangered the life of the perpetrator or any other person.

The use of the firearm is permitted also when no other measure can be taken to conduct the arrest and given that no real risk is posed to the lives and safety of bystanders and innocents.

According to the procedure, officers are required to give a warning before firing their weapons. In the first stage, a loud verbal warning must be given. Only after that, officers are permitted to open fire. The warning may be skipped in the case of immediate danger to the life of the officer or any other person.

However, the procedure also determines that after all conditions to open fire have been fulfilled, the officer must exercise the utmost care when using the firearm, in a manner causing the lightest damage possible to any person or property.

Police spokesman Micky Rosenfeld said police have beefed up security and raised preparedness to its second highest level - the country's highest since the conclusion of this summer's 50-day Gaza war. The weekend protests included some marching with Palestinian flags and calling for an uprising.

At his weekly Cabinet meeting, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu warned against further violence.

"Israel is a nation of law. Whoever violates the law will be punished severely. We will not tolerate disturbances and riots," he said. "I have instructed the Interior Minister to use all means, including evaluating the possibility of revoking the citizenship of those who call for the destruction of the State of Israel."

The anger erupted after an early morning incident Saturday in the Arab village of Kfar Kanna in northern Israel. Police said officers opened fire against a knife-wielding man attempting to stab policemen. Video footage later emerged, apparently taken from a security camera, showing a man repeatedly banging on the window of a police vehicle with an object in his hand. When officers emerged to confront him, he began to backpedal and was then shot. Police took him to a hospital where he died.

The police's internal investigations department is looking into the shooting to determine whether proper protocol was followed.