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Last updated on February 13, 2012 at 0:10 EST

Seattle security raised after Jewish center shooting

July 29, 2006

By Daisuke Wakabayashi

SEATTLE (Reuters) – Police stepped up security at Seattle
synagogues and mosques on Saturday, a day after a Muslim man
who said he was angry at Israel shot dead one woman and wounded
five others at a Jewish center.

Naveed Afzal Haq, 31, burst into the Jewish Federation of
Greater Seattle on Friday afternoon. He surrendered without a
struggle and police arrested him on charges of murder and five
counts of attempted murder.

Amy Wasser-Simpson, the federation’s vice president, told
the Seattle Times that Haq got past security at the building
and shouted, “I’m a Muslim American; I’m angry at Israel,”
before he began shooting.

Police officers circled Seattle’s Seward Park area, the
city’s traditional Jewish neighborhood and home to three major
synagogues. Uniformed guards stood outside the neighborhood’s
Bikur Cholim-Machzikay Hadath synagogue and the Sephardic Bikur
Holim synagogue.

“There is high security,” said Robin Boehler, chairwoman of
the Jewish Federation. “This is the thing we dread the most
happening.”

She said three of the victims were not Jewish.

Authorities said they were “taking every precaution,”
searching for explosives and additional suspects, and were
monitoring the city’s synagogues and Jewish organizations.

Police said Haq is a U.S. citizen and that their initial
conversation with him by phone while he was inside the building
indicated that he was a Muslim. Police would not disclose the
content of the conversation.

The Jewish federation, a group covering the Jewish
community around the Puget Sound region, had organized a large
rally last weekend to demonstrate support for Israel in its
fight against Hizbollah in southern Lebanon.

“A CRIME OF HATE”

A silent march to protest Israeli actions in Gaza planned
for Saturday morning in the Seattle suburb of Kirkland was
canceled due to safety concerns, according to Arsalan Bukhari,
president of the Seattle chapter of the Council of
American-Islamic Relations.

There are no plans to scale back weekend schools or any
other religious activities, he said.

“The events that are happening in the Middle East should
not spill over into our city,” said Bukhari.

In light of the fighting in the Middle East, Seattle police
alerted its officers earlier this week to carefully monitoring
synagogues, temples and mosques, but Seattle Police Chief Gil
Kerlikowske said they had received no specific threats.

At a news conference on Friday, Seattle Mayor Greg Nickels
said, “This was a purposeful, hateful act as far as we know, by
an individual acting alone. … This is a crime of hate.”

The FBI was working with local authorities on the case.

Local media reported Haq was on medication for a bipolar
disorder and had a misdemeanor lewd conduct charge pending. He
allegedly exposed himself at a shopping mall.

A hospital spokeswoman said three of the victims remain in
critical condition. The surviving women range in age from 23 to
43, and one is pregnant. The dead woman’s name has not been
released.

Rob Jacobs, the executive director of the Anti-Defamation
League of the Pacific Northwest, said acts of anti-Semitism are
on the rise in region. Bias and discrimination complaints
reported to the League in the Pacific Northwest quadrupled in
the last three years.

“We see ourselves as very tolerant and accepting of all
people, but the reality is that, on a day to day basis, we are
sadly not too different from many other places,” said Jacobs.

(Additional reporting by Elaine Porterfield)


Source: reuters