Christian center torched, anti-Jesus graffiti sprayed in Jerusalem
Xinhua, February 26, 2015 Adjust font size:
A Christian seminary building in Jerusalem was torched and anti-Jesus slurs were spray-painted on its walls early on Thursday, in what the police suspected a hate crime attack by far-right Jews.
A spokesperson for the fire services said that firefighters arrived at the scene near Jerusalem's Old City at around 4 a.m. (2 a.m. GMT,) and extinguished the blaze.
No injuries were reported but the building, which belongs to the Greek-Orthodox church, was damaged. Racist graffiti were spray-painted on a wall.
The building resides in Mount Zion across from the Old City, one of the regions most prone to the so-called "price tag" attacks. Dozens of hate crimes by Israeli extremists occurred in the area, including assaults and spitting attacks on Christian clergymen and vandalism of churches, cars and tombs.
"Price tags" are attacks perpetrated by far-right Jews against Palestinians' property or religious sites, including mosques and Christian churches, in response to Palestinian violence or, alternatively, to Israeli government moves that are perceived as a threat to the expansion of the Jewish settlements in the West Bank and Jerusalem.
The latest incident came a day after a mosque in the West Bank village of Jab'aa near Bethlehem was set on fire. According to Palestinian reports, settlers entered the mosque overnight and sprayed hate graffiti on the walls, including: "revenge" and "we want redemption of Zion." Enditem