Benjamin Netanyahu: Israel founded as a haven for Jews under threat
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                  Benjamin Netanyahu: Israel founded as a haven for Jews under threat

                  Flanked by security guards, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu (4th R) and French ambassador to Israel Christophe Bigot (2nd R) leave after offering their condolences to the Sandler family in Jerusalem on March 22, 2012, following the Toulouse Jewi

                  Benjamin Netanyahu: Israel founded as a haven for Jews under threat

                  22.03.2012, Israel and the World

                  Israel was set up as a haven for Jews whose lives were threatened, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said on Thursday as he met the families of four people killed in a shooting attack against a Jewish school in Toulouse, France. Three French-Israeli children and a teacher, who were gunned down on Monday morning at the Ozar Hatorah school in southwestern France, were buried in Jerusalem on Wednesday during a funeral attended by thousands.
                  During a condolence call to Eva Sandler, who lost her 30-year-old husband Jonathan and her two sons, Arieh, 5, and Gabriel, 4, Netanyahu said Israel was created as a safe haven from just such threats.
                  "I saw the depth of the grief and pain of a young mother who is feeding a baby, who lost her husband and two of her little children, the agony of life cut short and hope which was crushed, and I think to myself: what cruelty, what barbarity can cause a man to do an act which is so inhumane," he said.
                  "For these murderers, wherever a Jew walks, every centimetre of land he walks on, is occupied territory. From their perspective, Jews have no place in the world. They want to murder Jews wherever they are, and for that reason the state of Israel was established," Netanyahu said.
                  He then went on to meet the family of seven-year-old Myriam Monsonego, whose father is the principle of the school where the shooting occurred.
                  French Ambassador Christophe Bigot said he had come to show France's "strong solidarity" with the bereaved families.
                  "Those kids were our kids. They were French kids and also Israeli kids," he said, speaking in English. "We are engaged in a very determined fight against terrorism."
                  French police said the man believed to be responsible for the shootings died on Thursday when he jumped out of a window during a shoot-out with police who stormed his flat in Toulouse after a 30-hour standoff.
                  Investigators believe 23-year-old Mohamed Merah, a Frenchman of Algerian descent with Al-Qaeda links, also killed three soldiers in two other attacks last week.

                  EJP