JERUSALEM (AP) — The killing of an Eritrean man who was shot by a security guard and then beaten by an Israeli mob that mistook him for an Arab attacker has prompted soul-searching in Israel and raised concerns about racism and vigilantism amid a wave of Israeli-Palestinian violence. Haptom Zerhom, who was in his late 20s, was killed during a deadly attack in a bus station in the southern town of Beersheba by an Arab armed with a gun and a knife, who killed an Israeli soldier and wounded nine people before being shot dead by police. The seemingly random violence has put Israelis on edge, but has also raised concerns about revenge attacks. The targeting of Zerhom, along with previous attacks on Arabs and at least one dark-skinned Jew mistaken for an Arab, have injected race into the discussion. People at the scene of these incidents should evacuate the area and allow security and rescue services to work. Even if it was the terrorist himself, by the way, after he was shot, after he was neutralized and lying on the floor, you need to be an animal to torment him, — Yaakov Amidror, Netanyahu's former national security adviser.