Suicide blast kills 18 on Israeli bus ( 2003-08-20 09:09) (Agencies)
A suicide bomber blew himself up Tuesday on a bus
packed with Jewish worshippers returning from the Western Wall, killing at least
18 people, including five children.
Israeli rescue workers investigate the site
of an explosion on a bus in downtown Jerusalem, Aug. 19 2003. A suicide
bomber blew up a bus packed with observant Jews returning from the Western
Wall. The bombing threatened to derail a U.S.-backed peace plan. In a
first move, Israel called off the planned handover of the West Bank towns
of Jericho and Qalqiliya to Palestinian control. The handover was to have
taken place later this week.
[AP]
Hamas and Islamic Jihad both claimed
responsiblity for the blast, one of the deadliest Palestinian attacks in the
past three years.
More than 100 people were also injured, 40 of them children, hospital
officials said.
The attack marked perhaps the most serious blow yet to the U.S.-backed "road
map" peace plan, which was unveiled three months ago. It shattered a truce
called by militants on June 29 that had been fraying in recent weeks with less
deadly attacks.
In an immediate response, Israel froze all contacts with the Palestinian
Authority, as well as the handover of two West Bank towns, Jericho and
Qalqiliya, to Palestinian control. The handover had been expected later this
week. Israel also decided to seal off the West Bank and Gaza Strip, a security
source said.
The powerful explosion ripped through the tandem bus — which has two
passenger sections — shortly after 9 p.m. At the time, the bus was heading from
the Western Wall, Judaism's holiest shrine, to an ultra-Orthodox Jewish
neighborhood on the outskirts of Jerusalem. Many families with children were on
the bus, witnesses said.
An injured Israeli girl is carried into a
hospital by an emergency rescue worker following an explosion in
Jerusalem, August 19, 2003. A suspected Palestinian suicide bombing aboard
a Jerusalem bus killed at least 20 people, an Israeli medical official
said. [Reuters]
"I had just come home from praying at the Western Wall and was heading home,"
said Zvi Weiss, an 18-year-old Jewish seminary student from New York City who
sat in the front of the bus and escaped unharmed.
"The bomb went off at the back of the bus. Everything went black. I climbed
out of the broken window and started running. All around me there were people
covered in blood, screaming, some with limbs missing."
Palestinian Prime Minister Mahmoud Abbas was meeting with Islamic Jihad
leaders in the Gaza Strip at the time of the explosion, in a renewed attempt to
persuade them to halt attacks.
Abbas condemned the bombing as a "terrible act" and said he ordered
Palestinian security forces to investigate. Abbas has been trying to use
persuasion, rather than force in handling the militants. It might cost him his
job if his approach fails and violence continues.
The road map plan requires the Palestinian security forces to dismantle
militant groups, something Abbas has said he cannot do for fear of setting off
internal fighting.
In Tuesday's bombing, at least 18 bystanders were killed, including five
children, the Zaka rescue service said. Police initially had put the death toll
at 20, but there was some confusion because many of the bodies had been
dismembered, rescue workers said.
The bus had started out at the Western Wall, Judaism's holiest shrine. One
report said among the passengers were members of a family who had celebrated a
Bar Mitzvah, the Jewish rite of passage into adulthood for boys, at the Western
Wall.
A second bus passing nearby when the explosion went off was also badly
damaged, with windows blown out. Rescuers had to use blow torches to get out
some of the wounded.
Police said the bomb was very powerful, and had been packed with bits of
metal, for greater deadliness.
Shocked survivors, including crying children with blood-smeared faces, were
led away from the scene. A paramedic cradled a little girl with a ponytail in
his arms, and two others led away an older woman who had blood streaming down
her face.
Paramedics treated wounded on the sidewalk, and body parts were strewn on the
sidewalk. Later Tuesday, hundreds of people were praying at the site, some
holding prayer books. A small group chanted "Death to Arabs!"
In Washington, the White House deplored the bombing and offered sympathies to
the victims and their families.
"We condemn this vicious act of terrorism," said Sean McCormack, a spokesman
on national security issues. "We call on the Palestinian Authority to dismantle
terrorism."
The attack followed a deadly explosion set off by a suicide bomber outside
the hotel housing the U.N. headquarters in Baghdad.
An Israeli government spokesman said there was no known direct link between
the two bombings, although he said the motivations were similar.
"It is motivated by extremist Islamist militants who don't accept the
legitimacy of the West or of Israel," said the spokesman, Dore Gold.
Gold said Israel was paying the price for the Palestinian Authority's
inability to rein in militants.
Abbas said he has asked Palestinian security forces to investigate. "I want
to declare my full condemnation for this terrible act, which cannot serve the
interests of the Palestinian people," he said.
Last week, Islamic Jihad threatened attacks on Israelis to avenge the killing
of a senior operative, Mohammed Sidr, in an Israeli arrest raid in the West Bank
city of Hebron.
In a phone call to The Associated Press, Islamic Jihad claimed responsibility
for Tuesday's bombing, saying it was in revenge for the killing of Sidr, whom
Israel had accused of plotting a series of attacks.
However, later Tuesday, Hamas distributed fliers in Hebron, saying the
Jerusalem bombing was carried out by one of its supporters, identified as Raed
Abdel-Hamed Mesk, 29, a mosque preacher from Hebron.
Hamas released Mesk's farewell video. The plump man with the bushy beard said
he was a member of the Hamas military wing, Izzedine al Qassam, accused Israel
of violating the cease-fire offered by Hamas.
Mesk's wife Arij began clearing belongings out of her home late Tuesday, in
expectation that it would be demolished by Israeli troops. The Israeli military
routinely destroys the homes of suicide bombers, hoping it will act as a
deterrent.
Arij Mesk said she was not sad. "God gave Raed something he always dreamed
of. All of his life he dreamed of being a martyr," she said. The couple has two
children, ages two and three.
In the Gaza Strip, a Hamas leader, Abdel Aziz Rantisi, insisted Hamas was not
involved."We are committed to the truce. I don't know who carried out this
action," said Abdel Aziz Rantisi, a Hamas leader.