Two suicide
bombers kill 23 bystanders in deadliest attack since June
by
Jason Keyser
The Associated Press
TEL
AVIV - Two Palestinian suicide bombers set off back-to-back
blasts Sunday in a central Tel Aviv area crowded with foreign
workers, killing 23 bystanders and wounding more than 100
in the bloodiest attack in six months.
Hours
later, Israeli attack helicopters fired at least four missiles
at metal workshops in Gaza City, witnesses said. Eight people
were slightly injured. The Israeli military said the workshops
were used for making weapons, including mortars and rockets.
In
Rafah, on the Gaza-Egypt border, Israeli forces destroyed
a house belonging to an Islamic Jihad leader, Palestinians
said.
The
Al Aqsa Martyrs' Brigade, a militia linked to Yasser Arafat's
Fatah movement, said the suicide bombers were its members.
Earlier, the militant Islamic Jihad claimed responsibility.
The
twin blasts came just three weeks before Israel's Jan. 28
general election and could boost support for hardline parties,
including Likud, the party of Prime Minister Ariel Sharon.
Sharon
convened an emergency meeting of key Cabinet ministers Sunday
evening. Israel responded to two similar attacks in June -
Jerusalem bus bombings that left 26 dead - by reoccupying
most West Bank towns.
But
with Israeli troops still in control of Palestinian population
centers, Israel's range of additional responses is limited,
particularly as the United States considers a possible strike
against Iraq and wants to avoid friction with the Arab world
over the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
The
blasts were a setback to Egypt's efforts to persuade Hamas
and Islamic Jihad to halt attacks on Israeli civilians, at
least until after the elections. The bombings also ended a
period of relative calm. Previously the last bombing inside
Israel was Nov. 21, when 11 bus passengers were killed in
Jerusalem.
The
Palestinian Authority condemned yesterday's attacks, which
occurred at about 6:30 p.m. in a pedestrian area filled with
working-class shops and restaurants near Tel Aviv's defunct
central bus station. Both bombers had explosives strapped
to their bodies.
One
blew himself up near a fast-food restaurant called "McChina."
The explosion ripped through the outdoor restaurant, overturning
wooden picnic tables and showering glass on the sidewalk.
Seconds
later, the other bomber blew himself up in a commercial area
about 100 yards away.
Rescue
workers said most of the dead were foreigners, thousands of
whom live in the area. Several of the wounded were treated
on the sidewalk.
"I
saw a man without a leg. I saw horrible things, people without
legs, without arms. I saw fingers," said Tomer, a witness
who gave only his first name.
Yitzhak
Teva, a barber who was slightly injured, said he was cutting
hair when the blast went off. "Half the wall fell on
me and I was covered in broken glass," Teva said. "I
shut the shop and then there was the next explosion."
Traffic
jams in the narrow alleys around the old bus station hampered
the evacuation of the wounded. Bystanders helped remove the
injured with improvised means, using doors torn from their
hinges as makeshift stretchers.
In
broadcast appeals, police told illegal workers they had nothing
to fear if they sought treatment or checked on friends.
"Please
don't be afraid to go to one of the Israeli hospitals in Tel
Aviv, even if you are working illegally," one announcement
said.
President
Bush was informed about the bombing by Condoleezza Rice, his
national security adviser, who accompanied him home to Washington
from Texas aboard Air Force One, said White House spokeswoman
Claire Buchan.
"He
condemns this in the strongest possible terms," Buchan
said. "There are those who want to derail the peace process,
but the president will not be deterred. Innocent people have
a right to live in safety."
In
the past 27 months of fighting, Palestinian militias have
carried out scores of bombings in Israel, and Sharon has held
Arafat responsible by virtue of inaction. Palestinians say
Israel's military strikes have rendered the Palestinian security
services helpless.
A
Palestinian Authority statement pledged "to follow all
those who planned and were behind these attacks. Such attacks
against civilians are against the Palestinian national interest
and violate all decisions taken by the Palestinian Authority
(and) must be stopped."
Claiming
responsibility for the Tel Aviv blasts, the Al Aqsa Martyrs
Brigades named the attackers as Samir Nouri, 19 and Burak
Khelfeh, 20, both from the West Bank city of Nablus.
Egypt
and Fatah have been trying to persuade Islamic Jihad and the
larger Hamas to halt attacks on civilians in Israel. Talks
in Cairo were to resume next week, but it was not clear if
they would after yesterday's attacks. Israel TV said Egypt
was planning to issue an ultimatum to Hamas to comply.
Abdel
Aziz Rantisi, a Hamas spokesman, said "resistance will
continue." The Israelis, he said, "are killing us
day and night, so they should pay the price of their crimes."
Since
violence erupted in September 2000, 2,029 people have been
killed on the Palestinian side and 714 on the Israeli side.
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