A bomb blast ripped through a bus in Jerusalem on Monday and sparked a fire, wounding at least 21 people, Israeli police said, in an apparent escalation in a wave of violence.
JERUSALEM: A bomb blast ripped through a bus in Jerusalem on
Monday (Apr 18) and sparked a fire, wounding at least 21 people,
Israeli police said, in an apparent escalation in a wave of violence.
Details of the incident were still emerging, but police said
a bomb had exploded on one bus in a relatively isolated area of
Jerusalem, sparking a fire that spread to another one as well as a car.
Israeli domestic security agency Shin Bet referred to the explosion
as a "terror attack". The bombing was expected to lead to a sharp
increase in security ahead of Jewish Passover celebrations beginning
Friday night.If confirmed as a Palestinian bombing, it would both reverse a decline in a wave of violence that erupted in October and mark an escalation, with most of the attacks having been stabbings.
"A professional examination of police sappers has proven that a bomb exploded on the back part of the bus, resulting in the wounding of passengers and the burning of the bus," a police statement said. "In addition, another bus and car were damaged."
An AFP journalist at the scene said one bus was completely burnt out while another was partially burned, with a large contingent of firefighters battling to extinguish the blaze.
Police said 21 people were injured, with medics reporting at least two hurt seriously. Police were investigating whether any of the wounded were behind the bombing. Authorities initially said most of them were passengers on the second bus, though conflicting information later emerged.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said "we'll find whoever prepared this explosive device." "We'll reach the dispatchers and those behind them. We'll settle the score with these terrorists. We're in an ongoing struggle against terror, knife terror, shooting terror, bombs, rockets and tunnel terror."
The Palestinian Islamist group Hamas, which rules the
Israeli-blockaded Gaza Strip, welcomed the attack as "a natural response
to Zionist crimes", but there was no claim of responsibility for the
bombing.
SECURITY IMPLICATIONS
The blast struck in an area of the city without any major
buildings or homes and which is not heavily used by pedestrians. The
location was on Moshe Baram Street close to the so-called Green Line
dividing mainly Jewish west Jerusalem from predominately Palestinian
east Jerusalem.
Jerusalem Mayor Nir Barkat called on residents to be
vigilant, "but continue with your plans." "Here in Jerusalem and in
Israel, we go back to normal life as fast as possible," he said.
"It's part of the deep understanding that if it's a terror
attack, they want to deter us from our normal life, and what we must
do... is go back to normal life as fast as possible."
Israeli President Reuven Rivlin said that on a day
"frightened citizens returning from their daily routine are being rushed
to hospital - it is clear to us all, that the struggle against
terrorism is ceaseless." "We will pursue and we will reach all those who
wish us harm, until quiet is assured," he said in a statement.
The explosion comes with tensions high following a wave of
violence that began in October that has killed 201 Palestinians and 28
Israelis. Most of the Palestinians killed were carrying out knife, gun
or car-ramming attacks, according to Israeli authorities.
A bus bombing would mark a significant escalation in the
violence. The last bomb targeting a bus in Jerusalem dates back to 2011,
killing a British tourist.
In Tel Aviv, a bomb exploded on an empty bus in 2013 in what
Israeli authorities called a "terrorist" attack. Suicide bombings were
frequent during the second Palestinian intifada between 2000-2005.
Speaking before the bomb was confirmed, police spokesman
Micky Rosenfeld said "if it was a terrorist attack, the implications are
very great in terms of security on the ground".
Attacks have steadily declined in recent weeks, though there
have been concerns that the Passover holiday beginning April 22 could
lead to a new surge in violence.
Many analysts say Palestinian frustration with Israeli
occupation and settlement building in the West Bank, the complete lack
of progress in peace efforts and their own fractured leadership have fed
the recent unrest.
Israel blames incitement by Palestinian leaders and media as a main cause of the violence.
- AFP/rw/de
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