At least seven killed in explosion near bus stop in Jerusalem

EDITOR’S NOTE This story was submitted to Israeli military censures as required by the government, and deletions were made.


JERUSALEM A suicide bomber sprang from a car, slipped past a pair of policemen and blew himself up at a busy Jerusalem intersection Wednesday, killing at least six other people in the second deadly attack in the city in two days.

Israel responded about three hours later with helicopter rocket attacks on metal workshops in the Gaza Strip used to manufacture weapons for Palestinian militants. Thirteen Palestinians were hurt, two seriously, Palestinian doctors said. A group tied to Yasser Arafat’s Faith faction claimed responsibility.

Earlier Wednesday, Israel said it would reoccupy Palestinian territory in retaliation for terror attacks, and troops moved into three West Bank towns.

In Washington, President Bush decided to hold off revealing his plan for a future Palestinian state. Administration officials said an announcement at this sensitive time would be unlikely to have a positive effect. Aides said the announcement may be delayed until next week.

A trip to the Middle East next week by Secretary of State Colin Power also was put on hold, though it remained under consideration. Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon adamantly opposes any form of Palestinian statehood at this time, and blames Arafat for failing to stop the attacks.

In one of his strongest condemnations ever, Pope John Paul II decried Tuesday’s attack, saying “those who plot and plan such barbarous attacks will have to answer before God.”

More than 50 prominent Palestinians signed a full-page newspaper ad in al Quds news urging groups behind deadly assaults on Israeli civilians to “stop sending our young people to carry out such attacks.”

On Wednesday, the bomber emerged from a red Audi and dashed toward a concrete bus stop shelter, which is also used as a hitchhiking post. The intersection has been targeted by assailants in the past and was heavily guarded.

But the attacker made it past a pair of border policemen.

“The police chased him to try to stop him, and when he got to the (bus stop), he blew up a large device,” said Jerusalem Police Chief Mickey Levy.

One policeman chasing the bomber was badly hurt, Levy said. More than 35 people were wounded, many of them seriously.

Body parts and shattered glass littered the street, and religious volunteers propped a ladder against a stone wall and picked through the shrubbery for bits of human remains.

An overturned baby carriage was covered with black plastic by rescue workers. Government spokesman Danny Seaman said a baby wasn’t among the dead, but one had been rushed to a hospital.

The Al Aqsa Martyrs Brigades claimed responsibility for the bombing, according to Al Manner television station run out of Lebanon by the militant Islamic group Hezbollah.

The newspaper ad, whose signers included legislator Hanna Ashram and the Palestinians’ senior Jerusalem official, Sari Nusseibeh, said: “We see no results in such attacks, but a deepening of the hatred between both peoples and a deepening of the gap between us.”

The ad urged all Palestinians who support such a call to sign on. Polls consistently have found the majority of Palestinians support suicide bombings, but less strongly since Israel’s recent six-week military campaign in the West Bank.

That shift hasn’t gone unnoticed.

“I have begun to discern developments on the Palestinian side that they are, for the first time, doing some soul-searching about ‘What have we done? What have we achieved?”‘ Israeli Defense Minister Binyamin Ben-Eliezer told Jewish delegates to an annual Zionist Congress in Jerusalem.

Israeli troops, meanwhile, fortified their positions in the northern West Bank, suggesting plans for an extended stay. The move came after the government announced it was prepared to reoccupy Palestinian areas in response to attacks. Tuesday’s bombing on a Jerusalem bus killed 19 people, the worst in Jerusalem in six years.

Hamas claimed responsibility for Tuesday’s blast in a leaflet saying it was prepared for a prolonged offensive against Israel that it called “the war of the buses.” Hamas, based in Gaza, boasted it had dozens of suicide bombers waiting to strike.

Hamas spokesman Ismail Abu Shanab said shortly before Wednesday’s blast that in light of Sharon’s plans to reoccupy Palestinian land, more suicide bombings were on the way.

“I can guarantee that, and I say he will create the best atmosphere for resistance,” Abu Shanab said.

The Palestinian leadership condemned the attack Wednesday, but Israel again held Arafat responsible.

“We will of course take whatever action necessary in order to continue to protect the citizens of Israel,” Israeli government spokesman Arieh Mekel said.

Israel says Arafat is responsible because his security forces have not prevented the attacks, and has retaliated by targeting Arafat’s offices, as well as other buildings used by the Palestinian government and security forces.

Palestinian Cabinet secretary Ahmed Abdul Rahman condemned Wednesday’s attack, as the Palestinian Authority routinely does with such bombings. But he said Israel’s occupation of Palestinian land was the underlying cause of the violence.

“We all denounce any operation against civilians if they are Palestinians or Israelis but the Israeli government should ask itself about what they are doing today … and their decision to reoccupy our cities,” he said.

In a sign of the army’s longer-term intentions, seven mobile homes were brought in on flatbed trucks and set up Wednesday in a forest just outside the West Bank’s Jenin refugee camp, where Israeli forces parked fuel and water trucks.

Hundreds of soldiers moved house-to-house in the camp, searching for Palestinian gunmen and fugitives. The center of the camp was gutted in April during Israel’s military campaign aimed at wiping out the gunmen.

About 10 busloads of Palestinian men were rounded up and driven, blindfolded and handcuffed, toward a military base west of the city, Palestinian security officials and witnesses said.

Soldiers also occupied Qalqiliya, placing the West Bank town under curfew.

Jibril Rajoub, the Palestinians’ West Bank security chief, said the Palestinians cannot cooperate with Israel to arrest those behind suicide attacks.

“As long as the Israelis are continuing their invasion using their tanks, F-16s and Apaches (attack helicopters) there will be no arrests of any Palestinian,” Rajoub told The Associated Press from Egypt, where he was holding meetings.