Jerusalem – Few Answers Emerge 24 Hours After Jerusalem Bus Bombing

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    Israeli rescue workers stand next to a burnt bus in Jerusalem, Monday, April 18, 2016. A bus exploded in the heart of Jerusalem Monday, wounding at least 15 people who appeared to have been in an adjacent bus that was also damaged and raising fears of a return to the Palestinian suicide attacks that ravaged Israeli cities a decade ago. Police officials initially called the blast a terrorist attack, but later said all options are being examined. (AP Photo/Oded Balilty)Jerusalem – One day after a bomb incinerated an Egged bus in Jerusalem, wounding 21 people, a police gag order amid an ongoing joint investigation with the Shin Bet (Israel Security Agency) has resulted in few details emerging Tuesday about who is responsible for the explosion.

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    The No. 12 bus burst into flames during rush hour traffic on Moshe Baram Street, a major thoroughfare in Talpiot’s industrial area in the southern portion of the capital, resulting in an inferno that engulfed a second empty Egged bus and car.

    Despite the powerful impact of the blast, no one was killed in the inferno. A forensics team subsequently found the remains of a bomb at the site.

    The victims, one of whom remains in critical condition, were treated at the scene by Magen David Adom and United Hatzalah paramedics and rushed to Hadassah University Medical Center in Ein Kerem and Mount Scopus, as well as Shaare Zedek Medical Center.

    According to hospital officials, one male victim, who lost multiple limbs in the explosion, remains in critical condition, two victims remain in serious condition, five are in moderate condition, and the remaining 13 have either been discharged or are in light condition.

    Police would not confirm multiple reports in the Israeli media that the man in critical condition was a suicide bomber. The bus’s driver, Moshe Levi, told Israel Hayom that there was nothing unusual in the minutes preceding the explosion. “Everything was fine,” he said. “I was in a traffic jam on Moshe Baram Street, and then suddenly a large explosion rocked the back of the bus. I opened the doors and shouted at everyone to run away.”

    Levi, who was not physically wounded, was treated at Shaare Zedek Medical Center for shock before being discharged.

    Rachel Dadon, who was on the bus with her 15-year-old daughter Eden, said they heard a loud explosion before the bus’s windows shattered and the inside was enveloped in smoke and fire.

    “I looked for my daughter and I saw her burnt,” said the elder Dadon, who sustained light wounds. “I pray that she makes it through,” she added of her daughter, who was seriously wounded and remains hospitalized.
     Israeli security officials search the remains of a burnt out bus following an explosion in Jerusalem, Israel, 18 April 2016.EPA
    On Tuesday, police spokesman Micky Rosenfeld said that although all indications point to a terrorist attack, police are still gathering evidence and investigating the series of events that led to the explosion before making a final determination. “The police and Shin Bet investigation is continuing, and we’re looking into a number of directions, but our main emphasis is to understand what took place, and whether the bomb was planted on the bus or carried by a passenger,” said Rosenfeld.

    “We’re continuing to interview witnesses and continue to implement heightened security throughout Jerusalem, with extra units deployed to public areas across the city to prevent further attacks.”

    Comparing Monday’s explosion to the many bombs that were discharged on buses during the second intifada, former Shin Bet head Avi Dichter said during an interview with Army Radio that “the explosive charge was much lower” than those used between the 2000-2005 uprising.

    Adding confusion to the investigation is that no terrorist group has claimed responsibility for the attack, leading police to believe the suspect may have acted independently. Such a scenario fits the profile of the six-month terror wave, primarily carried out by lone assailants.

    Still, Hamas and Islamic Jihad, respectively, praised the attack as a “welcome development” and “natural response to the crimes of the Zionist occupation.”

    Further exacerbating tensions with incitement, Hamas falsely reinforced the patently false allegation that the violence is due to Israel’s purported plans to take over al-Aksa Mosque on the Temple Mount.

    In the meantime, the Jerusalem Municipality said on Tuesday that this week’s attack will not alter plans for the tens of thousands of Jewish visitors expected to visit the Old City for Passover, which begins Friday night.

    Rosenfeld added that security assessments for the holiday are continuing, and will be far-reaching to ensure the safety of all visitors to the capital.


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    Logical_Abe
    Logical_Abe
    8 years ago

    Why only few answers? Can’t the police grab some Religious Zionists off the streets and torture them to confess in the bombing as they always do?