Suicide bomber kills 3 in Tel Aviv (Agencies) Updated: 2004-11-02 08:49
A 16-year-old Palestinian laden with explosives blew himself up Monday in a
crowded outdoor market in Tel Aviv, killing three Israelis, wounding 32 and
scattering body parts and blood-spattered vegetables on the ground. The bomber's
mother said the militants who dispatched him were "immoral."
The attack tested Israel's promise to show restraint during the absence of
the ailing Yasser Arafat. Palestinian leaders — including Arafat — immediately
condemned the attack, the first since a Sept. 22 bombing in Jerusalem.
![An injured woman receives first aid at the scene after an explosion in Tel Aviv November 1, 2004. An explosion rocked an open-air market in Tel Aviv on Monday, causing many casualties, the Magen David Adom ambulance service said. [Reuters]](xin_41110102085067622461.jpg) An injured woman
receives first aid at the scene after an explosion in Tel Aviv November 1,
2004. An explosion rocked an open-air market in Tel Aviv on Monday,
causing many casualties, the Magen David Adom ambulance service said.
[Reuters] | From a military hospital near Paris,
the 75-year-old Arafat "appealed to all Palestinian factions to commit to avoid
harming all Israeli civilians and he appealed to (Israeli Prime Minister Ariel)
Sharon to take similar initiatives to avoid harming Palestinian civilians,"
Arafat's spokesman Nabil Abu Rdeneh said.
The blast occurred shortly before noon when the suicide attacker detonated an
11-pound bomb in the Carmel market, ripping apart a dairy store, damaging a
vegetable stall and sending screaming shoppers running.
"The explosion was huge, there was fire and smoke ... it knocked me over,"
said David Hayu, who owns a nearby butcher shop. "No one knew what to do. People
were looking for their sons, their daughters, their husbands and wives."
![A family hand-out photograph shows Palestinian suicide bomber Aamer Alfar who blew hemself up in Tel Aviv, November 1, 2004. The Palestinian suicide bomber hit a bustling open-air market on Monday, killing three people in a show of force by militants three days after Yasser Arafat was airlifted to France for urgent medical treatment. [Reuters]](xin_411101020850848319142.jpg) A family hand-out photograph shows Palestinian
suicide bomber Aamer Alfar who blew hemself up in Tel Aviv, November 1,
2004. The Palestinian suicide bomber hit a bustling open-air market on
Monday, killing three people in a show of force by militants three days
after Yasser Arafat was airlifted to France for urgent medical treatment.
[Reuters] | The blast ripped off the dairy store's
sign, covering it with blood and leaving loose wire dangling out of the wall.
Lettuce and parsley splattered with blood were strewn on the pavement, along
with spices and packages of children's socks.
Paramedics wheeled away bodies in black plastic bags. Rescue workers scoured
the pavement and dug through piles of cheese and spices in search of body parts.
The attack was the 117th suicide bombing since the outbreak of
Israeli-Palestinian fighting in 2000 and was the first since Arafat left for
France, where he has been treated since Friday for an unknown disease. In all,
494 Israelis have been killed in such attacks.
The Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, a PLO faction, claimed
responsibility, identifying the assailant as Eli Amer Alfar, from the Askar
refugee camp near the West Bank city of Nablus.
Alfar was among the youngest Palestinian suicide bombers _only one other was
as young as 16 — and his parents lashed out at the militants who recruited him.
"It's immoral to send someone so young," said Samir Abdullah, 45, Alfar's
mother. "They should have sent an adult who understands the meaning of his
deeds."
Abdel Rahim, 53, Alfar's father, said his son woke him up Monday and asked
for two shekels — 50 cents.
"Two shekels, that's what boys ask for — it's not money for men," he said.
"He kissed me on the cheek and hand and left, and I went back to sleep."
The other 16-year-old blew himself up at an army checkpoint on Nov. 3,
wounding a soldier.
Frustrated by Israeli security measures that have greatly reduced their
effectiveness, militant groups have turned to using woman and teenagers to
transport explosives and carry out attacks, hoping they would raise less
suspicion at the dozens of Israeli checkpoints designed to capture bombers and
other militants.
Also, Israelis say the contentious barrier they are building along the West
Bank, which is one-third completed, has significantly reduced the bombings by
making it harder to infiltrate from the West Bank into Israel.
However, use of children and teenagers has evoked criticism among
Palestinians of the militant groups — harsh words that were rarely heard in the
first three years of the current conflict, when Palestinians presented a united
front, celebrating and passing out candies when relatives blew themselves up in
Israel.
Monday's blast came at a time of growing concern about instability during
Arafat's absence. Militants appeared to be signaling they are in charge, not
Arafat's stand-ins, who have been trying to convey a sense of normalcy in
Palestinian politics.
After the bombing, Sharon said Israel "will not stop its war against
terrorism" and reiterated his commitment to disengage from the Palestinians.
"I'm not changing my policy until there are changes in the Palestinian
administration and until it stops its incitement and its terror," Sharon said.
But there were few signs Israel was gearing up for a major retaliation, with
none of the hurried meetings of top security officials or the heated rhetoric
that usually precedes such a raid. Instead Israel called on the Palestinians to
fight the violence.
"We want to see a Palestinian leadership, no matter who is in control over
there, we want to see them fighting terror," said David Saranga, a foreign
ministry spokesman.
Soon after the attack, Israeli soldiers shot and killed a 12-year-old
Palestinian boy in Askar who was throwing stones at an Israeli patrol, doctors
said. The army said it was unaware of the incident.
In Nablus, Israeli troops shot dead three activists who were wanted by the
Israeli security forces, Palestinian medical officials said. An army spokeswoman
said that during an attempt to arrest five suspects of the Fatah-linked Al Aqsa
Martyrs' Brigades, the wanted men drew pistols and the soldiers opened fire,
killing three men and wounding one.
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