From CNN.com:

Blast in Jerusalem kills 1 Israeli, injures 110

JERUSALEM (CNN) --An Israeli man was killed and more than 110 people were 
injured in a Palestinian bombing attack midday Sunday in the center of west 
Jerusalem. It was the second attack in the same area in less than a week.

Israeli police said a woman's body was found at the scene, and they are 
working under the assumption that she was responsible for the bombing. They 
said it was not clear whether she was a suicide bomber or she was planting 
a bomb that
prematurely detonated.

The Palestinian Authority leadership said it strongly condemned the attack, 
but Israeli officials laid the blame on Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat.

"The Palestinian people and the Palestinian leadership have reached a 
moment of truth, and they have to make a decision," said Ranaan Gissin, a 
spokesman for Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon. "We are not going to 
allow ourselves to continue to be victims of this terrorist campaign."

The blast, which coincided with the beginning of the Israeli workweek, 
occurred near Jaffa and King George streets, a busy commercial strip where 
a Palestinian gunman went on a shooting spree last week, killing two women 
and injuring more than a dozen people before police shot him dead.

Jaffa Street is also close to the Sbarro pizza restaurant where a suicide 
bomber killed 15 people last year.

Emergency services raced to the scene, treated people there and carried 
them away to hospitals. Explosives reportedly were still attached to the 
body of the bomber.

Police are looking into whether there was an accomplice in the attack.


Revenge cited

Israel has mounted a sustained clampdown on the Palestinian Authority since 
a January 17 attack at a bat mitzvah gathering in Hadera that killed six 
Israelis. The Al Aqsa Martyrs Brigades, an arm of Arafat's Fatah movement, 
claimed responsibility for the Hadera attack and for a shooting rampage 
Tuesday in Jerusalem that killed two people.

The group said their attacks came in revenge for the January 14 killing of 
Fatah leader Raed al-Karmi and for the deaths of four Hamas activists who 
were killed Tuesday in an Israeli raid in the West Bank town of Nablus.

Karmi was on Israel's most-wanted list for taking responsibility for the 
deaths last year of two Tel Aviv restaurant owners. Israeli authorities 
also accused him of being involved in the deaths of eight other Israelis.

Attacks on Israelis had abated briefly following Arafat's call for a 
cease-fire December 16, which followed a rash of suicide attacks on Israeli 
civilians.

In Washington, the Bush administration is mulling options in its 
relationship with Arafat.

Government officials said Saturday they would not be sending Mideast envoy 
Anthony Zinni back to the region at this time. Zinni has been trying to 
broker a cease-fire and cooling-off period between the Israelis and 
Palestinians.

One source said Arafat telephone U.S. Secretary of State Colin Powell last 
week and urged him to send Zinni, a retired Marine general, back to the 
region to help restore calm.

"But Powell told Arafat, 'You have a lot of things to do on security, and 
you better act quickly,' " one official said. "Without some action there is 
no envoy, there is no U.S. engagement."

Bush administration officials said they are focusing on the issue of "what 
Arafat needs to do" to end terrorism and "clear the way for peace," making 
it clear that they are not considering sending Zinni to the troubled region 
at present.

"Arafat knows what he needs to do," said an official with the National 
Security Council.


Bush administration options

Several senior officials said the administration's next move will hinge on 
what steps Arafat takes to improve the security situation.

Among the options are:

-- Breaking off U.S. relations with the Palestinian Authority.  [Hmm.  Does 
having "relations" with them mean the US has recognized the PA as a "country"?]

-- Adding Arafat's personal security force and other Palestinian groups to 
the U.S. list of terrorist groups.

-- Closing the Palestinian Authority's Washington office.

-- Ending or suspending Zinni's work.

U.S. officials said President Bush finds himself in a vexing position: 
cutting ties or imposing sanctions on the Palestinian Authority could cause 
a ripple effect in the Arab world and likely end any hopes of getting the 
Mideast peace process back on track in the near future.

CNN's Jerrold Kessel and Rula Amin contributed to this report

Find this article at:
<http://www.cnn.com/2002/WORLD/meast/01/27/mideast.accuse/index.html>

Reply via email to