2002 Hadera attack
Bat Mitzvah massacre | |
---|---|
Part of the Second Intifada militancy campaign | |
Location | Hadera, Israel |
Date | January 17, 2002 9:45 pm (GMT+2) |
Attack type | Mass shooting, massacre, murder-suicide, suicide bombing |
Weapons | M16 assault rifle |
Deaths | 7 (including the perpetrator) |
Injured | 33 |
Perpetrator | Abdul Salaam Sadek Hassouneh (al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigades claimed responsibility) |
The Bat Mitzvah massacre was a terrorist attack in Hadera, Israel on Thursday January 17, 2002, in which a Palestinian gunman, 24-year-old Abdul Salaam Sadek Hassouneh, killed six people and wounded 33 at a Bat Mitzvah celebration, a traditional Jewish celebration held for a 12-year-old girl.[1]
The attack
The attack took place at 9:45 pm (GMT+2) as guests were departing.[2] The al-Aqsa Martyrs' Brigades assumed responsibility for the attack, claiming it was vengeance for the killing of its leader Raed Karmi. An Israeli police spokesman said the man, apparently on a suicide mission, had thrown several grenades into the Armon David wedding hall, where the Bat Mitzvah celebration had taken place, and detonated explosives on himself. A belt filled with explosives was found on the attacker.[1]
Victims
- Boris Melikhov, 56, of Sderot[3]
- Aharon Ellis, 32, of Ra'anana[3]
- Anatoly Bakshiev, 62, of Or Akiva[3]
- Avi Yazdi, 24, of Or Akiva[3]
- Edward Bakshayev, 48, of Or Akiva[3]
- Dina Binayev, 48, of Ashkelon[3]
Media coverage
The Al Jazeera television network was criticized for bias in coverage of the massacre, failing to note that the victims were attending a bat mitzvah and that the gunman crashed the event at a crowded banquet hall, and failing to mention the number of people killed by Raed Karmi when covering his assassination several days earlier, which would have provided context for the story.[4]
The perpetrators
The al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigades said the attacker, 24-year-old Abdel Salam Hassouna, was from a village near Nablus and launched the attack to avenge the death of Raed Karmi.[1]
After the attack a video made earlier by the attacker was released, in which he is seen declaring: "I am doing this to avenge all the Palestinian martyrs."[4]
Official reactions
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- Involved parties
Israel
Palestinian territories:
- The Palestinian Authority condemned the attack but blamed Israel for provoking it.[2]
- International
- United States: the US government condemned the Hadera attack "in the strongest possible terms," calling it a "horrific act of terrorism."[2]
See also
References
- ^ a b c Bat mitzvah massacre in Israel leaves seven dead, Phil Reeves, 18 January 2002
- ^ a b c Gunman kills 6 Israelis; jets fire missiles in response, January 18, 2002. CNN
- ^ a b c d e f http://old.btselem.org/statistics/english/Casualties_Data.asp?Category=6®ion=ISRAEL&sD=29&sM=09&sY=2000&eD=26&eM=12&eY=2008&filterby=event&oferet_stat=before
- ^ a b Perspectives on war. Hickey, Neil, Columbia Journalism Review, March 1, 2002
External links
- Seven killed in attack in Israel - published on BBC News on January 18, 2002
- Seven Suicide terrorist kills 6 at Bat Mitzvah in Israel - published on the New York Post on January 18, 2002
- Attacks in 2002
- Spree shootings in Israel
- Israeli casualties in the Second Intifada
- Terrorist incidents in Israel in 2002
- Massacres in Israel
- Mass murder in 2002
- Massacres in Israel during the Israeli–Palestinian conflict
- Terrorist attacks attributed to Palestinian militant groups
- Palestinian terrorism
- Fatah
- Mass shootings in Israel
- Suicide bombing in the Israeli–Palestinian conflict
- Deaths by firearm in Israel
- Hadera