RSS | Advertise With Us | Blogs | Judaica Gifts |  4 Kislev 5770, Saturday, November 21, 2009 11:10 IST |
WebJPost.com 
Subscribe! Judaica Gifts
RSS Feeds E-mail Edition
HomeHeadlinesIranian ThreatJewish WorldOpinionBusinessReal EstateLocal IsraelBlogsArts & Culture Français Classifieds
IsraelMiddle EastInternationalHealth & Sci-TechFeaturesTravelCafe OlehMagazineSportsIsrael GuideSubscribe
Specials
Eldan Rent a Car
Israel's leading car rental company offers a 20% discount on online reservations
Israeli Basketball
Watch Live Israeli Premier Basketball Games
Jerusalem Post Lite
Light Edition of the Jerusalem Post for English improvement
Desert lodging & activity
Tents, camping & cabins, various activities and meals in the Negev
The Best Jewish Charity
Learn how Efrat saved 30,000 lives of Jewish children
Tamir Rent a car
Car rental in Israel, special prices
ג'רוזלם פוסט לייט
עיתון חדשות באנגלית קלה התורם לשיפור השפה האנגלית
Tour guides in Israel
Choose you’re your tour guide in Israel
Israel guide
Your guide to Israel
Green Israel
Protecting Israel's environment
ג'רוזלם פוסט לייט
עיתון חדשות באנגלית קלה התורם לשיפור השפה האנגלית


Middle East & Israel Breaking News » Israel » Article
DAVID HOROVITZ DAVID HOROVITZ

Another attack from 'within'


PrintSubscribe
Toolbar
+ Recommend:
facebook twitter del.icio.us reddit fark
What's this?

Decrease text size Decrease text size
Increase text size Increase text size

Jerusalem's central Jaffa Road artery is a building site these days - reduced to barely two lanes as the infrastructure is laid for the much-anticipated light-rail system. Tractors and bulldozers routinely ply the route past Jerusalem Capital Studios toward the Mahane Yehuda open-air market.

A wounded baby is carried by...

A wounded baby is carried by a medic from the scene of the bulldozer attack in Jerusalem.
Photo: AP

But the driver who maneuvered his massive yellow Caterpillar tractor along that same stretch of road at noon on Wednesday had devastation, not construction, on his mind.

According to a young, bearded eyewitness, pale and shaking in one of the cafes that line the street, the driver ploughed down the road, crushing cars indiscriminately and flipped an Egged bus onto its right-hand side, in a swathe of destruction two hundred or more meters long.

Initially, it was suggested that the driver, soon identified as an east Jerusalem resident employed by a local construction firm, might have lost control of his vehicle and accidentally caused the bloodshed and chaos. But Yoni Ben-Menachem, the Israeli Radio chief who was in his car when the tractor sped toward him, quickly laid that theory to rest, recounting that he had made eye contact with the driver, who was calm, focused and knew exactly what he was doing. Ben-Menachem swerved onto the sidewalk to safety.

Minutes after the driver was finally shot dead by security officials after a struggle in the tractor's cab, Jaffa Road had become a combined building site and terror-attack-zone.

From the second, third and higher floors of the television studio buildings overlooking the terror route, camera crews filmed the ambulances converging, the victims being stretchered away, and the police gradually sealing off the long, long path of wreckage.

Husam Taysir Dwayat, the...

Husam Taysir Dwayat, the terrorist who perpetrated the first bulldozer terror attack in Jerusalem on July 2.
Photo: AP

Several cars lay turned on their sides, or smashed. Helicopters clattered overhead. A uniformed woman with a bomb-detector dog on a leash walked along the lowered light-rail route alongside the road, checking that no explosive devices had been planted to coincide with the attack.

A mother, her head covered in a floral scarf, appealed frantically to a policewoman to let her through because her daughter was shopping in Mahane Yehuda. Ambulances wailed in the distance, struggling to get through the halted traffic clogging the surrounding streets. And hundreds of onlookers, many of them young yeshiva students in white shirts and black kippot, thronged behind the police tape.

The security barrier has dramatically reduced the incidence of attacks inside Israel by West Bank Palestinians in recent years. But three months ago, in the last major terror attack in the capital, an east Jerusalem resident killed eight students in a nighttime attack at the Mercaz Harav Yeshiva. On Wednesday, Jerusalem's vulnerability to attacks from "within" - by a perpetrator with the residency rights to move freely around the city - was murderously demonstrated.

RATE THIS ARTICLE
PrintSubscribe
Toolbar
+ Recommend:
facebook twitter del.icio.us reddit fark
What's this?
Post comment | Terms | Report Abuse
Most Original
Ulpan Aviv
Dove Sderot
Nefesh B'eNefesh
Kadish
eTeacher
JWStore
Philanthropy Guide
Hertz
JWStore
Bank hapoalim
KKL Picture of the week
Got a Question?
Have a question about something in this story? Ask it here and get answers from other users like you.

 
 
 
© 1995 - 2009 The Jerusalem Post. All rights reserved.    About Us | Media Kit | Exclusive Content | Advertise with Us | Subscribe | Contact Us | RSS
The online edition of The Jerusalem Post – JPost.com – provides first class news and analysis about Israel, the Middle East and the Jewish world. Whether news about Iran, Gaza, Syria, Fatah, Hamas or Hezbollah, JPost.com covers the burning issues of the Middle East and the Israeli-Arab conflict.