For 1st time since August, Israel sees no victim deaths from terrorist attacks

Of the 115 attacks documented, 91 involved firebombs.

Border Police officers secure the scene of the terror attack on Dizengoff Street, Tel Aviv, by Nashat Milhem, in which two people were killed, January 1 (photo credit: REUTERS)
Border Police officers secure the scene of the terror attack on Dizengoff Street, Tel Aviv, by Nashat Milhem, in which two people were killed, January 1
(photo credit: REUTERS)
April was the first month in half a year with zero fatalities among victims of terrorist attacks against Israelis.
With a total of 115 attacks, the figure for April continued a six-month downward trend in the number of incidents in Israeli-controlled areas and is the lowest monthly total recorded since July, when 103 attacks were observed, according to a report published earlier this week by the Israel Security Agency, or Shin Bet.
Of the 18 victims who were wounded in terrorist attacks against Israelis in April, 16 were injured in an explosion set off on a bus in Jerusalem on April 18. Another victim was stabbed in Rosh Ha’ain on April 3 and a police officer was wounded from a firebomb hurled at him near Jerusalem that same day.
Of the 115 attacks documented, 91 involved firebombs.
Approximately 30 victims of terrorist attacks lost their lives in attacks since August and hundreds were wounded. Approximately 200 Palestinians were also killed since then, most of them while carrying out attacks or in riots.
In Israel and the West Bank, attacks began increasing in August, when 171 of them were documented, and rose sharply in September and October, with 223 and 620 attacks recorded in those months respectively. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in October called the escalation “a terror wave,” whereas many in the Israeli and Palestinian media dubbed it “the third intifada,” or “the knife intifada.”
But the overall number of attacks decreased to 326 in November, 246 in December, 169 in January, 155 in February and 123 in March.