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CNN Live At Daybreak

Suicide Bomber Kills Seven in Israel As Cease Fire Plans Continue

Aired March 20, 2002 - 05:07   ET

THIS IS A RUSH TRANSCRIPT. THIS COPY MAY NOT BE IN ITS FINAL FORM AND MAY BE UPDATED.


THIS IS A RUSH TRANSCRIPT. THIS COPY MAY NOT BE IN ITS FINAL FORM AND MAY BE UPDATED.
CAROL COSTELLO, CNN ANCHOR: Now it's time to head live to the Middle East, where at least five people are dead after a suicide bomber blew up the bus in northern Israel. The new violence comes as Israeli and Palestinian officials are working towards a cease-fire.

CNN Jerusalem Bureau Chief Mike Hanna joins us live with the latest -- Mike.

MIKE HANNA, CNN JERUSALEM BUREAU CHIEF: Carol, in the last few minutes, Israeli police have confirmed that that death toll has risen to seven. Seven Israelis killed in an explosion on a bus that was traveling between Tel Aviv towards Nazareth in the north. According to eyewitnesses, a man got on the bus near the town of Afullah (ph) and detonated an explosive device. The seven Israelis killed. Also dead, the man, the suicide bomber himself.

As many as 30 people were injured in the attack. Ambulance officials say that at least 10 of them are in a serious condition.

The Islamic Jihad organization, a radical group, has claimed responsibility for the terror attack, identifying the suicide bombing as a 20-year-old from a village near the West Bank city of Jenin.

The Palestinian Authority has condemned the attack in a statement. Israel, too, has condemned the attack, but a spokesman for the Israeli government says it's evidence that the Palestinian Authority is not meeting its commitment to end all terror attacks against Israeli targets.

Despite the attack, it is reported that a preplanned cease-fire meeting between security chiefs from the two sides is going ahead today. This meeting had been planned in recent days and is being chaired by the special U.S. envoy Anthony Zinni. But the latest attack obviously putting immense strain and pressure on the cease-fire process, a process that has been taking place in a series of meetings between Israelis and Palestinians in recent days, the intention to implement a cease-fire plan drawn up by CIA Director George Tenet.

But this whole cease-fire move in jeopardy with yet another attack on Israeli civilians -- Carol.

COSTELLO: I guess, Mike, it brings up that old question, can Yasser Arafat control the suicide bombers? HANNA: Yes, that is the question. The organization that has claimed responsibility, Islamic Jihad, is like another radical organization, Hamas, completely opposed to the peace process and completely opposed to the cease-fire talks that are going on at present. So they have been enemies of the peace process and theoretically of Yasser Arafat and his Fatah movement through a long period of time.

However, Israel is adamant that there is a causal connection between Yasser Arafat's Palestinian Authority and these ongoing suicide attacks regardless of what group claims responsibility for it. This denied by the Palestinian Authority itself.

But certainly it does raise into question whether Yasser Arafat can meet his commitments in terms of any cease-fire plan. Among those commitments, to clamp down on militants and to stop terror attacks and the planning of terror attacks against Israeli targets.

COSTELLO: As they say, we'll see.

Thank you.

Mike Hanna reporting live for us this morning.

We've got much more on the suicide bombing on our Web site plus in depth reporting on the crisis in the Mideast. And you can find us at CNN.com. It's easy. The AOL Keyword, of course, is CNN.

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