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| Explosion kills at least one, injures at least 20, Israeli radio reports
Blast follows Israeli killing of 4 Palestinians
CNN Correspondents Mike Hanna, Jerrold Kessel, Tom Mintier and James Martone contributed to this report. HADERA, Israel (CNN) -- An explosion took place in a car in a northern Israeli town on Wednesday, killing at least one person and wounding at least 25, according to Israeli radio. Witnesses said a bus was badly damaged in the blast, which took place in rush-hour traffic on a main street of Hadera, north of Tel Aviv. Heavy black smoke was rising from the site after the blast, the radio said, hindering rescue efforts.
No official confirmation of the casualties was available, but some police sources said the blast could have been a car bomb. The blast came hours after Israeli forces opened fire on two cars driving near a Jewish settlement in southern Gaza, killing four Palestinians -- including a Fatah official -- and sparking a dispute over how the incident began. The Israelis said the vehicles were occupied by militiamen tied to Palestinian Authority President Yasser Arafat's Fatah movement. The Israelis said the vehicles tried to burst through an Israeli roadblock near the Morag settlement at a high speed. But the Palestinians said the occupants were innocent, unarmed civilians. "Israeli tanks opened fire on two Palestinian civilian vehicles," said a Palestinian police officer at the scene. "We are talking about four Palestinians killed and we are still checking for others." The Palestinians said a fifth man was wounded and arrested, but the Israelis said they knew nothing of a fifth man. Mohammed Dahlan, the Palestinian security chief in the area, called the incident a barbaric act, but the Israelis disputed the contention that the dead Palestinians were unarmed and said that the roadblock had been set up to stop Palestinian gunmen. Palestinian militants claim attack on Israeli civilianWednesday's incident came as a radical Palestinian group claimed responsibility for an attack in Gaza that wounded an Israeli civilian Tuesday.
"A unit of our Omar al-Mukhtar forces attacked a military enemy post near Kfar Darom settlement in Gaza," said a statement by Fatah al-Assifa. "They lobbed a bomb at the enemy position and followed it by machine gun fire." The Israeli army said on Tuesday that Palestinian gunmen shot an Israeli civilian in the head as he was traveling in a convoy in Gaza while Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Barak was visiting a military base nearby. The Damascus-based Fatah al-Assifa, also known as Fatah Uprising, is a splinter group opposed to Arafat's main Fatah faction. As gunfire echoed overnight in the West Bank and Gaza, some in Israel compared the conflict's similarity to the guerrilla attacks that Israeli soldiers faced in southern Lebanon before ending a 22-year occupation in May. "All the things that characterized Lebanon have now reached the Gaza Strip," Israeli Army Radio said. The latest fatalities bring to more than 270 the number of people killed in almost two months of Israeli-Palestinian violence. All but a handful of those killed have been Palestinian or Israeli Arabs. U.S. defense chief in regionThe tank attack on Wednesday came as Arafat held talks in Cairo with Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak. Arafat thanked the Egyptians for their decision on Tuesday to recall their ambassador to Israel, Mohammed Bassiouny. Prime Minister Ali Abu-Ragheb of Jordan, the only other Arab country with diplomatic ties to Israel, announced on Tuesday that its new ambassador to Israel would not present his credentials "until Israel ends its attacks." Following his meeting with Arafat, Mubarak met with U.S. Defense Secretary William Cohen, who then traveled to Israel for talks with Barak. "All lives are precious in the eyes of the United States," Cohen said in an interview on Egyptian television. "We want to see a stop to the violence on both sides." He said he hoped Egypt would send its ambassador back to Tel Aviv as soon as possible. The United States has urged Egypt to stay engaged with Israel, saying its help is needed to restore calm after eight weeks of Israeli-Palestinian fighting. RELATED STORIES: Two Israelis dead, 9 injured in Gaza bombing RELATED SITES: Palestinian National Authority | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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