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Bus attack kills at least 8 Israelis

Civilians and military were at the bus stop
Civilians and military were at the bus stop  

In this story:

Palestinian life turned to 'hell'

Barak, Sharon near agreement?

RELATED STORIES, SITES Downward pointing arrow


JERUSALEM (CNN) -- A bus driven by a Palestinian has plowed into a group of Israeli military and civilians at a bus stop -- killing at least eight people and injuring 14 others.

Israeli police said they were investigating whether the incident was deliberate or an accident but Prime Minster-elect Ariel Sharon said it was a "serious attack."

The driver sped away from the scene and was eventually stopped 20 kilometers away after a high-speed police chase. He was shot by police and was in a serious condition.

The incident happened shortly before 8 a.m. local time at a busy bus stop on a main road in Tel Aviv.

  AUDIO

CNN's Jerrold Kessel reports: "They [Israelis] do not want a peace process now"

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Palestinian Cabinet Minister Ziad Abu Zayyad on conditions of Palestinians under Israeli occupation

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Israeli Deputy Defense Secretary Ephraim Sneh gives reasons for Israeli attacks

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 TIMELINES
graphic Recent acts of violence in the Middle East:
 • Bombings
 • Activist deaths
 
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Timeline gallery: Israeli leader Ariel Sharon
 

The Palestinian driver had a permit to drive the bus and had dropped off Palestinians passengers from Gaza shortly before he plowed into the bus queue, police said.

The incident comes a day after a deadly Israeli helicopter mission inside Gaza.

Palestinian police said that Massoud Ayyad, 60, died when Israeli helicopter gunships fired four missiles into his car as he drove on the outskirts of the Jabaliya refugee camp.

Ayyad, a lieutenant colonel in Palestinian Authority President Yasser Arafat's bodyguard unit, Force 17, was the sole occupant of that car, but four men in a car behind him were slightly injured in the attack.

Israeli Deputy Defense Secretary Ephraim Sneh told CNN said: "This man, Massoud Ayyad, was in charge of terrorist operations and planned more terrorist operations, including kidnapping, including shelling of Israeli villages. Since we could not arrest him ... in this case we had no option but to hit him in the way we did."

Sneh said such attacks -- Israel has killed about 20 Palestinian activists in the West Bank and Gaza since the start of the latest Palestinians uprising five months ago -- would end if Palestinian officials "arrested those people who mastermind and organize the terrorist operations."

"As long as the Palestinian Authority doesn't fulfill its duty to contain terrorism, there is no alternative left for us but to act," Sneh said. "As long as there is a war, we are in war."

Palestinian life turned to 'hell'

But Palestinian Cabinet Minister Ziad Abu Zayyad called the attack an assassination and denied that Ayyad was a member of Hezbollah -- a pro-Iranian organization -- or had any contacts with the group.

Zayyad told CNN that such claims of terrorism and assassination were not the real problem, however.

"Even if we assume that (Massoud Ayyad) was active and he was shooting, why was he active and why he was shooting?" Zayyad said. "It is the situation. It is the occupation. It is the resistance against occupation, and saying this doesn't mean that they agree with the Israeli allegations against this man."

"No one now speaks about how the Palestinians are living, what are the conditions inside the Palestinian territories," he said. "Palestinians are not able to move from one village to another, from one city to the other. They can't go to their schools, they don't go to universities, they don't go to their work, and Israel is demolishing houses, uprooting trees, turning their life to hell."

Zayyad acknowledged that the Israelis were duty-bound to protect their citizens, but noted that "as long as Israel is trying to oppress our people, unfortunately this uprising will continue and there will victims on both sides."

Barak, Sharon near agreement?

Tuesday's dramatic events threatened to overshadow Israeli Prime Minister-elect Ariel Sharon's negotiations to form a coalition government with the Labor Party of defeated rival Ehud Barak.

Officials said the two men have agreed on most elements of a joint platform, but the fresh violence -- including a 14-year-old Palestinian shot and killed in Gaza and an Israeli soldier wounded in separate incidents -- were an ominous reminder of the challenges ahead.

Sharon has said he will not negotiate while the violence, which has claimed more than 400 lives -- most of them Palestinian -- continues.

But an agreement between Sharon's hawkish Likud party and the center-left Labor Party could pave the way for a resumption of peace talks.

Coalition talks were due to start Tuesday to discuss, among other issues, which Cabinet posts the Labor Party would receive under Sharon.

Sharon has offered the defense ministry to Barak despite Barak's promise to resign from public life after his defeat in last week's election. Nobel laureate Shimon Peres is thought to be a front-runner for foreign minister in Sharon's cabinet.



RELATED STORIES:
Air attack amid Mideast coalition hope
February 13, 2001
Israel coalition talks amid clashes
February 12, 2001
Jerrold Kessel: Israel inching toward unity
February 12, 2001
New clashes erupt as Israel withdraws peace plans
February 11, 2001
Sharon not bound by current peace offer, Barak says
February 11, 2001
U.N. launches abuse inquiry over Israeli protests
February 10, 2001
Bomb overshadows Sharon unity bid
February 9, 2001

RELATED SITES:
United Nations Human Rights Website
Israel Ministry of Foreign Affairs
Israeli Prime Minister's Office
Knesset, The Israeli Parliament
Likud
Avoda (Labor) Party
Israel Defense Forces
Palestinian National Authority
Palestinian Red Crescent

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