Tue Jul 16,11:52 AM ET |
A blood-stained stretcher lies on the ground as an Israeli policeman guards the site of an attack after Palestinian gunmen ambushed an Israeli bus near Emmanuel, a Jewish settlement in the West Bank July 16, 2002 killing at least seven people and wounded another 20 before a high-level meeting on Middle East peace in New York. The incident was the most serious attack on Israelis since the Israeli military reoccupied seven Palestinian cities in the West Bank last month after 26 people were killed in back-to-back Palestinian suicide bombings in Jerusalem. REUTERS/Laszlo Balogh |
Tue Jul 16,11:58 AM ET |
Israeli policemen and investigators check the site of an attack after Palestinian gunmen ambushed an Israeli bus near Emmanuel, a Jewish settlement in the West Bank on July 16, 2002, killing at least seven people and wounded another 20 before a high-level meeting on Middle East peace in New York. The incident was the most serious attack on Israelis since the Israeli military reoccupied seven Palestinian cities in the West Bank last month, after 26 people were killed in back-to-back Palestinian suicide bombings in Jerusalem. REUTERS/Gil Cohen Magen |
Tue Jul 16,12:01 PM ET |
A body lies on the ground after Palestinian gunmen ambushed an Israeli bus near Emmanuel, a Jewish settlement in the West Bank July 16, 2002 killing at least seven people and wounded another 20 before a high-level meeting on Middle East peace in New York. REUTERS/Laszlo Balogh |
Tue Jul 16,11:44 AM ET |
Israeli investigators check a bus that was ambushed by Palestinian gunmen near a Jewish settlement in the West Bank July 16, 2002, killing at least seven people and wounding another 20. A group linked to Palestinian President Yasser Arafat's Fatah movement claimed responsibility for the attack Hizbollah's al-Manar television said. Photo by Laszlo Balogh/Reuters |
Tue Jul 16,11:16 AM ET |
Israeli policemen investigate the site of an attack after Palestinian gunmen ambushed an Israeli bus near Emmanuel, a Jewish settlement in the West Bank, killing at least seven people and wounding another 20, July 16, 2002. The incident was the most serious attack on Israelis since the Israeli military reoccupied seven Palestinian cities in the West Bank last month after 26 people were killed in back-to-back Palestinian suicide bombings in Jerusalem. REUTERS/Gil Cohen Magen |
Tue Jul 16,11:16 AM ET |
Israeli police and investigators stand at the site of an attack after a Palestinian gunmen ambushed an Israeli bus near Emmanuel, a Jewish settlement in the West Bank, July 16, 2002, killing at least seven people. A group linked to Palestinian President Yasser Arafat's Fatah movement claimed responsibility for the ambush, Hizbollah's al-Manar television said. Photo by Laszlo Balogh/Reuters |
Palestinian gunmen killed seven Israelis and wounded at least 19 in an attack on a bus near a Jewish settlement in the northern West Bank yesterday, the Israeli army said. Israeli security officials said roadside bombs were detonated under the bullet-proof bus, after which Palestinian snipers perched on a nearby hill opened fire on fleeing passengers and people in other cars. AFP photo
Tue Jul 16, 1:36 PM ET |
An Israeli police officer waves away members of the media from a destroyed bus, at the scene of an attack against Israelis at the entrance to the Jewish settlement of Emmanuel, in the West Bank, Tuesday July 16, 2002. Palestinians dressed as Israeli soldiers detonated a roadside bomb near the bus heading to the settlement Tuesday, and then sprayed the passengers with gunfire as they tried to flee, military sources and witnesses said. Seven people were killed and more than a dozen wounded. (AP Photo/Eitan Hess-Askenazi) |