Terrorists Hit
Jerusalem Bus
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Jerusalem (JTA) — Two
Israeli women were killed in
a terrorist attack on a
crowded city bus here in the
most serious security inci-
dent in several months.
But a potentially far
greater loss of life was
averted, as a result of the
bus driver's resourcefulness.
Two of the three heavily
armed Palestinian attackers
were killed as they tried to
flee the scene by car and
break through a roadblock
on their way to the West
Bank. They had been chased
off the bus by the driver and
passengers.
One of the slain Israelis
was a passenger shot on the
bus. The other was a mo-
torist forced at gun point to
drive the fleeing terrorists
away from the scene of the
attack in her own car.
The motorist, Jeanette
Kadosh, was killed along
with the terrorists during a
clash with soldiers at a
roadblock set up near the
southern exit from the city
on the way to Bethlehem.
Israeli army officials
claimed Kadosh, a 39-year-
old mother of four, was shot
first by gunfire from the Pa-
lestinians and then by
Israeli border police. The
army said it was unclear
whose shooting caused her
death.
The slain bus passenger,
42-year-old Ella Haikman,
was seriously injured by a
gunshot wound to her head
and died later in the day
from her wounds. The driver
and a third terrorist were
lightly wounded.
Israeli officials, as well as
the Damascus-based Radio
Al Kuds, said the attack was
perpetrated by militants
associated with the Islamic
fundamentalist Hamas
movement.
The attack coincided with
reports from that Palestin-
ian negotiators in Washing-
ton were deeply disap-
pointed with an American
draft of proposals presented
at the end of the 10th round
of bilateral talks with Israel.
The incident began close to
7 a.m., when three Arab ter-
rorists boarded the No. 25
bus on the Jerusalem-
Nablus road, near the Fren-
ch Hill neighborhood and
close to police national
headquarters.
The last to ascend the bus,
which was crowded with 80
passengers, suddenly opened
a bag he was carrying. Much
to the dismay of the driver,
the man pulled out a rifle
and aimed it at the passen-
gers.
The driver, Dudi Yom-Tov,
stopped the bus, jumped out
of his seat and scuffled with
the passenger, trying to take
hold of his M-16 rifle.
"I acted on instincts," he
later told journalists at his
hospital bed. "He could have
butchered us all."
The attacker managed to
fire a few shots, slightly
wounding the driver in the
upper leg, fatally shooting
Mr. Haikman and also
wounding one of his part-
ners, a Gaza resident.
As passengers rushed to
aid the bus driver, the at-
tacker fled the scene along
with one of his two partners,
taking over at gunpoint the
car driven by Ms. Kadosh, a
drafter in an architect's of-
fice who was on her way to
work.
With Ms. Kadosh driving
the car at gunpoint, the
three rushed in toward the
southern end of Jerusalem,
dropping an explosive
charge on Eshkol Boulevard,
a major traffic artery in the
capital. That charge was
later dismantled by police
sappers.
Border police stationed on
the road leading out of the
city were notified of the ap-
proaching car and spotted it
approaching the barrier
with a woman driving and a
young man seated beside
her.
Before the border police
could signal the car to stop,
the young man threw a hand
grenade in their direction.
The soldiers fired at the car,
killing the two terrorists.
Police insisted that Ms.
Kadosh was shot first by the
terrorists before they were
killed themselves.
The third terrorist,
hospitalized at the
Hadassah-Hebrew Univer-
sity Medical Center in Ein
Kerem, was put under heavy
guard. Bullets and ex-
plosives were found in his
bags and clothes.
Prime Minister Yitzhak
Rabin, in Paris on a state
visit, condemned the attack.
"Beyond the citizens of
Israel, those terrorists aim
in fact at the peace process.
We will be undeterred. The
peace process will go on. It is
our interest and the interest
of all the Arab countries in