Wednesday, 23 March 2011

Jerusalem blast leaves 1 dead,

dozens injured


By the CNN Wire Staff

March 23, 2011 -- Updated 1531 GMT (2331 HKT)
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Explosion rocks central Jerusalem

STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • NEW: A woman dies of her injuries
  • There was no intelligence warning of the attack, a police spokesman says
  • An explosive device is found attached to a phone booth near the site of the blast

Jerusalem (CNN) -- A woman was killed and more than 30 people were wounded when a loud explosion shook a busy street in Jerusalem as the evening rush hour began on Wednesday, authorities said.

Several of the wounded were critically injured in the first serious bombing in Jerusalem in four years, authorities said.

Mayor Nir Barkat condemned the "cowardly terrorist attack" in which "innocent people were hurt."

The blast took place in "a very crowded area" with "a lot of civilians and two buses," said Yonatan Yagadovsky, a spokesman for Israel's emergency services.

Injured rushed to Jerusalem ambulances
Jerusalem mayor calls attack 'cowardly'
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"Three to four are in critical condition. The rest of the casualties are moderately to lightly injured," he said before the woman's death was announced. The injuries came from both the force of the blast itself and from flying shrapnel, he said.

The wounded included two pregnant women, he said.

There was no immediate claim of responsibility.

The terror attack comes after an unusually intense period of hostilities between Israel and the Palestinians. At least 10 Palestinians have been killed since Saturday, including four militants and two children who died in an Israeli strike that appears to have missed its target.

Police found a medium-sized explosive device attached to a phone booth near the site of a blast. It was close to Jerusalem's central bus station, Israeli medical services said.

All the people injured in the blast were between the bus station and a bus, police spokesman Micky Rosenfeld said.

Jerusalem is on heightened security since the blast, he said. There had been no specific intelligence warning of plans for an attack in the city before the blast, he said.

"Israel and Jerusalem are relatively very safe recently," Mayor Barkat told CNN. "This is something that happens rarely, and we hope to keep it that way."

He said he hopes security forces will find the people responsible and "bring them to justice."

The attack "brings very bad memories to us," medical services spokesman Yagadovsky said. "It was relatively very quiet," he said, adding that Israel had not had "this type of terror attack for a very, very long time."

"It is something that we will have to deal with again."

CNN's Kevin Flower, Michal Zippori and Kareem Khadder contributed to this report