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Thema: Palästinenser, die an Israel hängen

  1. #1
    BadTemper Benutzerbild von Ka0sGiRL
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    Standard Palästinenser, die an Israel hängen

    Israels Innenminister erklärte kürzlich, dass vier Palästinenser, die wegen Hilfe bei Selbstmord-Bombenanschlägen im Jahr 2002 mit 35 Toten verurteilt wurden, nach ihrer Freilassung aus langen Haftstrafen aus Israel abgeschoben werden. Sie würden, so berichtete Associated Press, „die Privilegien von Personen mit permanenten Aufenthaltsgenehmigungen verlieren, so Sozialversicherung und Krankenversicherung".


    Die Entscheidung des Ministers wirft Fragen auf. Warum sollten sich Palästinenser, die sich an der Vernichtung des Staates Israel beteiligen, dadurch bestraft fühlen, dass sie das Recht verlieren in Israel zu leben? Man sollte erwarten, dass antiisraelische Terroristen es vorziehen würden in den Autonomiegebieten zu leben.

    Da würde man falsch liegen. Palästinenser – sogar Terroristen – ziehen das Leben in dem vor, was sie das „zionistische Gebilde" nennen. Bei zwei Gelegenheiten wurde dieses Muster besonders deutlich: als 2000 das östliche Jerusalem und als 2004 ein Teil des Arabischen Dreiecks in Galiläa zur Übergabe in PA-Kontrolle vorgesehen waren. In beiden Fällen klammerten sich die Palästinenser an Israel.

    Als die Diplomatie von Premierminister Ehud Barak Mitte den Vorschlag aufbrachte, dass einige mehrheitlich arabische Teile Jerusalems an die PA übergeben werden sollten, stellte ein palästinensischer Sozialarbeiter „eine überwältigende Mehrheit" unter den 200.000 Jerusalemer Arabern fest, die sich für ein Verbleiben unter israelischer Kontrolle entschieden. Ein Mitglied des Palästinensischen Nationalkomitees, Fadal Tahabub, führte genauer an, dass 70 Prozent die israelische Herrschaft vorzögen. Als „panisch" beschrieb ein weiterer Politiker, Husam Watad, die Leute angesichts der Aussicht, sich unter PA-Herrschaft wiederzufinden.

    Israels Innenminister berichtete pflichtgemäß einen Anstieg der Anträge auf Staatsbürgerschaft und Stadtrat Roni Aloni berichtete, dass er von Jerusalemer Arabern hörte: „Wir sind nicht wie Gaza oder die Westbank. Wir haben israelische Ausweise. Wir sind an einen höheren Lebensstandard gewöhnt. Selbst wenn die israelische Regierung nicht so gut ist, ist sie immer noch besser als die der PA." Ein Arzt, der israelische Papiere beantragte, erklärte: „Wir wollen in Israel bleiben. Hier können wir wenigstens unsere Meinung frei äußern, ohne ins Gefängnis geworfen zu werden und haben auch eine Chance ehrliches Geld zu verdienen."

    Um diesen palästinensischen Drang nach der israelischen Staatsbürgerschaft aufzuhalten, erließ der führende islamische Vertreter in Jerusalem einen Erlass, der die Annahme verbot; der PLO-Vertreter in Jerusalem, Faisal Husseini, ging weiter und nannte solche Schritte „Verrat". Das erwies sich als wirkungslos, also drohte Husseini, dass die israelische Staatsbürgerschaft anzunehmen zur Folge haben würde, dass das Haus des Betroffenen konfisziert werden würde.

    Im Arabischen Dreieck Dreieck in Galiläa, einer Gegend mit palästinensischer Mehrheit im Norden des Landes, stimmten gerade einmal 30% der arabischen Bevölkerung Israels zu, dass ein Teil des Dreiecks einem palästinensischen Staat zugeschlagen würde, fand eine Umfrage im Mai 2001 heraus; das bedeutet, dass eine große Mehrheit es vorzog in Israel zu bleiben. Bis zum Februar 2004, als die Regierung Sharon einen Versuchsballon dazu startete, der PA die Kontrolle über das Arabische Dreieck zu geben, stellte das Arab Center for Applied Social Research in Haifa heraus, dass die Zahl auf 90 Prozent angestiegen war. Dazu sagten 73 Prozent der Araber des Dreiecks, dass sie Gewalt anwenden würden, um Grenzveränderungen zu verhindern.

    Örtliche Politiker verurteilten heftig, dass Israel irgendeinen Teil Galiläas abtreten könnte. Ahmed Tibi, arabisches Mitglied des israelischen Parlaments, der einmal als Ratgeber für Yassir Arafat arbeitete, nannte die Idee „einen gefährlichen, antidemokratischen Vorschlag". Heftiger arabischer Widerstand führte zu einer schnellen Aufgabe der Übergabe-Idee.

    Ebenfalls 2004, als Israels Sicherheitszaun aufgebaut wurde, sahen sich einige Palästinenser vor die Wahl gestellt, auf welcher Seite des Zauns sie leben wollten. Die meisten, wie Ahmed Jabrin aus Um el-Fahm, hatten keine Zweifel. „Wir kämpften [gegen die israelischen Behörden] dagegen innerhalb des Zauns zu sein und sie verlegten ihn, so dass wir immer noch in Israel sind."

    Dass Palästinenser es in großer Zahl vorziehen unter israelischer Kontrolle zu leben, scheint mehr praktischen Überlegungen zu entstammen als einer Absicht den jüdischen Staat demographisch zu unterwandern. Sie betrachten die PA als verarmt, autokratisch und anarchisch. Wie ein Palästinenser erklärte, ist sie „ein unbekannter Staat, der weder ein Parlament hat, noch Demokratie, nicht einmal anständige Universitäten".

    Palästinenser sind ideologisch nicht so stark festgelegt, dass sie das gute Leben verschmähen, das der Wohnort in Israel bietet. Zwei langfristige Schlussfolgerungen folgen. Erstens: Würden die palästinensischen Forderungen nach einem „Rückkehrrecht" nach Israel jemals erfüllt, wäre das Ergebnis ein massiver Bevölkerungszufluss nach Israel. Zweitens: jede Endstatus-Vereinbarung, die verlangt, dass von Israel regiertes Land an die Palästinenser gegeben wird, wird sehr schwer umzusetzen sein.

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    So richtig passt das nicht ins Bild. Palästinenser die sich dagegen wehren in Palestina zu leben. Einerseits wird die "westliche Dekandenz" und Israel verteufelt aber ohne dessen Vorzüge, möchten die Palästinenser auch nicht leben...
    Geändert von Ka0sGiRL (06.07.2005 um 21:02 Uhr)

  2. #2
    obwohlschon
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    Zitat Zitat von Ka0sGiRL
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    So richtig passt das nicht ins Bild. Palästinenser die sich dagegen wehren in Palestina zu leben. Einerseits wird die "westliche Dekandenz" und Israel verteufelt aber ohne dessen Vorzüge, möchten die Palästinenser auch nicht leben...
    Völlig nachvollziehbar.

    Israel ist ein moderner Rechts- und Sozialstaat. Das Arafat-Gebilde ist dagegen eine korrupte Despotie der ehemaligen PLO-Aktivisten über die ansässige Bevölkerung. Die Hamas konnte nur deshalb so stark werden, weil sie viel Funktionen, besonders im Sozialbereich übernommen hat, die eigentlich die staatlichen palästinensischen Strukturen leisten müssten.

  3. #3
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    Kaosgirl, Wo würdest Du leben? In einem großen Gefängnis,
    - wo Du nicht in das andere Dorf kommen kannst ohne kontrolliert zu werden (bis zu 3-6 Tagen kannst Du warten),
    - wo keine Wirtschaft geben kann, da alles wieder mit Bulldozer und F-16 vernichtet werden kann,
    - wo das nötige Geld dadurch fehlt,
    - wo die Leute teilweise auf felsigen Grung leben müssen,
    - wo ihr eigenes Land genommen wurde und damit die Grundlage der Familien
    - wo über 6 Millionen Flüchtlinge im Ausland leben (größte politische Flüchtlingsgruppe der Welt), weil in Palästina kein wirtschaftliches Leben gibt.

    oder möchtest Du leben.
    - wo Du neues Land kaufen kannst, keine Kontrollposten die Wirtschaft hindert, frisches Geld aus den USA und Europa und selbst aus Brasilien bekommst, billige Arbeitskräfte a lá Palastinenser hast, Wirtschaft mit anderen Länder betreiben kannst, etc.

    Eine Stadt widerlegt Deine Theorie, wo die Palästinenser und Libanesen arbeiten, leben und wirtschaften dürfen. Es ist die drittgrößte Handelsmetropole knapp hinter Hongkong der Welt. Nur Ciudad del Este hat nur 235.000 Einwohner und handeln bzw. wirtschaftet 15-mal mehr pro Kopf als die in Hongkong. Der Stadt kommt es sehr gelegen, dass sie am Estado (Bundesland) Paraná liegt.

    Alfredos.

  4. #4
    medinet
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    Etwas Lesestoff, um sich eine Meinung bilden zu können :

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  5. #5
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    medinet, Leider nicht möglich Deine Seite aufzurufen. Was ist eigentlich Deine Meinung?

    Alfredos.

  6. #6
    BadTemper Benutzerbild von Ka0sGiRL
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    Zitat Zitat von medinet
    Etwas Lesestoff, um sich eine Meinung bilden zu können :

    [Links nur für registrierte Nutzer]

    Sehr einseitig. Im Übrigen gibt es bereits einen Überschuss an verzerrtert und unvollständiger Berichterstattung, die nie müde werden Islrael und Amerika verteufelt, während sie sich durch ein großes Verständnis für terroristische Moslems auszeichnet.

    Speziell zu deinen Artikel der Flüchtlingshilfe (der Name des Magazin "Schlepper" ist sehr bezeichnend...) über die Sicherheitsmauer entlang der Stadt Qalqilya.

    "Aber was noch viel wichtiger ist das von ihm verschwiegen Faktum, dass Qalqilya an der Grünen Linie liegt und quasi ein Steinwurf von Kfar Saba, einer Stadt im israelischen Kernland, entfernt liegt. Und die neue israelische Autobahn Nr. 6 (die vollständig im israelischen Kernland liegt) führt nur einige Meter (wortwörtlich) an Qalqiliya vorbei.
    Es stimmt nicht, dass die ganze Stadt von einer acht Meter hohen Betonmauer umringt ist. Sie ist zwar vom Sicherheitszaun vollständig umringt, die Mauer wurde jedoch nur entlang der Grünen Linie gebaut (siehe Karte).


    Die Nähe zu Kfar Saba und der Autobahn Nr. 6 ist der Grund, warum diese Stadt von der Mauer und dem Zaun umgeben wurde. Damit soll das Eindringen von Terroristen aus Qalqilya in die Nachbarstadt Kfar Saba und das Beschiessen von Autofahrer auf der Autobahn verhindert werden. Leider erlebte Kfar Saba auch in den letzten Jahren mehrer Anschläge. Die Terroristen nutzten dabei die Nähe Kfar Sabas zu Qalqilya aus. Und vor ein paar Monaten wurde ein Kleinkind in einem fahrenden Auto auf der Autobahn Nr. 6 erschossen. Ohne die oben erwähnte geographische Richtigstellung ist es für den Leser unbegreiflich, wieso gerade entlang Qalqilya die Mauer gebaut wurde und wieso der Rest der Stadt vom Sicherheitszaun umgeben wurde."
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    @ Alfredos

    Würde ich in Isreal wohnen, wäre ich dafür die Mauer dicker und höher zu machen - ich hänge nämlich sehr an meinem Leben.

  7. #7
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    Ka0sgirl, Wer andere bescheißt, wo es nur geht, der braucht überall eine Mauer, um sein zusammen geramschtes Vermögen zu sichern. Außerdem steht die Mauer auch noch auf das verbliebene Palästinensergebiet. Das hat sich nicht einmal der Osten erlaubt.

    Kein Land lässt sich solch freches Verhalten bieten, wie es die Israelis mit den Palästinensern machen. Über 6 Millionen Flüchtlinge aus Palästina auf 4 Kontinente haben sie schon verursacht mit ihrem modernen Staat. Die 6 Millionen erwirtschaften nicht viel weniger im Ausland als der Staat Israel. Es ist schwer einzuschätzen, aber wenn ich Ciudad del Este, Rio de Janeiro, Berlin, etc. sehe, kann es hinkommen. In Palästina im größten Gefängnis der Welt ist kein wirtschaften möglich. In den Gefängnissen in Deutschland wird auch nur ein geringes BIP erwirtschaftet.

    Als ein Air Franc-Pilot bei der Ankunft in Jerusalem seine Fluggäste mit "Herzlich Willkommen in Jerusalem, Hauptstadt von Israel und Palästina" begrüßte, wollten die Fluggäste ernsthaft bewirken, dass der Pilot entlassen werden soll. Nur weil er auch gesagt hatte, Hauptstadt von Palästina. Ich glaube, die richtigen Fanatiker sind auf der Seite Israel, siehe Räumung der Siedlungen.

    Alfredos.

  8. #8
    WASG-Sympatisant
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    auf beiden seiten gibt es solche und solche - aber fakt ist, dass der rasismus seitens der israelisch ziehmlich stark ist. es ist doch lächerlich, auf leute zu schiessen, die mit steinen auf den eigenen wachturm werfen. ein hilflosigkeitsakt wird mit gewehrsschüssen bestraft. das ist ja nicht das einzige.
    Beteiligt euch an der Protestaktion gegen die geplante "Aussperrung" des Linksbündnises aus wichtigen Diskussionsrunden von ARD und ZDF vor der Wahl!
    http://linksbuendnis2005.gamersunity.de/mailomat.php

    http://linksbuendnis2005.gamersunity...acvsboerse.gif

  9. #9
    BadTemper Benutzerbild von Ka0sGiRL
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    Aha. Die Palästinenser werfen mit Steinen. Täten sie nur das, benötigten die Isrealis wohl kaum eine Mauer. Kann es sein, dass deine einseitige, beschränkte Sichtweise der Lage in Isreal von deinem eigenen Rassismus herrührt? Juden sind ja bei manchen Leuten nicht so beliebt. Und zu steinewerfenden Pallis, hast du heute Nachtrichten gehört? Trotz Friedensabkommen hat sich heute ein palästinensicher Gotteskrieger vor einem isrealischen Einkaufszentrum in die Luft gesprengt - ich hoffe er schmort in der Hölle dafür und hoffe die isrealische Armee schlägt zurück.

    Noch ein paar Steinewerfer, die dir wohl entgangen sind (ich hoffe, du kannst Englisch):

    une 24, 2005: Two teenagers were killed and three others wounded in a drive-by shooting near Hebron. The Al-Aksa Martyrs Brigade claimed responsibility for the attack.

    February 25, 2005: Five Israelis were killed and 50 other civilians were wounded in a suicide bombing outside a Tel Aviv nightclub. Islamic Jihad claimed responsibility for the attack.


    January 13, 2005: Six Israelis were killed and five other civilians were wounded in a double suicide bombing at the Karni crossing between Israel and the Gaza Strip. The two suicide bombers used a very large explosive device to blast through a defensive wall that separates the Israeli and Palestinian sides at the crossing. Following the blast, the bombers crossed into the Israeli side, carrying explosives on their bodies, which they detonated.


    January 4, 2005: Two adults were lightly injured when a mortar shell, fired from Gaza Strip, hit a school bus near Nissanit. None of the children were wounded.


    December 15, 2004: Five motorists, an officer, three soldiers and a civilian were wounded from gunshots fired by a terrorist at Israeli vehicles on the Kissufim road in the Gaza Strip. Palestinian Islamic Jihad and Fatah claimed joint responsibility for the attack.


    November 1, 2004: Three people were killed when a suicide bomber exploded in Tel Aviv’s busy Carmel market. At least 32 were wounded. The Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine claimed responsibility.


    September 22, 2004: Two police were killed and at least sixteen people were injured when a suicide bomber detonated a bag packed with explosives at a crowded bus stop in the French Hill neighborhood of Jerusalem. The Al-Aksa Martyrs Brigade, affiliated with Yasir Arafat’s Fatah, claimed responsibility. The slain police had stopped the 18-year old woman, Zainab Abu Salem from the Askar refugee camp near the West Bank city of Nablus, from approaching the bus stop, and she detonated the explosives.


    August 31, 2004: Sixteen people, including a 3 year old, were killed and about 100 injured when two buses in Beersheba were attacked within minutes of each other by suicide bombers. Hamas claimed responsibility.


    July 11, 2004: One woman was killed and 32 people were injured when a bomb exploded next to a Tel Aviv bus stop. Fatah’s El-Aksa Martyrs Brigades claimed responsibility for the attack.


    June 28, 2004: A Kassam rocket fired by Hamas terrorists in the Gaza Strip struck near a nursery school in the northern Negev town of Sderot, killing an Israeli man and a 4-year old Israeli child.


    May 2, 2004: An Israeli woman, in her eighth month of pregnancy, was shot dead along with her four daughters when two Palestinian terrorists fired on their car at the entrance to the Gaza Strip settlement bloc of Gush Katif. After the car spun off the road after the initial attack, the terrorists approached the vehicle and shot the occupants at close range. Fatah and Islamic Jihad claimed joint responsibility for the attack.


    March 14, 2004: Ten people were killed and 16 wounded in a double suicide bombing in the area of the Ashdod Port. Hamas and Fatah claimed responsibility for the attack.

    February 22, 2004: A suicide bomber attacked a bus in the center of Jerusalem, killing 8 people and wounding 70. The Palestinian terrorist group Al Aksa Martyrs Brigades claimed responsibility.

    January 29, 2004: A suicide bomber attacked a bus in Jerusalem's Rehavia neighborhood, killing 11 people and wounding 50. The Palestinian terrorist group Al Aksa Martyrs Brigades claimed responsibility.


    January 14, 2004: A female suicide bomber killed four people and wounded 20 at the Erez Crossing in the Gaza Strip. Hamas and the Fatah Al Aqsa Martyrs Brigades claimed responsibility for the attack.

    January 13, 2004: An Israeli motorist was shot dead and three of his passengers were wounded when their car was fired upon by Palestinian terrorists near Talmon, west of Ramallah. The Fatah Al Aqsa Martyrs Brigades claimed responsibility for the attack.

    December 25, 2003: A suicide bomber killed four people and wounded more than 20 in an explosion near a bus stop at Geha Junction in Petah Tikvah, a suburb of Tel Aviv. The Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine claimed responsibility.

    October 15, 2003: Three Americans were killed and one wounded at the Beit Hanoun junction in the Gaza Strip when a massive bomb demolished an armor-plated jeep in a convoy carrying U.S. diplomats and CIA personnel. Both the militant Islamic Jihad and Hamas movements denied responsibility for the attack.

    October 4, 2003: Islamic Jihad claimed responsibility for a suicide bombing at the Maxim restaurant in Haifa killing 20 people and wounding more than 60.

    September 26, 2003: Eyal Yeberbaum, 27, and 7-month old infant Shaked Avraham were shot dead by a Palestinian terrorist who knocked on the door of a home in Negohot, south of Hebron, during a celebratory Jewish New Year holiday dinner. Islamic Jihad took responsibility for the attack.


    September 9, 2003: Hamas claimed responsibility for two suicide bombings, the first at an entrance to the Tzrifin army base near Rishon Lezion and the second at Café Hillel in the German colony neighborhood of Jerusalem, which killed a total of 15 people and wounded at least 80.

    August 19, 2003: Hamas and Islamic Jihad claimed responsibility for the suicide bombing of a bus in Jerusalem killing at least 18 people and wounding nearly 100.

    August 12, 2003: Suicide bombers killed two Israelis and wounded more than a dozen people in two attacks within a half hour of each other, one at a shopping mall in the Tel Aviv suburb of Rosh Ha’ayin and the other at the entrance of the West Bank town of Ariel. The Al Aqsa Martyrs Brigade claimed responsibility for the Rosh Ha’ayin bombing and Hamas claimed to have carried out the Ariel attack.

    July 7, 2003: Mazal Afari, 65, of Moshav Kfar Yavetz was killed in her home and three of her grandchildren lightly wounded in a suicide bombing. The Jenin-based cell of Islamic Jihad claimed responsibility for the attack.

    June 20, 2003: An Israeli motorist was shot dead and three of his passengers were wounded when their car was fired upon by Palestinian terrorists near Ofra, north of Ramallah. Hamas claimed responsibility for the attack.

    June 19, 2003: A suicide bombing in a grocery store in Sede Terumot in northeastern Israel, south of Beit Shean, killed the owner of the store. Islamic Jihad claimed responsibility for the attack.

    June 17, 2003: A shooting attack near the Kibbutz Eyal junction of the Trans-Israel Highway killed a 7-year-old girl and wounded three members of her family, including her 3-year-old sister. The Al Aksa Martyrs Brigades and the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine claimed responsibility.

    June 11, 2003: Sixteen people were killed and more than 80 wounded when a suicide bomber blew up a Jerusalem city bus during the afternoon rush hour. The bomber was disguised as an ultra-orthodox Jew. Hamas claimed responsibility for the attack.

    May 19, 2003: A suicide bomber attacked the Shaarei Amakim shopping center in Afula, in northern Israel, killing at least four and wounding 15. Islamic Jihad and Al Aksa Martyrs Brigades both claimed responsibility.

    May 19, 2003: A Palestinian suicide bomber on a bicycle attacked an Israeli checkpoint on the Gaza Strip, wounding three Israeli soldiers. Hamas claimed responsibility.

    May 18, 2003: Seven people were killed and more than 20 wounded when a suicide bomber blew up a Jerusalem city bus at the start of the Israeli work week. The bomber was disguised as an ultra-orthodox Jew. Soon after, a suicide bomber carrying explosives and dressed in the garb of an ultra-orthodox Jew was stopped at a roadblock. The Palestinian detonated his explosives, killing only himself. Hamas claimed responsibility in both attacks.

    May 17, 2003: A pregnant Israeli woman and her husband were killed when a suicide bomber detonated himself next to them in a public square in Hebron. Hamas claimed responsibility.

    April 30, 2003: Three people were killed and dozens wounded in a suicide bombing at a beachfront pub in Tel Aviv. The Fatah Tanzim and Hamas claimed responsibility for the attack, carried out as a joint operation.

    April 24, 2003: One Israeli was killed and 13 were wounded in a suicide bombing outside the train station in Kfar Saba. Groups related to the Fatah Al Aksa Martyrs Brigades and the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine claimed responsibility for the attack.

    March 30, 2003 - A suicide bombing in the pedestrian mall entrance of a cafe in Netanya wounded more than 40 people. Islamic Jihad claimed responsibility for the attack, calling it a “gift to the Iraqi people.”

    March 7, 2003 - Two Israelis were killed and five were wounded when armed terrorists infiltrated the community of Kiryat Arba and attacked during Shabbat. Hamas claimed responsibility for the attack.

    March 5, 2003: Sixteen people were killed and more than 30 wounded when a terrorist detonated a powerful bomb on a bus en route to Haifa University. Hamas claimed responsibility for the attack.

    January 5, 2003: Twenty two people were killed and about 120 wounded in a double suicide bombing near the old Central Bus Station in Tel Aviv. The Al Aqsa Martyrs Brigades, Islamic Jihad and Hamas all claimed responsibility for the attacks.

    January 2, 2003 - The charred body of an Israeli from Menahemiya in the Lower Galilee was found in the northern Jordan Valley in his burned out car. The Al Aqsa Martyrs Brigades claimed responsibility.

    December 27, 2002 : Terrorists broke into a dining hall at a yeshiva in Otneil, south of Hebron, and killed 4 students who were working in the yeshiva kitchen, and injured ten others. Islamic Jihad claimed responsibility.

    December 20, 2002 – An Israeli rabbi was shot and killed on the Kissufim corridor road in the Gaza Strip while driving with his wife and six children to attend a pre-wedding Sabbath celebration in Afula. Islamic Jihad claimed responsibility for the attack.

    November 28: A suicide car bombing of the Israeli-owned beachfront Paradise Hotel in Mombasa, Kenya, killed 3 Israelis and 10 Kenyans, and wounded at least 80 people. Al Qaeda is a main suspect in the attack.

    November 28 - Two terrorists opened fire and lobbed grenades at the Likud polling station in Beit Shea’an, Israel, killing 6 people and wounding at least 40 people. Al Aqsa Martyrs Brigades claimed responsibility for the attack.

    November 28: Two surface-to-air missiles narrowly missed an Israeli airliner as it lifted off from the runway at Moi International Airport in Kenya.

    November 21: Eleven people were killed and 47 injured when a Palestinian suicide bomber exploded on a bus filled with passengers, including schoolchildren, in the Kiryat Menahem neighborhood in Jerusalem. The bus was traveling toward the center of the city during the morning rush hour. Hamas claimed responsibility for the attack.

    November 18: An Israeli mother of seven from Kochav Hashahar was killed Monday in a shooting attack on the Allon Road, just north of Ramallah. Al Aqsa Martyrs Brigades claimed responsibility for the attack.

    November 15: Twelve Israelis were killed and 15 others wounded in Hebron when Palestinian terrorists opened fire and threw grenades at a group of Jewish worshippers and their guards as they were walking home from Sabbath prayers at the Cave of the Patriarchs. Islamic Jihad claimed responsibility for the attacks.

    November 10, 2002: Five Israelis were killed, including two children, at Kibbutz Metzer, near Tulkarm. The Al Aqsa Martyrs Brigades claimed responsibility for the attack.

    November 7, 2002: Two Israelis were killed when a Palestinian worker fired on them at the Pe'at Sadeh settlement in the southern Gaza Strip.

    October 27: Two Israeli police officers and a soldier were killed, and 20 bystanders were wounded in a suicide bombing at a gas station near the settlement of Ariel in the West Bank. The two officers and soldier were killed while trying to prevent the terrorist from detonating the bomb. Hamas and the Al Aksa Martyrs Brigades claimed responsibility for the attack.

    October 22, 2002: Domazlice -- An old Jewish cemetery was desecrated in a southwestern Czech town. Five tombstones were toppled at the cemetery in Domazlice, 94 miles southwest of Prague, and five copper lanterns stolen. Copper plaques with Hebrew inscriptions were removed from two tombstones.

    October 22: At least 14 Israelis were killed and more than 45 injured when an explosives-laden sport utility vehicle driven by a Palestinian suicide bomber rammed a bus near Hadera in northern Israel. Islamic Jihad claimed responsibility for the attack.

    September 19: Six people were killed and 60 wounded when a terrorist detonated a bomb on one of Tel Aviv's busiest streets, in a bus opposite the Great Synagogue. Many of the wounded were in critical or serious condition. Both Islamic Jihad and Hamas claimed responsibility for the attack.

    September 18: An Israeli police officer was killed, and three others were wounded, in a suicide bombing at a bus stop near the Umm al Fahm junction in northern Israel. Islamic Jihad claimed responsibility for the attack.

    August 10: One Israeli was killed and another was seriously injured when a Palestinian terrorist infiltrated Moshav Mechora in the Jordan Valley, and opened fire. The Fatah al-Aqsa Brigades claimed responsibility for the attack

    August 5: A Palestinian suicide bomber detonated himself in the vehicle of a resident of Nazareth. The driver, who tried to flee, was injured in the explosion.

    August 5: A husband and his pregnant wife were killed, and one of their children, aged 3, was injured, when terrorists opened fire on their car as they were traveling on the Ramallah-Nablus road in the West Bank. A Fatah-affilated group claimed responsibility for the attack

    August 4: Four people were injured - one seriously - when shots were fired at a bus near the West Bank town of Tulkarem. In addition, three Israelis were seriously wounded by a bomb blast while traveling in vehicle north of Ramallah in the West Bank.

    August 4: Two men were killed and 17 wounded when a Palestinian terrorist opened fire with a pistol shortly before noon near the Damascus Gate of Jerusalem's Old City. The Fatah al-Aqsa Brigades claimed responsibility for the attack.

    August 4: Nine people were killed and about 50 wounded in a suicide bombing of an Egged bus at the Meron junction in northern Israel. Hamas claimed responsibility for the attack.

    July 31: Eight people were killed and 86 injured, 14 seriously, when a bomb went off at the Frank Sinatra Cafeteria on the Hebrew University Mt. Scopus campus during the busy lunchtime rush. Israeli authorities reported that the explosive device had been planted ahead of time, with the terrorist possibly detonating it by remote control. Five Americans were among the dead. Hamas claimed responsibility for the attack.

    July 30: Two Israeli brothers from the Israeli settlement of Tapuah were shot and killed by masked Palestinian gunmen while delivering diesel fuel to a neighboring Palestinian village. Al Aqsa Martyrs Brigades claimed responsibility for the attack.

    July 30: Five people suffered light to moderate injuries in a suicide bombing at a falafel stand on Hanevi'im Street in central Jerusalem.

    July 30: A husband and wife were injured overnight in the West Bank settlement of Itamar, when a Palestinian terrorist entered their bedroom while they were sleeping, armed with two knives. The terrorist was killed by security forces.

    July 26: Four Israelis were killed, three from one family, and three were injured in a drive-by shooting attack near Hebron. The Al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigades claimed responsibility.

    July 25: One Israeli was killed and another injured in a shooting attack near the West Bank settlement of Alei Zahav. The Al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigades claimed responsibility for the attack.

    July 21: The driver of an Israeli commuter train was moderately injured when an explosive device, detonated by remote control, went off on the tracks between Rehovot and Yavneh. No passengers were injured and the train, which was travelling from Binyamina, near Hadera, to Ashdod in the south, was not derailed.

    July 17: Three people were killed, and 40 more were injured, six seriously, in a double suicide bombing near the old central bus station in Tel Aviv. Islamic Jihad claimed responsibility for the attack

    July 16: Seven people were killed and 20 injured, several seriously, in a terrorist attack on a bus traveling from Tel Aviv to the West Bank. An explosive charge was detonated next to the bullet-resistant bus and three terrorists waiting in ambush opened fire on passengers who fled the bus in search of safety. The Al Aksa Martyrs Brigades claimed responsibility for the attack.

    June 30: Four people were lightly injured when a bomb placed on the railroad tracks went off just after a crowded train passed over the spot, just north of the city of Lod in central Israel.

    June 20: Five Israelis, including a mother, three children and a neighbor who came to aid the family, were killed, when a Palestinian terrorist entered a home and opened fire in the West Bank settlement of Itamar. Two other children and two soldiers were also injured in the attack. The Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine and the Al Aqsa Martyrs Brigades claimed responsibility for the attack

    June 19: Seven people were killed and more than 50 were injured - three of them in critical condition - when a suicide bomber blew himself up at a crowded bus stop in Jerusalem's French Hill neighborhood. The Al Aqsa Martyrs Brigades claimed responsibility for the attack.

    June 18: Nineteen people were killed and more than 70 were injured, in a suicide bombing on a bus just outside of Jerusalem. The bus, which was completely destroyed, was traveling from Gilo to Jerusalem and had many students on board. In addition to the bus, at least two other vehicles were severely damaged in the attack. Hamas claimed responsibility.

    June 11: A 15-year-old Herzliya girl was killed and 15 others were wounded when a Palestinian suicide bomber set off a pipe bomb at a restaurant in the coastal city of Herzliya, north of Tel Aviv. No one has claimed responsibility for the attack.

    June 11: Three junior high school youths were injured in a roadside bombing near Hebron.

    June 8: Three Israelis, including a pregnant woman, were killed, and five were injured when an armed terrorist inflitrated the community of Carmei Tzur, south of Jerusalem. Hamas claimed responsiblity for the attack.

    June 5: Sixteen people were killed and 38 injured - 7 seriously - when a car packed with explosives struck a bus at the Megiddo junction near Afula, in northern Israel. The bus, which burst into flames, was completely destroyed. The militant Palestinian group Islamic Jihad claimed responsibility for the attack.

    May 28: Three yeshiva high school students were killed and two others wounded in Itamar, a settlement southeast of Nablus, when a Palestinian gunman opened fire, before he was shot dead by a security guard. The Al Aqsa Martyrs Brigades claimed responsibility.

    May 28: An Israeli man was killed in an ambush on the Ramallah bypass road. The Al Aqsa Martyrs Brigades claimed responsibility.

    May 27: A baby girl and her grandmother were killed when a suicide bomber detonated himself near an ice cream parlor outside a shopping mall in Petah Tikva, near Tel Aviv. The attack injured 40 others, some seriously. The Al Aksa Martyrs Brigades claimed responsibility for the attack.

    May 23: A suicide bomber, disguised as an Israeli with his hair dyed blond, killed at least two people and wounded more than 25 after detonating a powerful explosive in an outdoor market in Rishon Le Zion. The Al Aksa Martyrs Brigades, a militant faction of Yasir Arafat's Fatah movement, claimed responsibility.

    May 19: Three Israelis were killed and more than 50 injured in a suicide bombing at an open-air market in Netanya. A Palestinian disguised as an Israeli soldier carried out the attack. Both Hamas and the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine claimed responsibility. Two of the victims were identified as Yosef Haviv, 70 and Arkadi Wiselman, 40, both of Netanya. Wiselman, a chef at the Park Hotel, survived the Passover bombing on March 27.

    May 8: A Palestinian terrorist detonated a suitcase packed with explosives in a crowded gambling and billiards club near Tel Aviv, killing at least 15 people and wounding 58. The attack apparently was timed to coincide with Prime Minister Ariel Sharon's visit to the United States, where he met with President George W. Bush and other administration officials to discuss a new proposal for ending the conflict.

    April 27: Three Palestinian gunmen disguised as Israeli Army soldiers cut through the perimeter fence of Adora, a settlement on the West Bank, and entered several homes, firing on residents in their bedrooms. Four people, including a 5-year-old girl, were killed in the attacks. Another seven were injured, including one seriously. Both Hamas and the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine claimed responsibility.

    April 12: At least six people are dead, and more than 60 are reported wounded, in the wake of a Palestinian suicide bombing in Jerusalem. The terrorist was attempting to board a bus near Jerusalem's Mahane Yehuda open-air market when the explosives detonated. The Fatah Al Aksa Martyrs Brigades reportedly has taken responsibility for the attack.

    April 10: An Egged bus was blown up in a suicide bombing near Kibbutz Yagur, located close to Haifa, killing 10 people and wounding 17.

    April 1: An IDF reserve soldier, Sgt.-Maj. Ofir Rot, 22, of Gan Yoshiya was killed at a roadblock near Jerusalem's Har Homa neighborhood by a Palestinian sniper firing from Beit Sahur, near Bethlehem.

    April 1: Eight Israelis were wounded in a terrorist shooting attack at the entrance to Beit El in Samaria. Two were in critical condition, the other six were in light to moderate condition.

    March 31: A Magen David Adom paramedic was very seriously injured along with three other people in a suicide bombing at the emergency medical center in Efrat, in the Gush Etzion bloc south of Jerusalem.

    March 31: Fourteen people were killed and more than 40 injured in a suicide bombing in Haifa, in the Matza gas station restaurant near a shopping mall. Several of the injured were in serious to critical condition. Hamas claimed responsibility for the attack.

    March 30: Tomer Mordechai, 19, of Tel Aviv, a police officer, was killed in Jerusalem, when a Palestinian suicide bomber heading toward the city center blew himself up in his car after being stopped at a roadblock. The Fatah Al Aksa Martyrs Brigades claimed responsibility for the attack.

    March 30: About 30 people were injured, one critically and five seriously, by a powerful explosion in a cafe on the corner of Allenby and Bialik streets in Tel Aviv on Saturday evening. The Fatah Al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigades claimed responsibility for the attack.

    March 29: Two people were killed and more than 20 were injured when a 16-year-old female Palestinian suicide bomber attacked a Jerusalem supermarket. The Al Aqsa Martyrs Brigades claimed responsibility for the attack.

    March 27: Twenty-two people were killed and 140 injured - 20 seriously - in a suicide bombing at the Park Hotel in the coastal city of Netanya, in the midst of the Passover holiday seder with 250 guests. Hamas claimed responsibility for the attack.

    March 24: Esther Klieman, 23, of Neve Tzuf, was killed in a shooting attack northwest of Ramallah while traveling to work in a reinforced Egged bus.

    March 24: Avi Sabag, 24, of Otniel was killed in a terrorist shooting south of Hebron.

    March 20: Seven people, including four soldiers, were killed and 30 people were wounded in a suicide bombing of an Egged bus traveling from Tel Aviv to Nazareth. Two of the injurerd are in critical condition. Islamic Jihad claimed responsibility for the attack.

    March 19: 1st Lt. Tal Zemach, 20, of Kibbutz Hulda, was killed and three soldiers were injured when Palestinian terrorists opened fire at the paratroop training compound in the Jordan Valley. Hamas claimed responsibility for the attack.

    March 19: Two Border Police volunteers were lightly wounded when terrorists opened fire and threw a grenade at Moshav Aviezer, south of Beit Shemesh, on the Israeli side of the Green Line border. The gunmen were killed by Border Police

    March 17: Twenty-five people were lightly injured when a suicide bomber exploded himself near an Egged bus at the French Hill junction in northern Jerusalem on Sunday afternoon. Many of the passengers were high school students on their way home from school. The Islamic Jihad claimed responsibility for the attack.

    March 17: Noa Auerbach, 18, of Kfar Sava, was killed and 16 people were injured when a terrorist opened fire in the center of Kfar Sava on Sunday. The gunman was shot and killed by police.

    March 12: Eyal Lieberman, 45, of Tzoran in Samaria was killed and one person was wounded in a shooting attack on Tuesday morning at the Kiryat Sefer checkpoint, east of Modi'in.

    March 12: Terrorists opened fire, ambushing Israeli vehicles traveling between Shlomi and Kibbutz Metzuba near the northern border with Lebanon late Tuesday morning. Six Israelis were killed and at least 6 others suffered injuries. Two terrorists were also killed. Israeli forces are still conducting aerial and land searches for other members of the terror cell.

    March 10: Shots were fired at a bar mitzva celebration in the coastal city of Ashdod. A 13-year-old boy suffered moderate-to-serious injuries in the attack. The terrorist was apprehended when his rifle jammed.

    March 10: St.-Sgt. Kobi Eichelboim, 21, of Givatayim died from wounds suffered in the morning when a Palestinian gunman disguised as a worker opened fire at the entrance to Netzarim in the Gaza Strip.

    March 9: An infant girl and a 27-year-old man were killed and about 50 people were injured, several seriously, when two Palestinians opened fire and threw grenades at cars and pedestrians in the coastal city of Netanya, close to the city's boardwalk and hotels. The terrorists were killed by Israeli border police. The Fatah Al Aqsa Brigades claimed responsibility for the attack.

    March 9: Eleven people were killed and 54 injured, 10 of them seriously, when a suicide bomber exploded at in a crowded cafe at the corner of Aza and Ben-Maimon streets in the Rehavia neighborhood in the center of Jerusalem. Hamas claimed responsibility for the attack.

    March 8: Staff Sargeant Edward Korol, 20, of Ashdod, the medic of the Golani's Egoz unit, was killed by a Palestinian sniper in the Tulkarem refugee camp. The Israel Defense Forces incursion in the Tulkarem camp led to the discovery of two weapons-making facilities, a weapons arsenal, and a large quantity of explosive materials, including 10 Kassam-2 missiles. The 1,300 Palestinian men who turned themselves in were detained for questioning.

    March 7: A suicide bomber blew himself up shortly after 3:30 P.M. in the lobby of a hotel in the commercial center on the outskirts of Ariel in Samaria. 15 people were injured, one seriously. The PFLP claimed responsibility for the attack.

    March 7: Aharon Krogliak of Beit El, Tal Kurtzweil of Bnei Brak, Asher Marcus of Jerusalem, Eran Pikar of Jerusalem, and Ariel Zana of Jerusalem, all aged 18, were killed and 23 people were injured, four seriously, when a Palestinian gunman penetrated a highschool that combines religious studies and military training in the Gush Katif settlement of Atzmona late Thursday night. Hamas claimed responsibility for the attack.

    March 7: A suicide bombing was prevented Thursday afternoon, when a man carrying an explosive device was blocked from entering a cafe on Emek Refaim Street in the German Colony section of Jerusalem.

    March 7: A suicide bomber blew himself up shortly after 3:30 P.M. Thursday afternoon in the lobby of a hotel in the commericial center on the outskirts of Ariel in Samaria. Four injuries have been reported.

    March 6: Cpl.(res.) Alexander Nastarenko, 37, of Netanya was killed when Palestinian gunmen crossed the fence and ambushed an army jeep on the patrol road near Kibbutz Nir Oz.

    March 6: 1st Lt. Pinhas Cohen, 23, of Jerusalem, was killed overnight near the southern Gaza town of Khan Yunis, in the course of anti-terrorist activity following the rocket attack on Sderot. Another soldier, whose name has not yet been released, was killed and three others were wounded when Palestinians attacked them with gunfire and grenades while on routine patrol along the border with Egypt

    March 5: Palestinians fired two Kassam II rockets at the city of Sderot shortly before 18:00 PM on Tuesday. One of the rockets hit a residential building, moderately wounding a 16-month-old infant. Hamas claimed responsibility for the attack.

    March 5: Police officers Salim Barakat, 33, of Yarka; Yosef Abey, 52, of Herzliya; and Eli Dahan, 53, of Lod were killed and over 30 people were wounded in Tel-Aviv when a Palestinian terrorist opened fire on two adjacent restaurants shortly after 2:00 AM. The Fatah Al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigade claimed responsibility for the attack.

    March 5: Devorah Friedman, 45, of Efrat, was killed and her husband injured Tuesday morning in shooting attack on the Bethlehem bypass "tunnel road", south of Jerusalem. The Fatah Al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigade claimed responsibility for the attack.

    March 5: One person was killed and 5 injured when a suicide bomber exploded in an Egged No. 823 bus as it entered the Afula central bus station at 8:30 Tuesday morning. The Islamic Jihad claimed responsibility for the attack.

    March 2: The bullet-ridden body of Jerusalem police detective Chief-Supt. Moshe Dayan, 46, of Ma'aleh Adumim, was discovered Saturday evening next to his trail motorcycle, near the Mar Saba Monastery in the Judean Desert. Tanzim claimed responsibility for the attack.

    March 2: Ten people were killed and over 50 were injured in a suicide bombing at 7 pm on Saturday evening near a yeshiva in the ultra-Orthodox Beit Yisrael neighborhood in the center of Jerusalem where people had gathered for a bar-mitzva celebration. The terrorist detonated the bomb next to a group of women waiting with their baby carriages for their husbands to leave the nearby synagogue. Six children were among the victims. The Fatah Al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigade took responsibility for the attack.

    March 3: Sgt. Steven Koenigsburg, 19, of Hod Hasharon was killed and 4 soldiers injured Sunday morning when a Palestinian gunman opened fire near the Kissufim crossing in the Gaza Strip. The Islamic Jihad and Tanzim claimed responsibility for the attack.

    March 3: Ten Israelis, including 2 IDF officers and 5 soldiers, were killed and 5 were injured when terrorists opened fire at 7:00 Sunday morning at an IDF roadblock north of Ofra in Samaria. The Fatah Al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigade claimed responsibility for the attack.

    February 25: Palestinian terrorists killed two Israeli civilians and wounded two others - a pregnant woman and a small girl - in a shooting attack south of Jerusalem.

    February 22: Valery Ahmir, 59, of Beit Shemesh, was killed by terrorists in a drive-by shooting on the Atarot-Givat Ze'ev road north of Jerusalem as he returned home from work. Fatah claimed responsibility for the attack.

    February 19: Six soldiers were killed and one wounded in an attack near a roadblock west of Ramallah. Several terrorists opened fire at soldiers at the roadblock, including three off-duty soldiers inside a structure at the roadblock, killing them at point-blank range. The Fatah al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigades claimed responsibility for the attack.

    February 19: A suicide bomber was prevented from boarding an Egged bus traveling from Jerusalem to Tiberias in the Jordan Valley. The terrorist was killed when, fleeing pursuit, he detonated the charge.

    February 18: Ahuva Amergi, 30, of Ganei Tal in Gush Katif was killed and a 60-year old man was injured when a Palestinian terrorist opened fire on her car on Monday evening. Maj. Mor Elraz, 25, of Kiryat Ata and St.-Sgt. Amir Mansouri, 21, of Kiryat Arba, who came to their assistance, were killed while trying to intercept the terrorist. The terrorist was killed when the explosives he was carrying were detonated. The Fatah al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigades claimed responsibility.

    February 18: Policeman Ahmed Mazarib, 32, of the Bedouin village Beit Zarzir in the Galilee, was killed by a suicide bomber who he had stopped for questioning on the Ma'ale Adumim-Jerusalem road on Monday afternoon. The terrorist succeeded in detonating the bomb in his car. The Fatah al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigades claimed responsibility.

    February 10: A drive-by terrorist shooting at the entrance to the IDF Southern Command base in Be’er Sheva killed two female soldiers and injured four others. One of the Palestinian terrorists was killed at the scene; the second, wearing an explosives belt, fled in the direction of a nearby school when he was shot and killed by a soldier and police officer. Hamas claimed responsibility for the attack.

    February 9: A drive-by shooting on the Trans-Samaria Highway killed a 78 year old woman. Palestinian gunmen opened fire on the car, apparently from an ambush, between Ariel and the Tapuah Junction.

    February 8: A 25-year-old Israeli woman was stabbed to death by four Palestinians, ages 14-16, while strolling with her boyfriend in the Peace Forest, below the Sherover Promenade in Jerusalem's Armon Hanatziv neighborhood.

    January 27: A suicide bombing in the center of Jerusalem killed one person and wounded more than 150. The terrorist, armed with more than 10 kilos of explosives, was apparently a female student from Nablus.

    January 25: A suicide bombing outside a cafe on a pedestrian mall in Tel Aviv injured 25 people. The Lebanese television station Al-Manar reported that the bomber was an Islamic Jihad activist sent by the organization's cell in Tulkarm and Israeli security services are investigating whether the Fatah organization in Tulkarm and Hezbollah may also have been involved.

    January 22, 2002: A Palestinian terrorist opened fire with an M-16 assault rifle near a bus stop in downtown Jerusalem, killing two women and injuring about 40 others. The Fatah Al-Aqsa Brigades claimed responsibility for the shooting.

    January 17, 2002: A Palestinian gunman burst into a bat mitzvah celebration in a banquet hall in Hadera, opening fire on the 180 guests with an M-16 assault rifle, killing 6 people and injuring 35 people. The Fatah Al-Aqsa Brigades claimed responsibility for the attack.

    December 12, 2001: Palestinian gunmen attacked a No. 189 Dan bus and several passenger cars near the entrance to the settlement of Emmanuel, killing 10 people and injuring about 30 people.

    December 2, 2001: A suicide bombing on a No. 16 Egged bus in Haifa killed 15 people and injured about 40 people. Hamas claimed responsibility for the Haifa blast, while Hizbullah's radio and television stations expressed support for the attacks.

    December 1, 2001: A double suicide bombing at the Ben-Yehuda pedestrian mall in Jerusalem at 11:30 p.m. on a Saturday night killed 11 people, aged 12-21, and injured 188 people. A car bomb exploded 20 minutes later. Hamas claimed responsibility for the attack.

    November 29, 2001: A suicide bombing of a bus on its way from Nazareth to Hadera killed three people. Fatah and Islamic Jihad claimed responsibility for the attack.

    November 27, 2001: Two Palestinian gunmen opened fire on a crowd of people near the central bus station in the city of Afula, killing two people. Fatah and Islamic Jihad claimed responsibility for the attack.

    October 28, 2001: Two Palestinian gunmen killed four Israeli women at a crowded bus stop in the city of Hadera. Although Islamic Jihad claimed responsibility for the attack, the two gunmen who carried out the attack were members of the Palestinian police force.
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  10. #10
    medinet
    Gast

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    2.589 getötete und 41.000 verletzte Palästinenser - 915 Tote und 4.166 verletzte Israelis


    Wer verursacht den größten Terror ?

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