Israel
Mourns 4 Children, Mother Murdered in Terror Attack 
By
Joel Leyden Israel News Agency Jerusalem----May
2....Palestinian terrorists murdered 4 young Jewish children and their pregnant
mother this afternoon. The terror attack targeted the family vehicle while it
was traveling on the road that leads to the Gaza Strip settlement bloc of Gush
Katif. Another Israeli civilian traveling in a separate car suffered
moderate gunfire wounds in the attack near the Netzer Hazani settlement. The
terrorists arrived by car from the nearby Palestinian village of Dir al Ballah
and began to fire at passing Israeli vehicles, consequently killing the mother
and her four children. Another Israeli traveling in the opposite direction, was
also wounded. After spraying
the station wagen with bullets, the Palestinian terrorists walked up to the 4
terrified little girls and shot each one of them twice in the head, police said.
The 8-month-old pregnant mother was shot in her belly at point blank range as
she tried to cover her children The
victims of the attack were identified as Tali Hatuel, 34, and her daughters Hila
(11), Hadar (9), Roni (7) and Merav (2). Tali's husband was not in the car at
the time of the attack, ynet reported. The Hatuels lived on the Gush Katif settlement
of Katif. An Israel
Defense Forces jeep arrived at the scene and engaged in gunfire with the terrorists,
killing them. During the gun battle an explosion took place but it was still unclear
whether it was caused by a grenade or by a bomb. Two
IDF Givati brigade soldiers were wounded during the gun battle and were airlifted
to Soroka hospital in Be'er Sheva together with the Israeli civilian. Following
the terror attack, Defense Minister Shaul Mofaz canceled his participation in
the groundbreaking ceremony of the Center of Human Dignity Museum of Tolerance,
sponsored by the Simon Wiesenthal Center, in Jerusalem Sunday.
Israel responded with an IDF helicopter attack launching three missiles at a building
in Gaza City housing radio stations affiliated with the Hamas terror group and
Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat's Fatah party. The
missiles, which hit the top corner of the 14-story building near the radio stations'
offices, caved in part of the roof and cut off electricity to the building. The
roof's red tiles were blown off and smoke rose through the exposed rafters. Military
sources said the IDF had attacked a Hamas radio station that had been broadcasting
messages of incitement. After
the first missile hit, the building shook and glass started flying everywhere,
said Fathi Sabbah, an editor at Al Ayyam. "Everybody
was trying to get out ... but then they hit the building again. Glass flew everywhere,
and the building shook," he said. "The
blasts were very powerful," said Moin Saraj, 35, a journalist at Al Ayyam. People
ran in panic through the streets after the attack. Ambulances and fire engines
raced to the scene. "I
feel the pain of the family and I wish that the wounded will heal," said
Prime Minister Ariel Sharon. "Israel will not yield and will continue fighting
terror until it is destroyed just like we are fighting it now." "The
disengagement plan is a harsh blow to the Palestinians who will do anything to
prevent it from being accepted. The murder was intended to delay and interfere
with the plan," he added. "We
will fight terror and do everything possible to prevent such incidents in the
future and that is why I am struggling for my plan." The
IDF helicopter attack was most likely the first wave of defensive action taken
by Israel. The
terror attack against Israeli children only provided fuel for Jewish leaders in
Gaza saying that the attack proves that Likud members must vote against the disengagement
plan in order not to give a prize to terrorists. Meanwhile
Sunday, the Israel Likud party referendum on Prime Minister Ariel Sharon's unilateral
disengagement plan opened at 8 AM with polls to close at 10 PM. Final results
will be announced at 2 AM Monday. Some
443 polls have been set up for the 193,000 card-carrying Likud members who are
eligible to vote. Roughly 1, 300 security guards and police will secure the proceedings
throughout the country. 176 lawyers have been tasked with overseeing the vote's
legality. An explosive
device was detonated near the site of the shooting while the Israel Defense Forces
troops were chasing the terrorists, but it caused no injuries. Both
Hamas and Islamic Jihad and Popular Resistance Committees, an umbrella group,
claimed responsibility for the "heroic" attack in a call to The Associated
Press. The resistance committees
said the attack was in response to Israel's recent assassinations of the founder
of the Hamas militant group, Sheikh Ahmed Yassin, and his successor, Abdel Aziz
Rantisi. "The attack
is part of the Palestinian reprisals for the daily crimes committed by the Israeli
army against the Palestinian people, especially the killings of Yassin and Rantisi,"
the group said. David Hatuel
wept in front of five mounds of brown soil, the fresh graves of his pregnant wife
and four daughters - his entire family. "I
am all alone, there is no one left," he said in a whisper. 
TV
footage showed rescue workers sifting through the white Citroen station wagon,
a poster reading "A Jewish heart votes no" plastered across the car
hood. A medic
wiped blood off a baby seat, two small bright pink shoes lay on the blood-soaked
carpet of the bullet-riddled car. Settlers
and opponents of the Sharon plan have said a withdrawal from Gaza would be a reward
for attacks like these. A bumper sticker on the back of the car read "Uprooting
the settlements - a victory for terror". At
the funeral, David Hatuel apologised to his family for spending so much time away
from them campaigning against the plan to uproot the Gaza homes. "Only
on Friday, the girls drew me a picture and said 'Daddy, we are so proud of you
for working so hard to save our home," he said, calling his daughters, his
"flowers". "Tali,"
he said, "everything I have, everything I did, I did for her." Tali
Hatuel was a social worker and counselled the families of victims from attacks
by Palestinian militants, friends said. "She
was quiet and shy ... she was a very serious person," her neighbour Ezra
Haidu said. 
In
Gaza City, about 1,500 people joined an Islamic Jihad march celebrating the barbaric
attack. Islamic Jihad said the attack was in response to Israel's assassination
of Hamas leader Sheik Ahmed Yassin and Abdel Aziz Rantisi. "The
goal of this attack was to confirm the continuation of the resistance," said
Khader Habib, an Islamic Jihad leader in Gaza.
The spotlight is now on PA Chairman Yasser Arafat as many Israeli sources consider
him next in line for assassination after master terrorists Yassin and Rantisi
were killed by Israeli security. Arafat, who signed the Oslo Peace Accords and
agreed to the US brokered Road Map peace plan, has broken these commitments by
not confronting terror organizations under his control. Recently Arafat ordered
20 wanted terrorists to leave his home in Rahmallah fearing an immediate Israeli
attack against him. Settlement
leader Yehoshua Mor-Yosef said the dead were all Gush Katif residents. A resident
of Gush Katif settlement Kfar Darom said the family was on its way to campaign
against Prime Minister Ariel Sharon's disengagement plan. The attack took place
the same day as the party referendum on the pullout from the Gaza Strip and parts
of the West Bank. Defense
Minister Shaul Mofaz canceled scheduled appearances Sunday and planned to convene
with top security officials to plan a response to the attack, military sources
said. Opponents and proponents
of the disengagement plan interpreted the attack according to their respective
political convictions, with Likud MK Yuval Steinitz saying the attack did not
make the plan any less necessary and Likud MK Ehud Yatom saying the attack must
enhance the fierce opposition to disengagement. The
attack was the first to kill civilians in Gaza in more than a year. Israel
MK Ehud Yatom, who opposes PM Sharon's disengagement plan, stated: "The purpose
of the attack is to create a situation where the surrender to terrorism and escape
come sooner. Therefore, Likud voters' response to terrorism must be opposition
to the surrender plan". Israel
Minister Yisrael Katz said that the attack should not be linked to the disengagement
poll, but added: "The attack reinforces the Chief of Staff's claim that disengagement
gives terrorism a backwind". MK
Uri Ariel (National Union) demanded forceful action against the terrorists. "I
demand that the Defense Minister order the demolition of houses on both sides
of the Kissufim road and that the High Court of Justices refrains from again delaying
action that is essential to the security of Israeli citizens", he said. Israeli
Minister Gideon Ezra, who does support the PM's plan, said: "Our hearts are
with the Katif Block residents. The poll today is intended to address exactly
those painful issues. The government is obligated to protect its citizens, to
fight terrorism, and to remain only in places optimal for us". Ezra
added: "The Gaza region is protected by a fence, and whoever gets near it
will by killed. We are obligated to go along with the Prime Minister, the Chief
of Staff, and the chiefs of the GSS and of IDF Intelligence, who know better than
all of us". Palestinian
terrorists repeatedly use their own children as suicide bombers and as human shields
when attacking Israelis and have intentionally targeted Israeli children in recent
months. Matan, 5, and Noam Ohion, 4, and their mother were shot and murdered by
a Palestinian terrorist at Kibbutz Metzer in central Israel last November. The
terrorists walked into the child's bedroom and shot the children as they were
sitting in their beds.
Security sources said the body of the boys' mother, Revital, 34, was riddled with
bullets, apparently because she had tried to shield her children as the gunman
burst into the children's room. 
The
terrorist burst in as the mother was reading the children a bedtime story.The
Islamic madman then killed two more Israelis at the kibbutz before escaping in
the dark. Dozens of Israeli children have been murdered and hundreds injured on
public buses and in restaurants which were targets for Palestinian terrorism.
In April of 2002, both Israeli senior citizens and their small grandchildren were
slaughtered when a Palestinian terrorist blew up the Park Hotel in Netanya, killing
29 Jews in what's referred to as the Passover Massacre. Yasser
Arafat, who was born in Egypt, claims that "Palestine" is occupied and
that "armed resistance" is the only solution to ending the "occupation."
The West Bank was Jordan and Gaza was Egypt prior to the 1967 Israel Arab war.
When Palestinians claim that Palestine is occupied, they are not referring to
Nablus, Jenin or Rahmallah, they are directly referring to all of the land between
the Jordan River and the Mediterranean - the State of Israel. Many
Israeli and world leaders believe that regional stability will not be realized
until Arafat has been expelled or assassinated and replaced with a Palestinian
leader who will confront terror, create jobs for Palestinians and seek a true
and lasting peace between Israel and the Palestinians. Eight
Israelis and one Belgian who are victims of terrorism have filed a lawsuit in
Brussels charging Yasser Arafat with "genocide, murder and crimes against
humanity." The suit
was organized by the Terror Victims Association of Israel. Oscar
Gudlovitch, the Belgian involved in the suit who claims he was wounded when PLO
terrorists attacked a Brussels synagogue in 1982, said that until now, he "was
afraid to file any legal action against Arafat." Meanwhile,
at a press conference to announce the suit, Meir Indor, chief of the Terror Victims
Association, said the action gives the international community "a chance
to put Arafat where he rightfully belongs in prison for mass murder, and
not in the parlors of Europe receiving prizes for peace." Yaacov
Rubin, a lawyer for the group, said he believes the world media is generally anti-Israel.
"The world press
will now have to face the terrible genocide that Arafat has waged for 30 years
against the Jewish people," he said in Brussels. Paris
criminal lawyer Robert Goldnadel will also represent the group. Both attorneys
will work on a voluntary basis and are not charging fees for their service. Yehudit
Shahor who became a lawyer after her son was murdered by terrorists in
Wadi Kelt is also assisting the other attorneys, the Jerusalem Post newspaper
said last week. In Brussels
representing the 30 Israeli signatories to the suit were Hanna Maoz, whose daughter
was one of 15 killed in the Sbarro Pizzeria bombing in Jerusalem Aug. 9; Yisrael
Liebman, whose brother was murdered in the settlement of Yitzhar; Frida Sweri,
whose daughter, son and son-in-law were killed in a drive-by shooting near Beit
Horon; Irena Rudin, whose daughter was killed in the Dolphinarium suicide-bombing
in Tel Aviv; and Aryeh Bosnah, who was wounded in a 1974 PLO attack on a school
in Maalot. Officials with
TVA say they have evidence that directly links Arafat to a number of terrorist
attacks committed by groups such as Fatah, Force 17, Hamas and the Islamic Jihad.
The suit charges Arafat
"with murders which he ordered and which were carried out by members of organizations
which Arafat controls," according to a statement issued on the group's website.
The suit also charges
Arafat's assistants Mohammed Dahlan, Marwan Barghoutti and Jibril Rajoub
with murder and genocide. Arafat's
crimes transcend the murder of Jews. Yassir
Arafat has compiled a record of atrocities which would be the envy of past war
criminals. If one compiles a list in date order from the PLO's inception in 1964,
specifying all those attacks which were ordered by Arafat. From the blowing-up
of planes, through thousands of terrorist attacks, ordering the execution of American
Ambassador to Sudan, Cleo No'l, charges des affaires George Moore and the Belgium
aid, Guy Eid in Khartoum. During
the 12 year Civil War in Lebanon, caused by Yassir Arafat's assuming power through
terror, his terrorists committed mass murder. Whole villages of Christians like
Damour were massacred, chopped into pieces with machetes. Out of the 30,000 Christians,
10,000 were slaughtered by Arafat's PLO. The town was then occupied and kept as
Arafat's stronghold. David Shipler of the New York Times wrote the story of Damour
June 21, 1982. There were individual murders. One horrific, but typical, example
is when the Muktar (leader) of a village refused to be cooperative with Arafat
and his terrorists. The Muktar's teenage daughter was abducted and raped. Her
breasts were cut off and she was delivered to the doorstep of her father in a
sack. In any hospital
controlled by Arafat's terrorists, captured Christians became live blood banks
for wounded Palestinians. Israeli soldiers who captured these hospitals found
bodies drained of all their blood and stacked, like cordwood, in the hallways.
As of late September 2003,
according to the head of Israeli military intelligence, Maj.-Gen. Zeevi-Farkash,
Arafat orders for terrorist attacks were actually coming directly from Arafat's
headquarters. More recently,
Yasser Arafat's Fatah faction of the PLO shot and killed George Khoury (20) as
he was jogging in Jerusalem's French Hill neighborhood. Khoury was the son of
an Israel Arab lawyer who has for years championed the "Palestinian"
effort to build a state in the Land of Israel, and who has represented terror
suspects in Israeli courts. Arafat,
in a clear racist gesture, stated that this was a case of mistaken identity -
because their victim turned out to be an Arab instead of a Jew. Nearly
30 years ago, Arab terrorists murdered Khoury's grandfather in downtown Jerusalem. After
the terror attack, Arafat personally called Khoury's father, Elias, to apologize
for the "accidental" killing, confirming to many the conviction that
the terror chief is personally responsible for acts of terrorism that have claimed
hundreds of lives on both sides. The
U.S. State Department has renewed a $5 million reward for information leading
to the arrest or conviction of those involved in the terror attack of a U.S. diplomatic
convoy in Gaza last October. The
October 15 roadside terror bombing killed three American security personnel working
for the U.S. military contractor DynCorp as they guarded American diplomats traveling
into Gaza to interview Palestinians who were candidates for Fulbright Scholarship
grants. Israel
News Agency
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