Kalpana Kalpana (Editor)

1994 London Israeli Embassy bombing

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Target
  
Israeli embassy

Date
  
26 July 1994

Attack type
  
Car bomb

Non-fatal injuries
  
20

Location
  
London, United Kingdom

Location
  
London

1994 London Israeli Embassy bombing httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Suspected perpetrators
  
pro-Iranian extremists, allegedly linked to Hezbollah

Similar
  
Dizengoff Street bus bombing, Jaffa Road bus bombings, Ben Yehuda Street bo, 1983 United States em, TWA Flight 847

The 1994 London Israeli Embassy bombing was a car bomb attack on 26 July 1994 against the Israeli embassy building in London. Twenty civilians were injured.

Contents

The attack

A car packed with 20 to 30 pounds of explosives parked in front of the embassy blew up minutes after the driver left it. The blast, which caused widespread damage, was heard over a mile away. Apart from damage to the embassy building, shop windows were blown out. The attack took place one day after King Hussein of Jordan and Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin met in Washington to discuss a Jordan-Israel peace treaty.

Aftermath

The Israeli Ambassador and British intelligence experts blamed pro-Iranian extremists, allegedly linked to Hezbollah. Thirteen hours later another car bomb exploded outside Balfour House, which at the time was the London headquarters of one of the largest Jewish charities, The United Jewish Israel Appeal (UJIA), injuring six.

Five Palestinians were arrested in London in January 1995 in connection with the bombings. In December 1996, two of them, both Palestinian science graduates educated in the UK, Jawad Botmeh and Samar Alami, were found guilty of "conspiracy to cause explosions" at the Old Bailey. They were sentenced to 20 years in jail, and lost their appeal in 2001.

Botmeh was released from prison in 2008.

References

1994 London Israeli Embassy bombing Wikipedia