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Matzuva attack

Coordinates: 33°3′48″N 35°09′0″E / 33.06333°N 35.15000°E / 33.06333; 35.15000
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Matzuva attack
Part of the Second Intifada militancy campaign
Matzuva attack is located in Northwest Israel
Matzuva attack
The attack site
LocationNear kibbutz Matzuva, Israel
Coordinates33°3′48″N 35°09′0″E / 33.06333°N 35.15000°E / 33.06333; 35.15000
DateMarch 12, 2002; 22 years ago (2002-03-12)
Attack type
Ambush, mass shooting
WeaponsSmall arms, hand grenades
Deaths5 Israeli civilians and 1 Israeli soldier (+2 attackers)
Injured1 Israeli civilian
PerpetratorIslamic Jihad claimed responsibility

The Matzuva attack was a terrorist attack on March 12, 2002 in which two Islamic Jihad militants who infiltrated Israel from Lebanon opened fire on civilian vehicles traveling on the Shlomi-Matzuva road. Six Israeli civilians were killed in the attack and one injured.[1]

The attack

On March 12, 2002 two Islamic Jihad militants crossed the border, reached a mountain overlooking the Shlomi-Matzuva road, and began firing small arms and throwing hand grenades at vehicles traveling on the road, including a civilian commuter bus.

Five Israeli civilians and an Israeli army officer were killed and a member of Kibbutz Matzuva was injured.

The two attackers were killed in battle with Israeli security forces.

Fatalities

The perpetrators

Initially, Israeli intelligence officials believed that the attack was organized by Hezbollah, although Hezbollah did not confirm this.[8]

Following the signing of the trade agreement between Lebanon and the European Union in 2002, Hezbollah had agreed not to commit any attacks across the international border between Israel and Lebanon. In 2004, Islamic Jihad took responsibility for the attack. In May 2006, Mahmoud al-Majzoub, leader of the Palestinian Islamic Jihad at that time, was blown up in his car in Sidon. There were speculations that the hit was a response to the 2002 Matzuva attack, but Israel has not taken responsibility for al-Majzoub's death.

See also

References

  1. ^ Greenberg, Joel (March 14, 2002). "Fatal Attack Shatters Israeli Border Town's Calm". The New York Times. Retrieved March 22, 2011.
  2. ^ Lynne Livne
  3. ^ Lt German Rojyakov
  4. ^ Yehudit Cohen<
  5. ^ Alexei Kotman
  6. ^ Ofer Kanerik
  7. ^ Atara Livne
  8. ^ Fatal Attack Shatters Israeli Border Town's Calm, New York Times, 14 March 2002.