The failed suicide bombing in Tel Aviv in
August was carried out under the direction of Hamas headquarters in
Turkey, according to the findings of a joint Israel Police and Israel
Security Agency investigation published on Tuesday.
Indictments against eight terrorists arrested during the investigation were set to be filed later in the day.
According to authorities, the eight
maintained contact with Abada Bilal, a senior Hamas official in Turkey
who directed the execution of the attack.
The investigation also found that one of
the terrorists traveled several times to Turkey, where Hamas provided
him with funding for explosives and training on assembling bombs.
Security and rescue forces at the scene of an explosion in south Tel Aviv, Aug. 18, 2024.
On Aug. 18, a powerful explosion rocked
Tel Aviv’s Lehi Street. One passerby was moderately wounded by shrapnel,
and damage was caused to buildings and property.
The “military wings” of the Hamas and
Islamic Jihad terrorist groups claimed responsibility for the attack,
with the former vowing to carry out suicide attacks “as long as Israel
continues its massacre and policy of assassinations in Gaza.”
The investigation found that the bomber, Jaafar Muna, who was killed in the blast, was a Hamas operative from Nablus.
Authorities said on Tuesday that an
additional indictment was filed against a resident of Beit Hanina in
eastern Jerusalem, who transported Muna from the Israeli capital to Tel
Aviv.
During the investigation, security forces
uncovered Hamas infrastructure in the Nablus area and seized two
ready-to-use TATP (triacetone triperoxide) explosive devices weighing
about 4 kilograms (9 pounds), along with approximately 4 kilograms of
TATP intended for further attacks. Additionally, 111,000 shekels
($29,668) that had been transferred from Hamas HQ in Turkey to the local
terror cell were confiscated.
“The findings of this investigation clearly indicate the establishment of Hamas headquarters in
Turkey and their extensive efforts abroad to incite violence and carry
out bombings in Israel,” according to Israeli authorities.
The
site of a suicide bombing attack in Tel Aviv near a synagogue named for
Rabbi Shimon bar Yochai on Aug. 18, 2024.
In July, Israeli security forces foiled a significant terrorist plot orchestrated by Hamas operatives in Turkey and involving students from Birzeit University in Samaria.
The operation, a collaborative effort of
the ISA, Israel Defense Forces and a specialized police unit, led to the
arrest of several suspects and the seizure of weapons and funds
earmarked for the attack.
Earlier this year, Israeli authorities
thwarted a large-scale suicide bombing attack planned by Hamas’s
terrorist headquarters in Turkey, the ISA revealed in June.
The agency said its forces had captured
Anas Shurman—a Palestinian originally from Tulkarem who lives in
Jordan—during a March 15 raid in the central Samaria terrorist
stronghold of Nablus.
Interrogations revealed that three months
earlier, Shurman had been recruited to carry out a suicide bombing by
Imad Abid, a Hamas operative living in Turkey who was born in Judea and
Samaria.
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan has
long harbored members of Hamas. In 2022, the terrorist organization
marked the 10th anniversary of the official establishment of its offices
in Istanbul.
The Jerusalem Center for Public Affairs,
in a 2021 report, said that Hamas’s headquarters in Istanbul has
directed hundreds of terrorist attacks against Israelis and laundered
millions of dollars.
In April, Ankara invited Ismail Haniyeh, the head of Hamas’s political bureau who was subsequently assassinated by Israel in Tehran, to stay in the country, praising him as a “leader of the Palestinian struggle.”
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