17 июля 2013 17:01

One year on, Bulgaria still hunts for anti-Israeli bus bomber

ПОДЕЛИТЬСЯ

©REUTERS/Interior Ministry ©REUTERS/Interior Ministry

A year after an anti-Israeli bus bombing killed six people, Bulgaria is struggling to identify the attacker or confirm his suspected links to Hezbollah or Iran, AFP reports. The July 18, 2012, bombing at Bulgaria's Black Sea Burgas airport was the deadliest attack on Israelis abroad since 2004 and the first in a EU member state. Five Israeli tourists and their Bulgarian (Muslim) bus driver were killed and some 30 other people were injured. The bus was carrying a group of more than 40 Israeli tourists from the airport after they had just arrived in the country. On Thursday, officials from Bulgaria and Israel as well as relatives of the victims will open a monument at the site of the attack on the first anniversary of the bombing. But 12 months on, investigators are increasingly frustrated at efforts to track down those responsible. The bomber -- who was also killed in the attack -- was a Caucasian-looking man caught on airport cameras loitering in the arrivals hall with a big backpack on his shoulders. Bulgarian investigators managed to recover DNA and fingerprints from his remains along with an fake American driver's licence in the name of Jacques Felipe Martin. This data and a computer-generated image however failed to return a match from Interpol databases. Israel immediately blamed Iran, which denied complicity, and its "terrorist proxy" Hezbollah for the bombing. Two identical driver's licences -- made in Lebanon and used by two of the perpetrator's suspected accomplices -- allowed investigators to track down the real identities of Canadian and Australian passport holders residing in Lebanon since 2006 and 2010. "What we can make as a justified conclusion is that the two persons whose identity we have established belonged to the military wing of Hezbollah," the then interior minister Tsvetan Tsvetanov said in February. DNA recovered from one of the licences in the name of Ralph William Rico matched that of the bomber, the minister added, supporting the theory concerning his presumed Hezbollah links. "The justified conclusion stands," new Foreign Minister Kristian Vigenin confirmed last week while insisting that the EU should not base a decision on whether to blacklist Hezbollah on these circumstantial findings alone. Talks on whether to add the military wing of the powerful Lebanese Shiite movement to the bloc's list of "terrorist groups" also take place on Thursday. "The identity of the direct perpetrator has not been established yet and this hinders the probe to some extent," Bulgarian Interior Minister Tsvetlin Yovchev told 24 Hours in an interview Tuesday. "There is progress. We have received additional data from foreign partner services that confirms the proposition already made," he added. A coroner's examination of the man's severed head recovered from the site of the accident indicated a young person, aged around 25, about 1.8 metres (five foot nine inches) tall, with fair skin and mixed eyes. Airport CCTV footage showed him wearing typical holiday wear -- shorts, baseball cap and eyeglasses. Witness reports suggested his shoulder-length hair was probably a wig. Investigators initially thought the man was a suicide bomber but a closer examination of the blown up bus and a later re-enactment of the bombing with silicon mannequins confirmed that he either died by mistake or his device was detonated by a remote-controlled device, at a distance. The re-enactment confirmed that about 2.2 kilogrammes (4.9 pounds) of trotile equivalent -- a common material in bombs used as standard measure of explosives strength -- was used in the attack. Investigators have so far been unable to establish whether the bomb was made abroad and smuggled into the country or assembled on the ground, with local or imported materials. Israel's almost immediate repatriations both of the victims and the survivors prevented Bulgarian prosecutors from questioning them. Their written testimony was only received earlier this month and is still being translated, Burgas regional prosecution chief Kalina Chapkanova told 24 Hours newspaper last week. The investigation's initial end-of-June deadline has been extended by another five months.


A year after an anti-Israeli bus bombing killed six people, Bulgaria is struggling to identify the attacker or confirm his suspected links to Hezbollah or Iran, AFP reports. The July 18, 2012, bombing at Bulgaria's Black Sea Burgas airport was the deadliest attack on Israelis abroad since 2004 and the first in a EU member state. Five Israeli tourists and their Bulgarian (Muslim) bus driver were killed and some 30 other people were injured. The bus was carrying a group of more than 40 Israeli tourists from the airport after they had just arrived in the country. On Thursday, officials from Bulgaria and Israel as well as relatives of the victims will open a monument at the site of the attack on the first anniversary of the bombing. But 12 months on, investigators are increasingly frustrated at efforts to track down those responsible. The bomber -- who was also killed in the attack -- was a Caucasian-looking man caught on airport cameras loitering in the arrivals hall with a big backpack on his shoulders. Bulgarian investigators managed to recover DNA and fingerprints from his remains along with an fake American driver's licence in the name of Jacques Felipe Martin. This data and a computer-generated image however failed to return a match from Interpol databases. Israel immediately blamed Iran, which denied complicity, and its "terrorist proxy" Hezbollah for the bombing. Two identical driver's licences -- made in Lebanon and used by two of the perpetrator's suspected accomplices -- allowed investigators to track down the real identities of Canadian and Australian passport holders residing in Lebanon since 2006 and 2010. "What we can make as a justified conclusion is that the two persons whose identity we have established belonged to the military wing of Hezbollah," the then interior minister Tsvetan Tsvetanov said in February. DNA recovered from one of the licences in the name of Ralph William Rico matched that of the bomber, the minister added, supporting the theory concerning his presumed Hezbollah links. "The justified conclusion stands," new Foreign Minister Kristian Vigenin confirmed last week while insisting that the EU should not base a decision on whether to blacklist Hezbollah on these circumstantial findings alone. Talks on whether to add the military wing of the powerful Lebanese Shiite movement to the bloc's list of "terrorist groups" also take place on Thursday. "The identity of the direct perpetrator has not been established yet and this hinders the probe to some extent," Bulgarian Interior Minister Tsvetlin Yovchev told 24 Hours in an interview Tuesday. "There is progress. We have received additional data from foreign partner services that confirms the proposition already made," he added. A coroner's examination of the man's severed head recovered from the site of the accident indicated a young person, aged around 25, about 1.8 metres (five foot nine inches) tall, with fair skin and mixed eyes. Airport CCTV footage showed him wearing typical holiday wear -- shorts, baseball cap and eyeglasses. Witness reports suggested his shoulder-length hair was probably a wig. Investigators initially thought the man was a suicide bomber but a closer examination of the blown up bus and a later re-enactment of the bombing with silicon mannequins confirmed that he either died by mistake or his device was detonated by a remote-controlled device, at a distance. The re-enactment confirmed that about 2.2 kilogrammes (4.9 pounds) of trotile equivalent -- a common material in bombs used as standard measure of explosives strength -- was used in the attack. Investigators have so far been unable to establish whether the bomb was made abroad and smuggled into the country or assembled on the ground, with local or imported materials. Israel's almost immediate repatriations both of the victims and the survivors prevented Bulgarian prosecutors from questioning them. Their written testimony was only received earlier this month and is still being translated, Burgas regional prosecution chief Kalina Chapkanova told 24 Hours newspaper last week. The investigation's initial end-of-June deadline has been extended by another five months.
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