Iran denies involvement in Bulgaria bus bombing
The attack yesterday on a bus carrying Israeli tourists in Bulgaria killed seven people.
The attack yesterday on a bus carrying Israeli tourists in Bulgaria killed seven people.
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A suicide bomber with fake US identification carried out the attack on a bus carrying Israeli tourists in Bulgaria yesterday, according to Bulgarian Interior Minister Tsvetan Tsvetanov.
No one immediately claimed responsibility for the bombing, but Israel accused Iran and its Lebanese proxy, Hezbollah, for the attack, which killed seven people and injured dozens. The airport bombing was the deadliest attack on Israelis abroad since 2004, reports Bulgarian news source Novinite.
Israel and Bulgaria are currently working with other countries, including the United States, to draft a condemnation of the attacks for the UN Security Council, according to the Israeli newspaper Haaretz.
鈥淚ran and Hezbollah鈥檚 fingerprints are visible,鈥 said Israeli Foreign Ministry spokesperson Lior Ben-Dor, adding that both entities should be added to EU terror lists. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu accused Iran and the militant group Hezbollah of conducting 鈥渁 global terror campaign against Israelis across the world,鈥 including recent attacks in Thailand, Kenya, India, and Cyprus.聽
Iranian state TV rejected accusations of the country鈥檚 involvement, calling the accusations 鈥渞idiculous鈥 and 鈥渟ensational,鈥 reports the Associated Press.聽
Some say singling out Iran this early will only work toward straining an already tense relationship between Tehran and Israel. According to 海角大神:
The suspected bomber was identified on airport surveillance footage for close to an hour before yesterday鈥檚 attack. The man, carrying a fake Michigan driver鈥檚 license, placed his backpack in the luggage storage compartment beneath the bus prior to boarding, reports the Associated Press.
鈥淗e looked like anyone else 鈥 a normal person with Bermuda shorts and a backpack,鈥 Mr. Tsvetanov told reporters in front of the Burgas airport, located on the Black Sea just 250 miles from the capital, Sofia.
Bulgaria is a popular tourist destination for Israelis, and this was not the first attempted attack there. In January, a reported bomb threat on a bus carrying Israeli tourists to a nearby ski resort put security on high alert, reports the Monitor.
DNA samples from the bomber were collected at the scene and special forces are now trying to identify the suspect, Tsvetanov said. According to the Guardian, Bulgarian security services received no warnings of an attack.