Khaleej Times

Woman in 2001 Israel pizza parlour bombing on FBI’s ‘Most Wanted’ list

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washington — The US Federal Bureau of Investigat­ion placed a Jordanian woman who assisted in the 2001 suicide bombing of an occupied Jerusalem pizza parlour on its “Most Wanted Terrorist” list on Tuesday.

The Justice Department unveiled charges against Ahlam Aref Ahmad Al Tamimi, who was jailed in Israel for eight years in the attack that killed 15, before gaining release in an Israeli prisoner swap with Hamas in 2011.

US authoritie­s had hoped to have Tamimi extradited from Jordan but said they were frustrated by laws that ban extraditio­n of Jordanian nationals. The Justice Department said Tamimi, now in her mid-30s, escorted a suicide bomber to occupied Jerusalem on August 9, 2001, where he detonated a bomb, hidden inside a guitar, in a Sbarro pizza shop.

The bomb killed 15, including two Americans. After her capture, Tamimi pleaded guilty at trial and was sentenced in 2003 to 16 life prison terms. But she was released in 2011 in the prisoner swap. The US indictment unveiled on Tuesday charges her with “conspiring to use a weapon of mass destructio­n against US nationals outside the US, resulting in death”.

She faces a possible execution or life in prison if she is captured, tried and convicted in the United States.

“Al Tamimi is an unrepentan­t terrorist who admitted to her role in a deadly terrorist bombing that injured and killed numerous innocent victims,” said Acting Assistant Attorney General Mary McCord.

 ?? — AP ?? An image provided by the FBI for Ahlam Ahmad Al Tamimi.
— AP An image provided by the FBI for Ahlam Ahmad Al Tamimi.

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