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Patterns of Global Terrorism: 1997
From the original report at
http://www.state.gov/www/global/terrorism/1997report/1997index.html
Department of State Publication 10535
Office of the Secretary of State
Office of the Coordinator for Counterterrorism
Released April 1998
The Year in Review
During 1997 there were 304 acts of international terrorism, eight more
than occurred during 1996, but one of the lowest annual totals recorded
since 1971. The number of casualties remained large but did not approach
the high levels recorded during 1996. In 1997, 221 persons died and 693
were wounded in international terrorist attacks as compared to 314 dead
and 2,912 wounded in 1996. Seven US citizens died and 21 were wounded in
1997, as compared with 23 dead and 510 wounded the previous year.
Approximately one-third of the attacks were against US targets, and
most of those consisted of low-level bombings of multinational oil pipelines
in Colombia. Terrorists there regard the pipelines as a US target.
The predominant type of attack during 1997 was bombing; the foremost
target was business related.
The following were among the more significant attacks during the year:
- The deadliest terrorist attack ever committed in Egypt occurred on
17 November when six gunmen entered the Hatsheput Temple in Luxor and for
30 minutes methodically shot and knifed tourists trapped inside the Temple's
alcoves. Fifty-eight foreign tourists were murdered, along with three Egyptian
police officers and one Egyptian tour guide. The gunmen then commandeered
an empty tour bus and fled the scene, but Egyptian security forces pursued
them and all six were killed.
- On 18 September terrorists launched a grenade attack on a tour bus
parked in front of the Egyptian National Antiquities Museum in Cairo. Nine
German tourists and their Egyptian busdriver were killed, and eight others
were wounded.
- On 12 November four US citizens, employees of Union Texas Petroleum,
and their Pakistani driver were shot and killed when the vehicle in which
they were riding was attacked 1 mile from the US Consulate in Karachi.
- The Government of Iran conducted at least 13 assassinations in 1997,
the majority of which were carried out in northern Iraq.
- On 30 July two suicide bombers attacked a market in Jerusalem. Sixteen
persons--including a US citizen--were killed, and 178 were wounded.
- On 4 September three suicide bombers attacked a pedestrian mall in
central Jerusalem, killing seven persons--including a 14-year-old US citizen--and
injuring nearly 200 persons.
- Frank Pescatore, a US geologist and mining consultant working in Colombia,
was kidnapped by the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia in December
1996 and later killed by his captors; his body was discovered 23 February
1997.
- On 30 March unknown assailants threw four grenades into a political
demonstration in Phnom Penh, killing 19 persons and wounding more than
100 others. Among the injured were a US citizen from the International
Republican Institute, a Chinese journalist from the Xinhua News Agency,
and opposition leader Sam Rainsy, who led some 200 supporters of his Khmer
Nations Party in the demonstration against the governing Cambodian People's
Party.
- In April, in Bosnia and Herzegovina, police discovered and defused
23 landmines under a bridge that was part of Pope John Paul II's motorcade
route in Sarajevo, several hours before the Pope's arrival.
- On 30 July, in Colombia, National Liberation Army terrorists bombed
the Cano Limon-Covenas oil pipeline in Norte Santander. They had wrapped
sticks of dynamite around the pipes of the pump, which caused a major oil
spill on detonation. Pumping operations were suspended for more than a
week, resulting in several million dollars in lost revenue.
In a notable counterterrorism achievement, Peruvian security forces
staged on 22 April a raid on the Japanese Ambassador's residence in Lima
where members of the Tupac Amaru Revolutionary Movement (MRTA) were holding
72 hostages for four months. All but one of the hostages were freed; after
being shot during the rescue, that one suffered a heart attack and subsequently
died. All the MRTA hostage takers were killed. The United States strongly
supported the Government of Peru's steadfast refusal to make any concessions
to the terrorists holding the hostages during the four-month ordeal.
Terrorists were brought to trial in various countries throughout the
year:
- In April a judgment by a court in Berlin found that the highest levels
of Iran's political leadership followed a deliberate policy of murdering
political opponents who lived outside the country. The court found four
defendants guilty in the 1992 murders of four Iranian Kurdish opposition
figures in Berlin's Mykonos restaurant. Three of the four convicted were
members of the Lebanese Hizballah organization; the fourth was an Iranian
national. The court made clear that other participants in the murders had
escaped to Iran, where one of them was given a Mercedes for his role in
the operation. In March 1996 a German court had issued an arrest warrant
for former Iranian Minister of Intelligence and Security Ali Fallahian
in this case.
- On 18 November the trial of five defendants suspected in the 1986 La
Belle discotheque bombing opened in Berlin. Two US soldiers, Sgt. Kenneth
Ford and Sgt. James Goins, were killed in the attack along with a Turkish
citizen, and some 200 other persons were wounded, including 64 US citizens.
The United States believes the attack was sponsored by Libya. The trial
is expected to last two years.
- The notorious terrorist Illich Ramirez Sanchez, known as "Carlos
the Jackal," was convicted in December by a French court for the 1975
murders of two French investigators and a Lebanese national. Although Ramirez
had proclaimed during the trial that "There is no law for me,"
the court sentenced him to life in prison.
Several notable trials of international terrorist suspects in the United
States also took place during the year:
- On 12 November a federal jury in Manhattan convicted Ramzi Ahmed Yousef
of directing and helping to carry out the World Trade Center bombing in
1993. Eyad Mahmoud Ismail Najim, who drove the truck that carried the bomb,
was also found guilty. Yousef was extradited to the United States from
Pakistan in February 1995; Najim was arrested in Jordan in August of that
year pursuant to an extradition request from the United States, and he
was returned to the United States. (In January 1998 Yousef was sentenced
to 240 years in solitary confinement for his role in the World Trade Center
bombing. He also received an additional sentence of life imprisonment for
his previous conviction in a terrorist conspiracy to plant bombs aboard
US passenger airliners operating in East Asia.)
- In June 1997 US authorities arrested Mir Aimal Kansi, the suspected
gunman in the attack on 25 January 1993 outside Central Intelligence Agency
(CIA) Headquarters that killed two CIA employees and wounded three others.
Kansi was apprehended abroad, remanded into US custody, and transported
to the United States to stand trial. In November a jury in Fairfax, Virginia,
found Kansi guilty of the capital murder of Frank A. Darling, the first
degree murder of Lansing H. Bennett, and the malicious wounding of Nicholas
Starr, Calvin R. Morgan, and Stephen E. Williams, as well as five firearms
charges. (In January 1998, Kansi was sentenced to death.)
- A member of the Japanese Red Army terrorist organization, Tsutomu Shirosaki,
was turned over to US authorities in 1996 in an Asian country and brought
to the United States to stand trial for the improvised mortar attacks against
the US Embassy in Jakarta, Indonesia, on 14 May 1986. The projectiles landed
on the roof and in a courtyard but failed to explode. In November a US
federal court in Washington, DC, found Shirosaki guilty of all charges,
including attempted murder of US Embassy personnel and attempting to harm
a US Embassy. (In February 1998 Shirosaki was sentenced to a 30-year prison
term.)
There were 13 international terrorist incidents in the United States
during the year, 12 involving letter bombs:
- In January a total of 12 letter bombs with Alexandria, Egypt, postmarks
were discovered in holiday greeting cards mailed to the United States.
On two separate days during January, nine letter bombs were discovered
in the Washington, DC, and United Nations offices of the Saudi-owned al-Hayat
newspaper. In addition, three letter bomb devices were sent to the federal
prison in Fort Leavenworth Kansas. None of the letter bombs detonated,
and there were no public claims of responsibility. A similar device mailed
to the al-Hayat office in London on 13 January did explode, injuring
two persons. Subsequently, three more devices were found. The incidents
are under investigation by the FBI.
- On 23 February a Palestinian gunman entered the observation deck at
the Empire State building in New York City and opened fire on tourists,
killing a Danish man and wounding visitors from the United States, Argentina,
Switzerland, and France before turning the gun on himself. A note carried
by the gunman indicated that this was a punishment attack against the "enemies
of Palestine."
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