1978 London bus attack
51°30′45″N 0°9′4″W / 51.51250°N 0.15111°W / 51.51250; -0.15111
13:30 pm
On 20 August 1978, a staff bus of El Al airlines in London was attacked by Palestinian militants.[1] Flight attendant Irit Gidron and one militant were killed in the attack, and nine people were wounded.[2][3]
Attack
At around 13:30, a minibus with staff of El Al airlines was attacked during a stopover at the Europa Hotel in Grosvenor Square, Mayfair, central London, when two or three men opened fire with submachine guns and hand grenades.[2][3] An El Al flight attendant was killed in the attack, while members of a wedding party were among those wounded by gun shots and a taxi driver was blown from his cab by a grenade.[2][3] A man presumed to be one of the militants was found dead after the attack.[2] A second militant was captured by the police, while a possible third escaped.[3]
Aftermath
The Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP) claimed responsibility for the attack.[2][3] The area of the attack was noted as a hotspot of Arab militant activity in the country.[4] The flight attendant killed in the attack, Irit Gidron, 29, was buried in Israel next to the victims of the 1972 Munich Olympics massacre.[4] The militant arrested, Fahad Mihyi, was sentenced to life imprisonment[when?] for the attack.[5]
In 2000, Yulie Cohen Gerstel, one of the flight attendants injured in the attack, contacted Mihyi who was imprisoned at Dartmoor Prison. Mihyi was apologetic for his role in the militant attack. Gerstel advocated for his parole as shown in the 2002 documentary My militant.[6]
References
- ^ Rubin, Barry; Rubin, Judith Colp (2015). Chronologies of Modern Terrorism. Routledge. p. 193. ISBN 9781317474654.
- ^ a b c d e "1978: Two dead after El Al crew ambushed". BBC News. 20 August 1978.
- ^ a b c d e "Terrorist Attack on El Al Mini-bus Kills Airline Stewardess, injures 8". JTA. 21 August 1978.
- ^ a b "Irit Gidron, Terrorist Victim, Buried Alongside Victims of Munich Massacre". JTA. 23 August 1978.
- ^ "Terrorist Incidents against Jewish Communities and Israeli Citizens Abroad, 1968-2003". International Institute for Counter-Terrorism. 20 December 2003. Archived from the original on 26 March 2021. Retrieved 21 August 2018.
- ^ Naomi Pfefferman (9 May 2003). "'Terrorist' Helped Israeli Heal". Jewish Journal. Retrieved 12 November 2018.
- v
- t
- e
- Avivim school bus bombing* (May 22, 1970)
- Lod Airport massacre (May 30, 1972)
- Kiryat Shmona massacre* (April 11, 1974)
- Ma'alot massacre* (May 15, 1974)
- Nahariya attack* (June 24–25, 1974)
- Beit She'an attack (November 19, 1974)
- Savoy Hotel attack* (March 6, 1975)
- Kfar Yuval hostage crisis* (June 15, 1975)
- Zion Square refrigerator bombing (July 4, 1975)
- Coastal Road massacre* (March 11, 1978)
- Nahariya massacre* (April 22, 1979)
- Murder of the Aroyo children (January 2, 1971)
and hijackings
- Swissair Flight 330 (February 21, 1970)
- Olympic Airways Flight 255 hijacking (July 22, 1970)
- Dawson's Field hijackings (September 6–13, 1970)
- Lufthansa Flight 649 (February 22–23, 1972)
- Sabena Flight 571 (May 8, 1972)
- Lufthansa Flight 615 (October 29, 1972)
- Rome airport attacks and hijacking (December 17–18, 1973)
- TWA Flight 841 (September 8, 1974)
- Air France Flight 139 (June 27, 1976)
- Lufthansa Flight 181 (October 13–18, 1977)
- Munich massacre (September 5–6, 1972)
- Israeli Bangkok embassy hostage crisis (December 28, 1972)
- Assassination of the Israeli attache in Washington (July 1, 1973)
- Schoenau ultimatum (September 28–29, 1973)
- Paris café attack (September 15, 1974)
- Orly Airport attacks (January, 1975)
- OPEC siege (December 21, 1975)
- Yeşilköy airport attack (August 11, 1976)
- Orly Airport attack (May 20, 1978)
- London bus attack (August 20, 1978)