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    Autopsies performed on victims of Bulgaria attack

    SOFIA, Bulgaria (AP) — Autopsies have provided officials with new information about the suicide bomber who killed five vacationing Israelis and a Bulgarian bus driver in the Black Sea resort town of Burgas, an official said Sunday.

    But the identity of the attacker appeared to remain unknown, and Bulgaria's government was continuing to investigate whether he had carried out the attack with the help of an accomplice.

    Israel has blamed Wednesday's attack in Bulgaria, and other recent ones on its citizens around the world, on Iran and its proxy groups, including Hezbollah in Lebanon. Iran has denied responsibility.

    Israel has asked other countries in Europe to increase security in the bus parking lots used by Israelis and at airports, and Bulgarian police have responded by stepping up security at their country's airports. From now on, all flights arriving from Israel will not be publicly announced, and Israeli passengers will be kept in a separate and secure area, officials said Sunday.

    "The state of Israel is responsible for its citizens wherever they are," Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu told a Cabinet meeting in Jerusalem on Sunday. "We will continue to fight against terrorism, against the perpetrators and those who dispatch them."

    Bulgaria's government released no new information over the weekend about its ongoing investigation into the bombing in Burgas, which is about 400 kilometers (250 miles) east of the capital, Sofia. The attack occurred shortly after the Israelis boarded a bus outside the airport in Burgas, a popular tourist destination for Israeli tourists.

    However, Dr. Galina Mleva, a forensic expert who took part in autopsies on the victims and the attacker, told Bulgarian National TV on Sunday that the bomber did not meet the description of some witnesses, raising the possibility that they had seen an accomplice. Mileva said the bomber "had a white face, light eyes, and very thick brown hair. The facial bones were shattered in the explosion."

    On Friday, district prosecutor Kalina Tchapkanova cited witness reports that the suspect had dark eyes.

    Evidence gathered during the attack and several days before it have raised questions about whether the bomber was working alone or with an accomplice.

    Security camera footage just before the attack showed the suspected bomber wandering in and out of the bus terminal in Burgas, wearing a baseball cap over long hair, a T-shirt and plaid shorts. His bulky backpack was packed with TNT powder. Interior Minister Tsvetan Tsvetanov told reporters last week the bomber was believed to have been about 36 years old and had been in the country between four to seven days.

    Bulgarian prosecutors have said a man tried to rent a car in the days before the bombing but was turned down because his ID appeared suspicious. Authorities have examined his fingerprints, his DNA and his fake Michigan driver's license. They also said the man actually had short hair. It was not clear if he was wearing a wig, or if this was a different person from the bomber.

    Afrodita Petrova, the owner of the car rental company, told Bulgarian National TV that the suspect had short dark hair when visiting the office. She said he was the same person from the video camera footage and appeared to be wearing a wig.

    "He spoke English with an Arab accent," she said.

    Tsvetanov has said the investigation has ruled out that the bomber was a Bulgarian citizen, but he did not say how authorities know that. "Now we are focused on finding out the identity of the suicide bomber," he said.

    On Monday, Israel is sending a delegation of tourism officials to Bulgaria led by Tourism Minister Stas Misezhnikov to send out a "business as usual" message, not to give in to terrorism and to strengthen Israel's tourism relationship with Bulgaria.

    "Terrorism will not disrupt our lives and stop our aspirations," said Misezhnikov. "Tourism is a bridge to peace, understanding and dialogue between nations and it has the power to strengthen our mutual relationship with the Bulgarian people and the Bulgarian government. We extend our gratitude to the Bulgarian government for its dedicated treatment following the tragic terror attack."

    ___

    Amy Teibel contributed from Jerusalem.

     

    5 comments

    • alex  •  3 days ago
      He was foreign ..He brought 2 packs of TNT into the country ? He had no car , so he
      walked ..Anyone look at his shoes ?
    • Whoa  •  3 days ago
      Yawn...
      • MARCY 3 days ago
        @whoa... sorry youre bored , the families who lost members dont have that privilege.
    • ITOdeed  •  Seattle, Washington  •  3 days ago
      The cocky, evolution challenged Iranians need to experience a severe comeuppance.
    • Santiago  •  Centro, Mexico  •  3 days ago
      "it´s called collateral damage" Where have I seen this? Oh yeah, when a smart bomb has hit a bus full of palestinian children
      • Santiago 3 days ago
        Marcy, when the jews blow up palestinian homes they claim it´s in self defense, when they target civilians, they say they were terrorists.. What goes around comes around. I don´t aprove it but neither feel sorry for them
      • MARCY 3 days ago
        santiago youre on bad drugs. those were Israeli buses. besides whats the diff. they strap bombs to their own kids in gaza.
    • Bugs hunter  •  Seattle, Washington  •  3 days ago
      "Authorities have examined his fingerprints, his DNA and his fake Michigan driver's license."".............yeah! all that and bulgaria still can't tell us who he was, where did he come from, or where he was going.we know the dna won't reveal he's a mossad agent-jew, because they're not a race, but just a religion!.....we're waiting you bulgarian liars, for the dollar bill, what will you say?
      • Florida Sandbag 3 days ago
        I pray this is not the first incidence of a cloned assassin.
      • Bugs hunter 3 days ago
        what? there is no such thing as a "chosen one gene"!
        take your false insinuations somewhere else, and keep your drug use to yourself!
      • Peters 3 days ago
        Hey Buggy, why don't you take another Thorazine and lie down for awhile.
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