List of terrorist incidents in 1993
This is a timeline of incidents in 1993 that have been labelled as "terrorism" and are not believed to have been carried out by a government or its forces (see state terrorism and state-sponsored terrorism).
This list is incomplete; you can help by expanding it.
Date | Type | Dead | Injured | Location | Details | Perpetrator | Part of |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
January 7 | Car bombing | 2 | 39 | Medellín, Colombia | A car bomb kills two and injures 39 in the parking lot of a building where several judges lived, in the city of Medellín.[1] | Medellin Cartel | |
January 25 | Shooting | 2 | 3 | Langley, Virginia, United States | Pakistani immigrant Mir Qazi opened fire on CIA employees outside the CIA headquarters in Langley, Virginia. Qazi committed the shootings because he was angered at U.S. foreign policy towards Muslim nations. | Mir Qazi | |
February 11 | Bombing | 14 | 25 | Barrancabermeja, Colombia | A bomb kills 14 and injures 25 at an auto repair shop in Barrancabermeja.[2] | Unknown | |
February 26 | Truck Bombing | 6 | 1042 | New York City, United States | World Trade Center bombing kills six and injures over 1000 people, by coalition of five groups: Jamaat Al-Fuqra'/Gamaat Islamiya/Hamas/Islamic Jihad/National Islamic Front,[3] see FBI Most Wanted Terrorists, FBI Ten Most Wanted Fugitives, Ramzi Yousef. | Ramzi Yousef and co-conspirators | |
March 12 | Bombings | 257 | 713 | Bombay, India | 13 bombings targeting banks, hotels, the Bombay Stock Exchange and other buildings rip through Bombay. The bombings were organized by Dawood Ibrahim, the leader of D-Company. | D-Company | |
March 20 | Bombings | 2 | 56 | Warrington, United Kingdom | Two PIRA bombs exploded in trash bins on Bridge Street in Warrington, killing two young children and injuring dozens. | PIRA | The Troubles |
April 9 | Land mine | 22 | 13 | Karnataka, India | A bus is destroyed by a land mine planted by criminal leader Veerappan and his supporters. | Veerappan and co-conspirators | |
April 16 | Suicide bombing | 1 (+1 attacker) | 7-9 | Mehola, West Bank | Hamas kill 2 in Mehola Junction bombing.[4] | Hamas | Israeli-Palestinian conflict |
April 24 | Truck bombing | 1 | 44 | City of London, United Kingdom | IRA detonate a huge truck bomb in the City of London at Bishopsgate, killing one person and causing approximately £1bn of damage.[5] (See 1993 Bishopsgate bombing.) | PIRA | The Troubles |
April 24–25 | Hijacking | 1 (attacker) | 0 | Amritsar, India | Mohammed Yunus Shah hijacks Indian Airlines Flight 427 but is killed before he is able to harm any of the passengers. India accused the Hizbul Mujahideen of being behind the attack, but they denied responsibility. | Mohammed Yunus Shah Hizbul Mujahideen (suspected) |
Insurgency in Jammu and Kashmir |
May 1 | Suicide Bombing | 1 (+1 attacker) | Colombo, Sri Lanka | Suicide bomber in Colombo kills Sri Lankan President Ranasinghe Premadasa. Attack carried out by LTTE.[6][7] | LTTE | Sri Lankan civil war | |
May 28 | Arson | 5 | 14 | Solingen, Germany | Four neo-Nazis set fire to a house belonging to a Turkish immigrant family. | Four neo-Nazis | |
June 21 | Car bombings | 7 | 29 | Madrid, Spain | ETA detonates two car bombs targeting an army convoy in Madrid. | ETA | Basque conflict |
July 5 | Mass shooting, arson | 33 | Başbağlar, Erzincan province, Turkey | Several PKK members stormed the village and went on killing civilians one by one after rounding them up. Over 200 houses, a clinic, a school and a mosque in the village were burned down.[8] | PKK | Turkey-PKK conflict | |
July 25 | Mass shooting | 11 | 58 | Cape Town, South Africa | Members of the Azanian People's Liberation Army, in what has been described as a terrorist attack,[9] open fire on a congregation inside St James Church in Kenilworth, Cape Town, killing eleven and injuring fifty.[10] | Azanian People's Liberation Army | |
August 5 | Kidnapping and murder | 1 | 0 | Ramallah, West Bank | IDF private Yaron Chen is kidnapped and murdered after hitchhiking in East Jerusalem. | Hamas | Israeli-Palestinian conflict |
August 8 | Bombing | 11 | 7 | Chennai, India | The head office of the Chennai wing of the Hindu nationalist organization Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh is bombed. | Islamists | |
October 11 | Assassination attempt | 0 | 1 | Oslo, Norway | The publisher of Aschehoug William Nygaard was shot and got critically injured outside his residence . Police never managed to find the perpetrator, but it is believed that the reason for the assassination was Aschehougs publication of Salman Rushdie's controversial novel The Satanic Verses, which triggered an Islamist fatwa against the author and the translators and publishers. | Unknown | |
October 23 | Bombing | 9 (+1 attacker) | 57 | Belfast, Northern Ireland | Two members of the Provisional IRA entered a shop on Shankill Road where they believed a UDA meeting was taking place. However, the meeting had been rescheduled and the bomb detonated prematurely, killing one of the bombers, an UDA member and eight civilians. | PIRA | The Troubles |
December 30 | Mass shooting | 4 | Cape Town, South Africa | Six members of the Azanian People's Liberation Army, the armed wing of the Pan Africanist Congress, open fire on patrons of the Heidelberg Tavern in Observatory, Cape Town, killing four people (Jose Cerqueira, Lindy-Anne Fourie, Bernadette Langford, and Rolande Palm) and injuring several others.[10] | Azanian People's Liberation Army |
See also
References
- ↑ San Jose Mercury News, January 8, 1993, Page 17A
- ↑ NYT: 14 killed and 25 wounded by a car bomb in Colombia, February 11, 1993
- ↑ Official prepared statement of Steven Emerson before the Senate Judiciary Committee's Subcommittee on Terrorism, Technology, and Government Information, on February 24, 1998, Federal Information Systems Corporation, Federal News Service, as downloaded from the Library of Congress, 1998, Made available 4/5/98
- ↑ Levitt, Matthew (2008). Hamas: Politics, Charity, and Terrorism in the Service of Jihad. Yale University Press. p. 11.
- ↑ BBC: IRA bomb devastates City of London, On this day, April 24, 1993
- ↑ BBC News: Timeline of the Tamil conflict, September 4, 2000
- ↑ The Strategic Logic of Suicide Terrorism, ROBERT A. PAPE The University of Chicago, American Political Science Review Vol. 97, No. 3 August 2003, Page No 16
- ↑ "Başbağlar, one of PKK's bloodiest massacres, remembered". Daily Sabah. Retrieved 2016-09-28.
- ↑ "TRC Reports on St James Church Massacre". South African History Online. Truth and Reconciliation Commission. Retrieved 31 January 2015.
A terrorist attack on St. James Church in Cape Town, South Africa left 11 people dead and 58 wounded.
- 1 2 Jeffery, Anthea (2009). People's War - New Light on the Struggle for South Africa (1st ed.). Johannesburg & Cape Town: Jonathan Ball Publishers. ISBN 978-1-86842-357-6.
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