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Israel thwarts terror attack at Teddy Stadium in Jerusalem

The Hamas network among students at Birzeit University served as a “go between” for the three Hamas operatives and provided them funds.

Teddy Stadium in Jerusalem during the UEFA U21 final match between Spain and Italy, June 18, 2013. Credit: Dindia via Wikimedia Commons.
Teddy Stadium in Jerusalem during the UEFA U21 final match between Spain and Italy, June 18, 2013. Credit: Dindia via Wikimedia Commons.

Israel thwarted several terror attacks in Jerusalem, including at the country’s largest soccer stadium, the Shin Bet security services announced on Wednesday.

The Shin Bet arrested three Hamas members last month who planned to carry out attacks against Israel Defense Forces’ soldiers near Ramallah and at the Teddy Stadium in Jerusalem that can hold more than 30,000 people, according to a Ynet report.

The men were Ahmed Sajadia, 27, from Qalandiya refugee camp; Muhammad Hamad, 26, from Kafr Aqab near Jerusalem; and Omar Eid, 24, from the village of Deir Jarir near Ramallah.

The Shin Bet said they became friends while studying at Birzeit University near Ramallah. The Hamas network among university students there served as a “go between” for the three Hamas operatives and provided them funds.

Eid apparently used his Israeli identity card to attend a soccer match at Teddy Stadium in order to check the security level, according to the report.

The operatives also planned to use improvised explosive devices to attack IDF vehicles and checkpoints in Judea and Samaria. They were trying to construct the explosives using instructions from online.

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