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 The Amman Bomber Who Failed
 
 By Jackie Spinner
 
  AMMAN, Jordan, Nov. 13 -- She twirled, almost like a model showing off the 
latest fashion, her waist a thick belt of translucent tape with crude red wires 
attached. Her hands pumped a black cylinder of plastic, a switch that should 
have blown her up in a burst of flame and metal but did not.
 
 In a televised confession broadcast on state-run Jordanian television Sunday, 
Sajida Rishawi, 35, an Iraqi from the city of Fallujah, described how her 
husband pushed her out of a ballroom at the Radisson SAS Hotel in the Jordanian 
capital when her contraption failed to explode. His vest detonated, and a ball 
of flames ripped through the crowded hall.
 
 Rishawi modeled the suicide vest she allegedly wore to carry out the attack. 
She spun around, showing how it should have worked. At times, the camera 
focused on her hands, which she wrung as she spoke to an unidentified 
interviewer, presumably an interrogator.
 
 Rishawi was arrested Sunday morning for allegedly taking part in suicide 
bombings here Wednesday that killed 57 people at three hotels and jolted a 
population used to relative security.
 
 Jordanian intelligence had been tracking Rishawi since the night of the 
bombing, officials said, when an alert was issued that a potential suspect 
wearing a black dress was seen running from the scene of the Radisson bombing, 
where 200 people had gathered for a wedding.
 
 Two days later, al Qaeda in Iraq, an insurgent group led by Jordanian Abu 
Musab Zarqawi, posted a statement on its Web site asserting that three men and 
a woman married to one of them had died carrying out the coordinated attacks 
that struck the Grand Hyatt, Radisson and Days Inn hotels in downtown Amman. 
The statement said the woman, whom it did not name, "chose to accompany her 
husband to his martyrdom."
 
 But the female bomber apparently did not die.
 
 Jordanian intelligence police arrested Rishawi on Sunday morning after raiding 
the apartment in the Tela Ali neighborhood in Amman that her husband and the 
two other bombers had rented on Nov. 7, intelligence sources said. The bombers 
entered Jordan five days earlier from Iraq with false passports, Jordan's 
deputy prime minister, Marwan Muasher, said at a news conference Sunday.
 
 Muasher said the husband and wife specifically targeted the wedding party 
ahead of time, pointing out that they were wearing festive clothes. He 
identified the husband as Ali Hussein Ali Shamari. He also said Rishawi was the 
sister of Mubarak Atrous Rishawi, Zarqawi's top deputy in the western Iraqi 
province of Anbar, who was killed by U.S. forces in Fallujah.
 
 Muasher identified the two other bombers as Rawad Jassem Mohammed Abed and 
Safaa Mohammed Ali, both 23.
 
 In Fallujah, relatives of the alleged bombers quietly celebrated the Amman 
blasts, calling the attackers "martyrs."
 
 Abdullah Yousif Omar, 53, who described himself as a relative of one of the 
bombers, said they were "pioneer leaders in al Qaeda in Fallujah before the 
occupiers controlled it."
 
 In November 2004, U.S.-led forces launched an assault on the city to retake it 
from insurgents. Some of the fiercest fighting took place in southern Fallujah, 
where relatives said the bombers had lived.
 
 Omar said family members of the bombers learned about their deaths through 
friends in Amman. He added that Rishawi and her husband left Fallujah a month 
ago.
 
 In her televised appearance Sunday, Rishawi wore a black dress and white head 
scarf with tassels that dangled down her back. Her voice was even, devoid of 
emotion.
 
 Rishawi said she and the three men were picked up in a white car and taken to 
Jordan. She said the driver of the car "was the one who arranged it."
 
 "He had two explosive belts," she said, giving no further identification. "He 
made me wear one and he wore the other and taught me how to use it, how to pull 
and control it. He said we would carry it out in hotels in Jordan. We hired a 
car and went to the hotel."
 
 Rishawi said that she and her husband entered a hotel, which Jordanian 
officials said was the Radisson. "He took a corner, and I took a corner," she 
explained. "There was a wedding in the hotel, children, women and men. My 
husband carried it out. I tried to carry it out, but it did not explode. I went 
out. The people started running and I ran away with them."
 
 The terrorist attacks have rallied Jordanians. People have demonstrated 
peacefully in Amman to protest the violence, and another such gathering is 
planned for Monday. Motorists in the capital have attached Jordanian flags to 
the antennas and back windows of their cars.
 
 In an interview with the Jordan News Agency, King Abdullah said the attacks 
were a turning point for his countrymen, who were now taking a stand against 
terrorism. "I know very well the courage of Jordanians, and their response to 
these events had exceeded all expectations," he said. "Jordanians are fearless, 
and terrorism will not affect their morale or their determination."
 
 During a stop in Jerusalem on Sunday, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said 
the Amman bombings had served as a pivotal point across the Arab world. "In the 
aftermath of the vicious attacks in Jordan -- which killed dozens of people and 
wounded many more -- leaders and clerics and private citizens are now stepping 
forward and taking to the streets and calling this evil by its name," Rice 
said. "This is a profound change."
 
 Rice said violence committed by Arabs against Arabs has led parents in the 
region to tell their children "to be engineers, not suicide bombers, to be 
voting citizens, not docile subjects."
 
 The Rishawi confession dominated news in Amman on Sunday, and Jordanians were 
riveted by the sight of the plain-looking woman who had apparently set out to 
kill with abandon.
 
 "No one can expect this strange attitude from such a woman," said Mejdi 
Nuaimat, 23, a computer engineering student. "It is very weird because we know 
that women do not have the same strength and belief in the issue of jihad like 
men. We do not consider this jihad; we consider it against Islam and against 
humanity."
 
 Rafat Nasir, 30, manager of the De Cano cafe in Amman, said he was shocked by 
the disclosure that a woman might have been involved.
 
 "In such a stable and secure country, no one can expect this terrified 
experience, especially in Amman," he said. "It is a new method of bringing a 
woman to explode herself in cold blood."
 
 Staff writer Robin Wright in Jerusalem and special correspondents Naseer 
Mehdawi in Amman and Bassam Sebti in Baghdad contributed to this report.
 
 
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