Iraq
— appeared on Jordanian state TV hours after
she was captured by security forces who were
tipped off by an al-Qaida claim that a
husband-and-wife team participated in
Wednesday's bombings.
Looking nervous and wringing her hands,
Sajida Mubarak Atrous al-Rishawi, 35, described
how she failed to blow herself up during a
wedding reception at the Radisson SAS hotel on
Wednesday night after struggling with the cord
on her explosives belt.
"My husband wore an (explosives-packed)
belt and put one on me. He taught me how to use
it," al-Rishawi said, wearing a white head
scarf, a black gown and a disabled bomb belt
tied around her waist.
"My husband detonated (his bomb) and I
tried to explode my belt but it wouldn't,"
she said. "People fled running and I left
running with them."
Deputy Prime Minister Marwan Muasher said the
belt she wore in the broadcast was the same one
she tried to use in the attack. "The vest
was caught with her," he told CNN.
Her husband, Ali Hussein Ali al-Shamari, 35,
was identified Sunday as one of three Iraqi men
who carried out the bombings. The Grand Hyatt
and Days Inn hotels also were bombed.
Muasher said the confession offered further
proof that the attacks were the work of al-Qaida
in Iraq, which has claimed responsibility.
Muasher said the woman was wearing two vests,
one packed with explosives and the other with
ball bearings to inflict maximum damage.
"This technique was used in all three of
the attacks," he told CNN.
He said authorities hoped the broadcast of
the details provided in the broadcast confession
would offer some solace to Jordanians shocked by
the attacks and he promised the woman would get
a fair trial.
Al-Qaida in Iraq, which is led by the
Jordanian-born al-Zarqawi, said in its claim of
responsibility that there were four bombers,
including a woman. The group said the attacks
were to strike at Jordan's support for the
United States and other Western powers.
A top Jordanian security official, insisting
on anonymity because he is not authorized to
speak to the press, said she was arrested Sunday
morning at a "safe house" in the same
Amman district where her husband rented a
furnished apartment recently.
He said Jordanian security was "tipped
off" by al-Qaida's claim.
"There were leads that more people had
been involved, but it was not clear that it was
a woman and we had no idea on her
nationality," the official said.
Al-Rishawi, who is from the volatile Anbar
province town of Ramadi, west of Baghdad, said
she entered Jordan from Iraq with her husband
and two other men.
She did not identify the two men, but
Jordanian authorities have said the other two
Iraqi bombers were Rawad Jassem Mohammed Abed
and Safaa Mohammed Ali, both 23.
"I was traveling with my husband who
carried a forged passport under the name of Ali
Hussein Ali and mine was Sajida Abdel Qader
Latif," she said.
"We waited and a white car arrived with
a driver and a passenger. We rode with them and
entered Jordan (from Iraq)," she said.
Once in Amman, she said the four rented an
apartment and her husband showed her how to use
the bomb.
"He said it was for the attack on hotels
in Jordan. We rented a car and entered the hotel
on Nov. 9. My husband and I went inside and he
went to one corner and I went to another,"
she said. "There was a wedding at the hotel
with children, women and men inside."
She was interviewed by a man speaking
off-camera during the three-minute excerpt of
the taped confession broadcast on state-run
Jordanian TV.
The segment showed her in different poses,
including standing in front of the camera
displaying what appeared to be an
explosives-packed belt and sitting and
responding in a steady voice to an unidentified
interviewer.
Al-Rishawi's brother was al-Zarqawi's deputy,
Mubarak Atrous al-Rishawi, who was killed by
U.S. forces in the one-time terrorist stronghold
of Fallujah, Muasher said, adding it was unclear
when he was killed.
King Abdullah II, who also said Sunday that
three Iraqi men and one woman carried out the
attacks, has pledged to target anyone supporting
or sympathizing with the bombers.
Al-Shamari and his wife, both dressed for a
party with explosives belts under their clothes,
entered the ballroom where hundreds of guests
were attending a Jordanian-Palestinian wedding
reception.
Muasher said the four crossed into Jordan
from Iraq by car on Nov. 4, five days before the
bombings, and rented a furnished apartment in
the middle-class Tlaa' Ali suburb in western
Amman.
The four left their apartment Wednesday and
took taxis to their targets.
The bomb strapped to the husband at the
Radisson used the powerful explosive RDX and
ball bearings to kill as many people as
possible, Muasher said.
No Jordanians were involved in the actual
attacks, but several Jordanian followers of al-Zarqawi
have been arrested, the deputy premier added.
Al-Qaida in Iraq's operation in Jordan —
its deadliest inside a neighboring Mideast
country — raised fears that al-Zarqawi's
terror campaign has gained enough momentum to
spread throughout the region.
Wednesday's Amman hotel attacks sparked the
largest Jordanian manhunt in modern history and
angered most of this desert kingdom's 5.4
million people and many of the 400,000 Iraqis
living here. Jordanians took to Amman's streets
to denounce al-Zarqawi.
Al-Zarqawi, who traveled from militant
training grounds in
Afghanistan
to Iraq before the
U.S.-led 2003 war, has been sentenced to death
in absentia in Jordan for terrorism-related
crimes here. He has vowed to topple the
kingdom's moderate Hashemite rulers.
Jordan's confirmation of the Iraqi link could
harm already bruised relations between the two,
which previously have traded diplomatic blows
over the crossing of militants over the border.
Earlier Sunday, Iraq's defense minister
offered Jordan its support in the hotel bombings
probe and warned that unchecked violence in Iraq
will spread terrorism across the region.
"We are partners in facing
terrorism," Defense Minister Saadoun al-Dulaimi
told The Associated Press. "Amman's ordeal
and Jordan's ordeal is the ordeal of all
Iraqis."
The terrorists' "target is to kill
tolerance and destroy coexistence in Arab and
Muslim cities," al-Dulaimi said.
___
Associated Press reporters Jamal Halaby and
Zeina Karam contributed to this report.