February
Date |
Type |
Dead |
Injured |
Location |
Details |
Perpetrator |
Part of
|
3 February |
Bombing |
0 |
8 |
Paris, France |
A bomb exploded in a shopping gallery at the Champs-Élysées, wounding eight people. The bombing was claimed by the Hezbollah-affiliated Committee for Solidarity With Arab and Middle Eastern Political Prisoners (CSPPA).[1] |
CSPPA, Hezbollah |
1985–86 Paris attacks |
4 February |
Bombing |
0 |
4 |
Paris, France |
A bomb exploded in the basement record section of the Gibert Jeune bookstore on the Place Saint-Michel, tearing up the floor and setting the building ablaze. Four people were wounded. The bombing was claimed by the Hezbollah-affiliated CSPPA.[2] |
CSPPA, Hezbollah |
1985–86 Paris attacks |
5 February |
Bombing |
1 |
16 |
Santiago, Chile |
A bomb was detonated in front of a police bus killing one police and wounding 16 others |
Manuel Rodríguez Patriotic Front |
Armed resistance in Chile (1973–90) |
5 February |
Bombing |
0 |
4 |
Paris, France |
A bomb exploded in the basement record section of the Gibert Jeune bookstore on the Place Saint-Michel, tearing up the floor and setting the building ablaze. Four people were wounded. The bombing was claimed by the Hezbollah-affiliated CSPPA.[2] |
CSPPA, Hezbollah |
1985–86 Paris attacks |
9 February |
Land mine |
39 |
|
Serunuwara, Sri Lanka |
When refugees from Serunuwara, Dehiwatta were being escorted by army personnel along Ella/Kantalai road, LTTE exploded a mine killing 35 civilians and four army personnel.[3] |
LTTE |
Sri Lankan Civil War |
26 February |
Shooting |
1 |
0 |
Santiago, Chile |
During an opposition protest a policeman was shot dead by extremist |
Manuel Rodriguez Patriotic Front |
Armed resistance in Chile (1973–90) |
March
Date |
Type |
Dead |
Injured |
Location |
Details |
Perpetrator |
Part of
|
2 March |
Bombing |
1 |
1 |
Osorno, Chile |
A bomb exploded in a train rail killing a woman and injuring critically another person |
Manuel Rodríguez Patriotic Front |
Armed resistance in Chile (1973–90) |
9 March |
Bombing |
0 |
2 |
Santiago, Chile |
A bomb exploded in a bank hall wounding critically 2 costumers |
Manuel Rodríguez Patriotic Front |
Armed resistance in Chile (1973–90) |
10 March |
Shooting |
9 |
Unknown |
Córdoba, Colombia |
Militants of EPL kill one corporal and eight police officers during an ambush in Cintura, a rural area of Pueblo Nuevo in southern Córdoba.[4] |
EPL |
Colombian conflict |
13 March |
Car bombing |
60 |
|
Damascus, Syria |
Car bombing in Damascus. Pro-Iraqi militants were blamed for the attack. |
Pro-Iraqi militants (suspected) |
|
17 March |
Bombing |
0 |
9 |
Paris, France |
A bomb exploded on the TGV Paris-Lyon high-speed rail, wounding nine people. The bombing was claimed by the Hezbollah-affiliated CSPPA.[2] |
CSPPA, Hezbollah |
1985–86 Paris attacks |
20 March |
Bombing |
2 |
28 |
Paris, France |
A bomb exploded in the Point-Show shopping gallery on the Champs-Élysées, killing two people and wounding 28. The bombing was claimed by the Hezbollah-affiliated CSPPA.[5] |
CSPPA, Hezbollah |
1985–86 Paris attacks |
20 March |
Ambush |
8 |
16 |
Cauca Department, Colombia |
A thick column of guerrillas ambushes a mixed patrol of the Army and the police that composed by 10 vehicles and 3 armored ones were mobilized by the place known as The S in the way that of Caloto leads to Toribio in the north of the Cauca. In armored attack 1 is destroyed, and 7 agents die and 1 soldier and wound other 16.[6] |
Coordinadora Nacional Guerrillera |
Colombian conflict |
27 March |
Car bombing |
1 |
22 |
Melbourne, Australia |
Car bombing of the Russell Street Police Headquarters in Melbourne by three men linked to organize crime. Policewoman Angela Taylor was the sole fatality. |
Craig Minogue Stan Taylor Peter Reed |
31 March |
Knife attack |
0 |
2 |
Santiago, Chile |
Two policeman were attacked with knives during opposition protest |
Unknown |
Armed resistance in Chile (1973–90) |
May
Date |
Type |
Dead |
Injured |
Location |
Details |
Perpetrator |
Part of
|
3 May |
Bombing |
21 |
41 |
Katunayake, Sri Lanka |
LTTE bomb explodes aboard Air Lanka flight carrying mainly French, British and Japanese tourists killing 21 (including 13 foreigners – of whom 3 British, 2 German, 3 French, 2 Japanese, 1 Maldivian and 1 Pakistani) and injuring 41 on Bandaranaike International Airport.[3] |
LTTE |
Sri Lankan Civil War |
16 May |
Ambush |
8 |
20 |
Antioquia, Colombia |
guerrillas ambush an Army truck in Alto La Brava, corregimiento of the municipality of Remedios, Antioquia. 8 military deaths and other 20 wounded.[7] |
FARC Militants |
Colombian conflict |
29 May |
Armed Attack |
12 (+11) |
Unknown |
Valle del Cauca Department, Colombia |
Members of the M-19 and the indigenous guerrillas of Quintin Lame ambush units of the III Army Brigade in Restrepo (Valle). Five soldiers die and 11 subversives die. In the fighting, 7 civilians were also killed, hit by a bomb while taking refuge in a school.[8] |
M-19 and Quintin lame armed movement |
Colombian conflict |
August
Date |
Type |
Dead |
Injured |
Location |
Details |
Perpetrator |
Part of
|
4 August |
Car Bombing |
1 |
1 |
Santiago, Chile |
A car bomb was detonated outside the "los libertadores" regiment killing one soldier and wounding other |
Manuel Rodriguez Patriotic Front |
Armed resistance in Chile (1973–90)] |
13 August |
Ambush |
7 |
Unknown |
Santander Department, Colombia |
ELN guerrillas attempt to assassinate the commander in charge of the V Army Brigade, Colonel Elkin Antonio Bocaccio, on the Barrancabermeja-Bucaramanga road. One corporal and six high school welders were shot dead.[9] |
ELN |
Colombian conflict |
14 August |
Shooting |
4 (+2) |
3 (+4) |
Cali, Colombia |
Rescue operation of a cattle rancher in the neighborhood Alfonso López Pumarejo, to the northeast of Cali. The arrested, 3 civilians (included a child) and 2 guerrillas of the M-19, die in the combat.[9] |
M-19 |
Colombian conflict |
September
Date |
Type |
Dead |
Injured |
Location |
Details |
Perpetrator |
Part of
|
5 September |
Hijacking, hostage-taking |
20 |
120 |
Karachi, Pakistan |
Four gunmen from the Abu Nidal Organization hijack Pan Am Flight 73 at Sahar International Airport in Karachi. After a 16-hour siege, the Pakistani Army raided the plane and the militants opened fire on the passengers, killing 20. |
Abu Nidal Organization |
Israel-Palestine conflict |
6 September |
Mass shooting |
22 |
6 |
Istanbul, Turkey |
Gunmen from the Abu Nidal Organization open fire on the Neve Shalom Synagogue, killing 22. |
Abu Nidal Organization |
Israel-Palestine conflict |
7 September |
Shooting |
5 |
11 |
Cajón del Maipo, Chile |
The President Augusto Pinochet suffered an armed attack while returning from a rest weekend at his residence in El Melocotón. The attack, carried out by the armed organization of extreme left called Patriotic Front Manuel Rodríguez (FPMR), finished with 5 dead and 11 wounded; However, the FPMR did not achieve its objective and Pinochet remained alive.[10] |
Frente Patriotico Manuel Rodriguez |
Armed resistance in Chile (1973–90) |
8 September |
Bombing |
2 |
28 |
Paris, France |
A bomb exploded in the post office of the Paris City Hall, killing one person and wounding 18 others. The bombing was claimed by the Hezbollah-affiliated CSPPA.[5] |
CSPPA, Hezbollah |
1985–86 Paris attacks |
12 September |
Bombing |
0 |
54 |
Paris, France |
A bomb exploded in the cafeteria of the Casino supermarket in the Quatre Temps shopping centre in La Défense, wounding 54 people. The bombing was claimed by the Hezbollah-affiliated CSPPA.[5] |
CSPPA, Hezbollah |
1985–86 Paris attacks |
14 September |
Bombing |
2 |
0 |
Paris, France |
A bomb exploded after being found in the Pub-Renault, a fashionable cafe and restaurant on the Champs-Élysées, killing two policemen. The bombing was claimed by the Hezbollah-affiliated CSPPA.[5] |
CSPPA, Hezbollah |
1985–86 Paris attacks |
15 September |
Bombing |
1 |
56 |
Paris, France |
A bomb exploded in the Paris Police Prefecture, killing one person and wounding 56. The bombing was claimed by the Hezbollah-affiliated CSPPA.[5] |
CSPPA, Hezbollah |
1985–86 Paris attacks |
17 September |
Bombing |
7 |
60 |
Paris, France |
A bomb was thrown into a shopping street at rue de Rennes from a passing car, blowing in several store fronts and cars. The attack killed seven people and wounded 60. The bombing was claimed by the Hezbollah-affiliated CSPPA.[5] |
CSPPA, Hezbollah |
1985–86 Paris attacks |
December
- A bomb place on a bus in the West Bank kills one and severely injures three. A Jordanian Mahmoud Mahmoud Atta is arrested, extradited to Israel, convicted, sentenced to life in prison and freed by the Israeli Supreme Court. After the September 11 attacks, he was confused with ringleader Egyptian Mohamed Atta.[12]
References
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