Female Iraqi arrested after Amman bombings
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.
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."
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.
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