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Lieberman freezes talks on early release for terrorists

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Lieberman freezes talks on early release for terrorists

Following revelations of establishment of committee that would consider parole requests of terrorists who serve life sentences, defense minister announces he instructed to halt proceedings pending further discussions with military advisors.

 

Defense Minister Avigdor Lieberman froze on Sunday evening the appointment of the advisory committee that was supposed to consider parole requests of terrorists who were sentenced to life in prison by military courts in the West Bank.

Lieberman issued the instruction following the revelations regarding the committee’s establishment in a Yedioth Ahronoth report.

The Defense Ministry said that Lieberman intends to hold a comprehensive discussion on the issue with the IDF, the Military Advocate General and the defense establishment’s legal advisor.

The planned move was revealed during a hearing in the High Court of Justice (HCJ) regarding a parole request of a terrorist, who murdered Ziva Goldovsky, to be released from prison after serving 30 years, on the grounds that the current policy discriminates between those who are tried in West Bank’s military courts and those tried in civil courts in Israel.

The terrorist, who underwent a rehabilitation process in prison, appealed multiple times to military officials, who have full sovereignty in the West Bank, with a request to be pardoned, but it had always been rejected.

Until now, prisoners serving life sentences have been released only as part of plea deals, or due to decisions made by the political echelon, not by a relevant committee or a military source. The policy, which has been in place up to this point, did not allow the shortening of life sentences for terrorists. However, it has now been decided to equate the rights of those tried in military courts to prisoners who were convicted by civil courts.

According to legal sources, despite the establishment of the committee, the likelihood that terrorists’ life sentences will be cut down are slim, but still, it constitutes a significant policy change.

Currently there are dozens of terrorists in Israeli prisons who are serving life sentences, including those who carried out terror attacks on Israeli soil.

The establishment of the committee will be accompanied by a legislative amendment, which is currently being drafted by the IDF.

“The IDF issued an official statement following the report saying the changes being made to the current policy are minor and technical.

 

 (Photo: Gadi Kablo)

(Photo: Gadi Kablo)

 

“The changes made on the issue of parole requests for those serving life sentences in the West Bank are procedural and technical, which deals with the process of considering requests by a committee to equate it with the same process in the Israeli prison system,” stressed the statement.

“Any attempt to present it as a change in policy or the IDF’s intention to shorten the sentences of terrorists is wrong and inappropriate. There is no relief or change in policy,” the statement continued before reiterating that the committee will not decide on parole requests but rather give recommendations to GOC Central Command, who has the authority on the matter.

“A procedural amendment has been adopted recently in the Judea and Samaria region, which will examine requests for life sentences and formulate a recommendation to the commander of the Central Command, who is authorized to decide on such requests. Life imprisonment (also for terrorist attacks in Israel).

Source: YNET News

Manchester – Sajid Javid tells #EnoughIsEnough antisemitism rally: ‘You are not alone’

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Manchester – Sajid Javid tells #EnoughIsEnough antisemitism rally: ‘You are not alone’

Home secretary gives message of support to crowd of 2,500 as more than 30 community organisations sponsor rally

Home Secretary Sajid Javid sent a message of support and solidarity to Sunday’s Manchester #EnoughisEnough rally, telling the Jewish community: “You are not alone”.

It was a heartfelt message echoed by the city’s mayor, Andy Burnham, whose deputy, Baroness Hughes, joined a huge crowd of 2,500 from all over the country to hear 10 MPs — mainly local — express solidarity and pledge to root out antisemitism from British society.

 

Chair Stuart Ailion set the tone when he told the crowd that the level of antisemitism in Britain today had become “institutionalised. Make no mistake about it — it leaves our Jewish community feeling threatened, bullied, and vulnerable”. To cheers, he declared: “This is for sure: we pay our respects to the victims of terror. We do not lay wreaths to the perpetrators of terror”.

Speaker after speaker took to the stage in front of two giant draped Union Jack flags to denounce antisemitism and — in the case of the Labour MPs who spoke — express their support for colleagues who had been victims of abuse and frequent misogyny.

But perhaps the biggest cheers of the day — despite almost biblical amounts of rain — were reserved for Chief Rabbi Ephraim Mirvis and the Jewish community’s two “great dames” — MPs Dame Margaret Hodge and Dame Louise Ellman, the latter of whom was born and brought up in Manchester.

Dame Margaret declared: “I have lived my life as a secular Jew, but it is my heritage which has made me who I am. I cannot, and I will not, forget”. Despite having defeated the British National Party’s Nick Griffin in the 2010 general election, she said that since Jeremy Corbyn had become Labour leader, she had received more abusive antisemitic hatred than that emanating from the far-right. “One message said, Margaret Hodge is a Zionist pig, and hopefully Hizbollah will catch up with the bitch”. She said Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn “has to accept responsibility for what is going on in Labour today. He may be right to say that antisemitism exists elsewhere — but he is wrong to suggest that our mission to eradicate antisemitism from the Labour Party is simply an attempt to silence any criticism of the Israeli government… I will never accept antisemitism that is dressed up as something else, as a voice for Palestinian rights, when it is plain simple hatred of Jews.”

The Chief Rabbi, in a barnstorming address, told the crowd that there were essentially two kinds of Britain. There was one “where antisemitic incidents are at an all-time high… in which Jewish schools, our synagogues, our communal facilities exist behind walls, gates and guards, in order to protect us…in which people who previously were members of the British National Party and the Ku Klux Klan are praising public comments about the Jews which have been uttered by the leader of Her Majesty’s Opposition.”

Nevertheless, he said, there was another Britain, in “which we can walk the streets of these country with a kippah on our heads without fear… in which society is proud to have a Jewish community in its midst and views us as an essential and integral part of the fabric of British society.

“So our question to everyone living in Britain today is — which Britain do you want to live in, in the future? Is it going to be a Britain that will make us proud, or will bring us shame?”

Perhaps most striking among the contributions from non-Jewish MPs was the fact that several chose to highlight their own close links with the Jewish community. James Frith, MP for Bury North, spoke about his Jewish wife; Kate Green, MP for Stretford and Urmston, has a Jewish father; and Jeff Smith, MP for Withington and a Labour MP, is the great-grandson of Rosa Simonson, a Jewish immigrant to Manchester from eastern Europe.

Other speakers included MPs Lucy Powell, Mike Kane, Ivan Lewis,
Conservatives Chris Green and Mary Robinson, Manchester City Council leader Sir Richard Leese. Board of Deputies president Marie van der Zyl and Jewish Leadership Council chair Jonathan Goldstein also spoke.

In the only sour note of the proceedings, Manchester Central MP Lucy Powell was forced to tell the crowd: “Don’t heckle me, I’m on your side” as shouts of “Corbyn out!” grew ever more ferocious during her remarks. A number of rabbis have written to Ms Powell to apologise as have the rally organisers.

Separate anti-rally protests — under the banner of Manchester Jews for Justice and the local Palestine Solidarity Campaign — were organised but attracted tiny turn-outs.

Source: Jewish News

 

Thousands Mourn Terrorism Victim Ari Fuld

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Thousands Mourn Terrorism Victim Ari Fuld

By Ilanit Chernick • 17 September, 2018

The funeral began with soft singing. The swelling crowd stood for over an hour lamenting his death through words of Jewish prayer and song. There was not a dry eye in sight.

Despite the late hour, thousands of people from all backgrounds made their way to the Kfar Etzion cemetery, just south of Jerusalem, to mourn the life Ari Fuld a well-known Israel activist, husband, father of four,  friend to many.

As the singing continued, many spoke quietly amongst themselves of how Fuld had impacted their lives at different stages.

On Sunday morning, Fuld was stabbed to death in a terrorist attack outside a supermarket at the Gush Etzion Junction. Before succumbing to his wounds, Fuld managed to chase down the terrorist and shoot him.

Speaking at the funeral his wife Miriam spoke of her husband’s achievements in every aspect of life, adding that she was not sure how to go on without him.

“My dearest Ari, this is my last chance to say all the things that need to be said, so you better be listening,” she said. “You were a good man. I am not sure how to go on without you. We were born less than 24 hours apart and it seems that we lived our lives side by side.

“No one knew it would be cut so short this morning, on your way to do the shopping, that I asked you to do.”

She lamented that Fuld was “always running toward danger instead of away from it.”

“You never backed down from a fight, because you knew you were in the right. You fought for what you believe in. You left behind a legacy for the entire world to savor.

“We always watched the news together and wondered how families and wives could be so strong. But that is what we do. We get knocked down and we get right back up, because life is a package deal and we can’t pick and chose. We must accept the good and the bad.

“Now it is my turn to be strong and continue onwards,” she said promising to take care of the family, as soft sobs were heard from her family standing next to her.

“Thank you for 24-crazy years together. I love you, I love you. I always will,” she said.

Both Ari’s father and brothers lamented that he was a larger than life hero – also calling him a “superhero.”

“If there is one word to describe my brother, it was a hero,” said his brother Moshe as his voice cracked. “Who else could manage, after sustaining a fatal injury, to draw his pistol, jump a fence and shoot his attacker to make sure that his attacker would not hurt anyone else – only my brother, only my brother.”

“He was a scholar like no other. His head was always in the Gemara [commentary on the Talmud]. He went through those pages, like normal folk read a novel. He had a thirst for that next page, and he could not put it down for anything.

“And yet his head wasn’t in the clouds – he was the most grounded person I know,” his brother added.

His father Yonah said that “Ari was a true hero. Not only in his death but all of his life.”

“He was a giant of strength, of passion, of love for his family,” he said, adding that a parent should not be burying their child and that the situation was upside-down.

Tears continued to fall as more family members eulogized Fuld, and as his two young sons said the kadish prayer, quiet wailing took hold of the crowd.

People held onto each other as Fuld’s body was laid to rest, a silent promise rippled through the crowd: His larger-than-life legacy will never be forgotten.

Florence flooding live coverage: Storm ‘has never been more dangerous than it is right now’

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Florence flooding live coverage: Storm ‘has never been more dangerous than it is right now’

Florence, now a tropical depression, is still a dangerous storm and is expected to dump excessive rainfall on wide areas of North Carolina and South Carolina, causing historic flooding.

Officials also say the storm could kick up a few tornadoes on its trek across the region.

The storm has reached the height of danger, Governor Roy Cooper said in a press conference on Sunday afternoon.

“The storm has never been more dangerous than it is right now,” he said.

The Marines, the Coast Guard, civilian crews and volunteers used helicopters, boats and heavy-duty vehicles Saturday to rescue scores of people trapped by Florence’s shoreline onslaught, even as North Carolina braced for what could be the next stage of the disaster: widespread, catastrophic flooding inland.

There have been at least 10 people confirmed killed in North Carolina as a result of the storm. Three people died in South Carolina.

A day after blowing ashore with 90 mph winds, Florence practically parked itself over land all day long and poured on the rain. With rivers rising toward record levels, thousands of people were ordered evacuated for fear the next few days could bring the most destructive round of flooding in North Carolina history.

Florence was downgraded to a tropical depression on Sunday.

Typhoon Pounds South China After Killing 64 People in Philippines

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Typhoon Pounds South China After Killing 64 People in Philippines

 

HONG KONG (AP) –

Typhoon Mangkhut barreled into southern China on Sunday after lashing the northern Philippines with strong winds and heavy rain that left at least 64 people dead and dozens more feared buried in a landslide.

More than 2.4 million people had been evacuated in southern China’s Guangdong province by Sunday evening to flee the massive typhoon and nearly 50,000 fishing boats were called back to port, state media reported.

The Hong Kong Observatory warned people to stay away from the Victoria Harbour landmark, where storm surges battered the sandbag-reinforced waterfront.

Hong Kong’s RTHK broadcaster cited experts as saying Mangkhut was expected to be the strongest typhoon to hit the city in decades. The Hong Kong Observatory issued its strongest storm warning for 10 hours on Sunday, just slightly shorter than the record time of 11 hours set by Typhoon York in 1999, the South China Morning Post reported.

The storm made landfall in the Guangdong city of Taishan at 5 p.m., packing wind speeds of 100 miles per hour. State broadcaster CGTN reported that surging waves flooded a seaside hotel in the city of Shenzhen.

Groceries flew off the shelves of supermarkets in the provincial capital of Guangzhou as residents stocked up in anticipation of being confined at home by the typhoon, China’s official Xinhua News Agency said.

Authorities in southern China issued a red alert, the most severe warning, as the national meteorological center said the densely populated region would face a “severe test caused by wind and rain” and urged officials to prepare for possible disasters.

Hundreds of flights were canceled. All high-speed and some normal rail services in Guangdong and Hainan provinces were also halted, the China Railway Guangzhou Group Co. said.

In Hong Kong, a video posted online by residents showed the top corner of an old building break and fall off, while in another video, a tall building swayed as strong winds blew.

The storm also broke windows, felled trees, tore bamboo scaffolding off buildings under construction and flooded areas with sometimes waist-high waters, according to the South China Morning Post.

The paper said the heavy rains brought storm surges of 10 feet around Hong Kong.

Hong Kong Security Minister John Lee Ka-chiu urged residents to prepare for the worst.

“Because Mangkhut will bring winds and rains of extraordinary speeds, scope and severity, our preparation and response efforts will be greater than in the past,” Lee said. “Each department must have a sense of crisis, make a comprehensive assessment and plan, and prepare for the worst.”

Hong Kong’s Cathay Pacific said all of its flights would be canceled between 2:30 a.m. Sunday and 4 a.m. Monday. The city of Shenzhen also canceled all flights between Sunday and early Monday morning. Hainan Airlines canceled 234 flights in the cities of Haikou, Sanya, Guangzhou, Shenzhen and Zhuhai scheduled over the weekend.

In Macau, next door to Hong Kong, casinos were ordered to close from 11 p.m. Saturday, the first time such action was taken in the city, the South China Morning Post reported. Macau suffered catastrophic flooding during Typhoon Hato last year, leading to accusations of corruption and incompetence at its meteorological office.

In Macau’s inner harbor district, the water level reached 5 feet on Sunday and was expected to rise further. The district was one of the most affected by floods from Typhoon Hato, which left 10 people dead.

In the northern Philippines, Mangkhut made landfall Saturday on the northeastern tip of Luzon island with sustained winds of 127 miles per hour and gusts of 158 mph.

Dozens of people, mostly small-scale miners and their families, were feared to have been trapped by a landslide in the far-flung village of Ucab in Itogon town in the northern Philippines’ Benguet province, Itogon Mayor Victorio Palangdan said by phone.

Palangdan said three villagers who nearly got buried by the huge pile of mud and rocks told authorities they saw residents rush into an old three-story building, a former mining bunkhouse that has been transformed into a chapel, at the height of the typhoon’s onslaught Saturday afternoon.

“That was not an authorized evacuation center,” Palangdan said, but expressed sadness that the villagers, many of them poor miners, had few options to survive in a region where big corporations have profited immensely from gold mines.

Police Superintendent Pelita Tacio said 34 villagers had died and 36 remained missing in the landslides in Ucab and another village in Itogon town. Rescuers were scrambling to pull out the body of a victim from the mound of mud and rocks in Ucab before Tacio left the area Sunday.

“It’s very sad. I could hear villagers wailing in their homes near the site of the accident,” Tacio said by phone.

Rescuers were hampered by rain and mud, and the search and rescue operation was suspended at nightfall and will resume at daybreak Monday, Palangdan said. Police and their vehicles could not immediately reach the landside-hit area because the ground was unstable and soaked from the heavy rains, regional police chief Rolando Nana told the ABS-CBN network.

Overall, at least 64 people have died in typhoon incidents in the northern Philippines, mostly from landslides and collapsed houses, according to the national police. Forty-five other people were missing and 33 were injured in the storm.

The hardest-hit province was Benguet, where 38 people died, mostly in two landslides, and 37 are missing, the police said.

Still, the Philippines appeared to have been spared the high number of casualties many had feared. In 2013, Typhoon Haiyan left more than 7,300 people dead or missing, flattened villages and displaced more than 5 million in the central Philippines. A massive evacuation ahead of Mangkhut helped lessen potential casualties, with about 87,000 people evacuating from high-risk areas, officials said.

Philippine National Police Director General Oscar Albayalde told The Associated Press that 20 people died in the Cordillera mountain region, four in nearby Nueva Vizcaya province and another outside of the two regions. Three more deaths were reported in northeastern Cagayan province, where the typhoon made landfall.

The typhoon struck at the start of the rice and corn harvesting season in the Philippines’ northern breadbasket, prompting farmers to scramble to save what they could of their crops, Cagayan Gov. Manuel Mamba said.

 

Source: Hamodia

House passes bill raising level of anti-Semitism envoy position to ambassador

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House passes bill raising level of anti-Semitism envoy position to ambassador

(JTA) — The U.S. House of Representatives passed legislation that upgrades to ambassador level the position of special envoy to monitor and combat anti-Semitism at the State Department.

The Special Envoy to Monitor and Combat Anti-Semitism Act was authored by Rep. Chris Smith, R-N.J., who helped write the 2004 law that created the monitor post.

Lawmakers and Jewish communal organizations have chafed at the Trump administration’s failure to name someone to the anti-Semitism monitor post since Donald Trump became president, citing a perceived spike in anti-Semitism worldwide.

Under the legislation, the anti-Semitism monitor would be the primary adviser to the U.S. government in monitoring and combating anti-Semitism and would not have extraneous duties. The president must nominate a candidate for the position within 90 days of the legislation becoming law.

“Tragically, anti-Semitism is on the rise across the globe,” Rep. Peter Roskam, R-Ill., co-chair of the Bipartisan Taskforce for Combating anti-Semitism, said in a statement following the legislation’s passage in the House. “The bipartisan Special Envoy to Monitor and Combat Anti-Semitism Act reinforces our nation’s leadership in fighting this scourge by elevating the position of Special Envoy to Monitor and Combat Anti-Semitism to the rank of Ambassador and ensuring that the Special Envoy is solely focused on this important task.

“History teaches us that anti-Semitism is defeated only when it is confronted directly. The Special Envoy to Monitor and Combat Anti-Semitism Act is a strong step forward as Congress seeks to defeat global anti-Semitism.”

The other co-chairs of the Bipartisan Congressional Task Force for Combating Anti-Semitism who cosponsored the bill are Reps. Chris Smith, R-N.J.; Nita Lowey, D-N.Y.; Ileana Ros-Lehtinen, R-Fla.; Eliot Engel, D-N.Y.; Kay Granger, R-Texas; Ted Deutch. D-Fla; and Marc Veasey, D-Texas.

The legislation still must pass the Senate Foreign Relations Committee and the full Senate.

Nazi-looted Renoir painting returned to last heir of Jewish art dealer

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Nazi-looted Renoir painting returned to last heir of Jewish art dealer

American authorities give back 1919 work “Deux Femmes Dans Un Jardin” to Sylvie Sulitzer of France

A Renoir painting that the Nazis stole from a Paris bank vault was returned to the heir of its owner.

On Wednesday, U.S. authorities returned the 1919 work “Deux Femmes Dans Un Jardin” to Sylvie Sulitzer of France, the last remaining heir of her grandfather Alfred Weinberger, at the Museum of Jewish Heritage in New York. The painting by Pierre-Auguste Renoir, a famed Impressionist, is worth at least £229,000 ($300,000).

 

“I’m very thankful to be able to show my beloved family wherever they are that after all they’ve been through, there is justice,” Sulitzer said. Her grandfather was a prominent art collector in prewar Paris.

Four other Renoirs and a Delacroix, which her grandfather also owned, have yet to be recovered, Sulitzer told AFP.

The Nazis stole the art in December 1941 from the bank vault where Weinberger stored his collection when he fled Paris at the outset of World War II.

Following the war, Weinberger spent decades trying to recover his property, registering his claim with French authorities in 1947 and with the Germans in 1958.

U.S. officials said the Renoir first resurfaced at an art sale in Johannesburg, South Africa, in 1975, before finding its way to London, where it was sold again in 1977. It was put up for sale again in Zurich, Switzerland, in 1999. It was last sold in 2012 in the United States for $390,000, The New York Times reported.

But it was only when it was put up for auction by a private collector at Christie’s in New York that the auction house called in the FBI. Its previous owner eventually agreed to relinquish the painting.

It is thought that up to 100,000 works of art, and millions of books, were stolen from French Jews, or Jews who had fled to France before the Nazi occupation began in 1940.

 

 

Son of ‘Japanese Schindler’ finds forged visas in Lithuanian archive

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Son of ‘Japanese Schindler’ finds forged visas in Lithuanian archive

Nobuki Sugihara discovers documents used by his late father Chiune to save the lives of Jewish people

 

Lithuania’s state archive contains forgeries of life-saving visas given to Jews during the Holocaust by late Japanese diplomat Chiune Sugihara, his son said.

Nobuki Sugihara, who visited the archives in Vilnius last week, found out that the seals and signatures on some visas said to have been issued by his father differ from those on the Japanese consulate’s official documents, the LETA news agency reported last week.

In 1940, he gave transit visas into Japan to some thousands of Jews fleeing the Nazis. The recipients had destination visas into Curacao, an island that was a Dutch colony, supplied to them by Jan Zwartendijk, the Dutch honorary consul in Kaunas.

With those visas, the recipients were able to travel through the Soviet Union, escaping the Nazis. Both men acted without the approval, and sometimes in defiance, of their superiors.

Source: Jewish News

Alleged Israeli strike said to target Iranian weapons delivery in Damascus

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Alleged Israeli strike said to target Iranian weapons delivery in Damascus

Missile attack at airport attributed to IDF reportedly causes ‘substantial’ damage to arms depots disguised as UN and DHL facilities

 

Source: Times of Israel

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