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U.S. Airports Get Nearly $1 Billion In Federal Funds For Makeovers

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More than 100 US airports will be awarded $970 million in federal grants, the latest effort to upgrade the nation’s infrastructure – a top priority of President Joe Biden.

The new funding, announced Thursday, comes as airports in recent years have raced to modernize terminals and add new amenities, seeking to ride a rebound in air travel after the coronavirus pandemic. The latest round is on top of the nearly $2 billion granted to airports over the past two years for capital improvement projects that include wider concourses, adding extra gates to accommodate more plane service and ensuring airports meet Americans with Disabilities Act standards.

“America has been thinking a lot about air traffic lately,” US Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg said on a call with reporters Wednesday. “A flight doesn’t begin just when you settle into your seat on board. First, you’re in the terminal and your experience depends in many ways on the conditions of that terminal building.”

US airports need $151 billion over the 2023-to-2027 period to meet infrastructure needs, according to Airports Council International-North America. Passenger traffic returned to pre-pandemic levels very quickly, as travelers were eager to get back to business and personal trips.

Among the 114 airports to receive new funding are Chicago O’Hare International Airport in Illinois, with $40 million, and Salt Lake City International Airport in Utah, with $20 million. Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood International Airport was awarded the most money with $50 million.

The grants are a part of the Biden administration’s effort to promote projects backed by a bipartisan infrastructure law passed in 2021, highlighting funding for ports, transit, roads and bridges. The administration also said Thursday that it is moving to hold airlines, like it did with Southwest Airlines Co. in December, more accountable for better passenger service.

Meanwhile, city governments have turned to the $4 trillion municipal bond market to help fund long-term airport upgrades. Just last year, agencies overseeing airports in Chicago and San Diego have sold debt to help finance infrastructure projects.

In addition to having to modernize aging facilities, airports have had to adapt to climate change, preparing for more extreme weather events such as storm surges and coastal floodings.

(c) 2024, Bloomberg · Skylar Woodhouse 

California Proposition To Tackle Homelessness Could Worsen The Problem

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Democratic California Gov. Gavin Newsom is urging voters to approve a ballot initiative that he says is needed to tackle the state’s homelessness crisis, a change social providers say would threaten programs that keep people from becoming homeless in the first place.

In 2004, voters approved legislation that imposed a tax on millionaires to finance mental health services, generating $2 billion to $3 billion in revenue each year that has mostly gone to counties to fund mental health programs as they see fit under broad guidelines.

Now Newsom wants to give the state more control over how that money is spent. Proposition 1, before voters on the March 5 ballot, would require counties to spend 60% of those funds on housing and programs for homeless people with serious mental illnesses or substance abuse problems.

The single formula would mean rural counties like Butte, with a homeless population of fewer than 1,300 people, would be required to divert the same percentage of funds to housing as urban counties like San Francisco, which has a homeless population six times bigger. San Francisco Mayor London Breed said she supports the measure. Butte County officials have expressed concerns.

The funding from the millionaire tax in Butte County has mostly gone to prevention services to combat high suicide and childhood trauma rates. Officials estimated they would have to divert at least 28% of current funding from existing programs toward housing. They say the change could cause cultural centers, peer-support programs, vocational services and even programs working with homeless people to lose funding.

Tiffany McCarter burst into tears when talking about how the African American Family & Cultural Center she runs in rural Oroville, a city in Butte County, might have to close its doors. The 14-year-old center with a mission of breaking the cycle of trauma in the Black community relies heavily on mental health funding from the county.

The center offers an after-school program, art and dance classes and anger management sessions — designed to steer young people away from the streets. McCarter said some have learning disabilities or parents who are incarcerated.

“I’d love to solve the homeless problem,” McCarter, the center’s executive director, said as the halls filled with laughter of children who ran around her to win her attention. “But then which one of my kids are we going to leave behind?”

With makeshift tents lining streets and disrupting businesses in communities across the state, homelessness has become one of the most frustrating issues in California and one sure to dog Newsom should he ever mount a national campaign. The Democratic governor has raised about $10 million to back the ballot measure and has appeared in television ads promoting it, indicating it’s one of his top political priorities.

Already he has pushed for laws that make it easier to force people with behavioral health issues into treatment, and he touts the proposition as the final piece of the new approach.

“We are in a unique position to take what we have been promoting — these promises — and make them real, and finally address the issue that defines more stress and more frustrations than any other issue in this state,” Newsom said at the proposition kickoff event.

The two-part measure would authorize the state to borrow $6.38 billion to build 4,350 housing units, half of which would be reserved for veterans. It also would add 6,800 mental health and addiction treatment beds.

Newsom’s administration has already spent at least $22 billion on various programs to address the crisis, including $3.5 billion to convert rundown motels into homeless housing. California is also giving out $2 billion in grants to build more treatment facilities.

But the crisis is worse than ever, many say.

The state accounts for nearly a third of the homeless population in the United States; roughly 181,000 Californians are in need of housing. A recent survey by the University of San Francisco’s Benioff Homelessness and Housing Initiative found about two-thirds of homeless people in California suffer from a mental health disorder, but only 18% had received recent treatment and only 6% had received any addiction treatment despite rampant abuse.

The state needs some 8,000 more beds to treat mental health and addiction issues, according to researchers who testified before state lawmakers last year.

California currently has 5,500 beds, down from as many as 37,000 more than a half-century ago, the governor said.

The proposal could also add beds in locked psychiatric facilities, which advocates say could force more people into involuntary treatment. Newsom and state lawmakers haven’t decided on what types of facility would be built.

“From a humanitarian and civil rights perspective, we vehemently oppose Proposition 1,” said Mark Salazar, executive director of Mental Health Association of San Francisco, which serves more than 15,000 people monthly. “There are studies that show over and over that coercing treatment just doesn’t end well for the individual.”

Mark Cloutier, CEO of Caminar, which provides mental health services, employment placement and supportive housing to mostly young adults, believes the ballot measure is needed since many people end up in jail or the emergency room because of the lack of housing and treatment beds.

Joe Wilson, who runs Hospitality House in San Francisco, said more housing and beds are needed but not at the expense of other programs like his organization’s two drop-in centers in the Tenderloin neighborhood and Sixth Street Corridor, where workers, most of whom were once homeless, help navigate services for people, update resumes, and drive them to appointments.

“Everyone agrees that we need more resources for housing,” he said. “Is this the best way to do it? We don’t believe so.”

One of the center’s workers, Anthony Hardnett, a San Francisco native who was homeless and suffered from addiction issues, said many people he has helped have become independent and productive by learning new skills and hobbies, like in the chess club he hosts. The group connected more than 30 people to jobs last month.

“You’ve got to show them something different to change their mindset,” Hardnett said. “We can’t just give up on them.”

In the Butte County city of Chico, about 165 miles (265 kilometers) north of San Francisco, providers say the city’s only drop-in center for troubled youth is at risk. The 6th Street Center for Youth also offers rent assistance to college students, but workers do not believe that would protect it from having its budget cut.

Solace Kalkowski, who uses the pronoun they, found themself sleeping in their truck after a breakup a few weeks ago and said the center kept them from ending up chronically homeless.

“It’s a healthy outlet for me to come where people will listen and give you advice,” Kalkowski said. “I’ve been working on myself and being more productive. … Me having this chance, I’m blown away.”

(AP)

Source: The Yeshiva World

NO TO KOSHER MEAT: Top EU Human Rights Court Upholds Bans On Shechitah In Belgium

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The European Court of Human Rights has issued a verdict regarding the bans on animal slaughter without stunning in Belgium, asserting that these bans do not impede religious freedom nor do they amount to discrimination.

This ruling, rendered on Tuesday in Strasbourg, France, stems from a petition lodged by Muslim organizations against the bans implemented in 2019 in two of Belgium’s three regions. As the highest authority with jurisdiction over the bans, the Strasbourg court’s decision is final, forbidding kosher shechitah in the country.

“In the implied determination of the distorted verdict is that the rights of these citizens to freedom of religion and worship are even less than that of animals,” said Rabbi Menachem Margolin, chairman of the Brussels-based European Jewish Association. He expressed concern that these limitations on Jewish religious practices will cause “serious damage to the fabric of life throughout the continent.”

Rabbi Pinchas Goldschmidt, the President of the Conference of European Rabbis, condemned the ruling as “a setback for Europe.” He pledged that the Jewish and Muslim communities will continue to advocate for religious freedoms and equality, though he acknowledged that this task has become more challenging in light of the court’s decision.

In Belgium, Jewish and Muslim communities are in opposition to these bans, which they perceive as an unjustifiable encroachment on their religious liberties. The rationale behind these bans is the prevalent belief that slaughter without stunning causes undue suffering to animals. Advocates of shechitah contend that when performed correctly, this method minimizes animal distress. Similarly, proponents of the Muslim practice, d’biha, make similar assertions regarding their method.

Source: {Matzav.com}

Rescued Hostages Never Received Promised Medication, Renewing Calls to Suspend Gaza Aid

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By Pesach Benson • 13 February, 2024

 

Jerusalem, 13 February, 2024 (TPS) — The families of two hostages rescued from Gaza told Israeli media their loved ones did not receive medication that Hamas and Qatar promised would be delivered to the captives, renewing calls for Israel to suspend humanitarian aid deliveries to the Strip.

Fernando Marman, 61, Louis Har, 70, were rescued from the Gaza town of Rafah on Monday and are recovering at the Sheba Medical Center in Ramat Gan. The families were informed that Marman and Har were given some medication while in captivity, but not medicines that were specifically intended for them as part of an agreement in January which saw Israel expand the amount of humanitarian aid allowed into the Strip.

Minister of National Security Itamar Ben-Gvir wrote a letter to Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Tuesday calling for the suspension of humanitarian aid transfers to Gaza until the well-being of the hostages is verified.

“Let us remind you that about a month ago you led a move against Qatar to deliver essential medicines to our abductees, in which you approved the transfer of two Air Force cargo planes filled with thousands of packages of medicines and humanitarian medical equipment to the residents of Gaza along with individual boxes of medicines for the abductees, in return For the promise that Hamas will present evidence that the abductees did indeed receive the drugs,” Ben-Gvir wrote.

“Now, when it is clear to the whole world that even the medicines intended for the abductees, through international mediation, did not reach their destination, I implore you to immediately stop the transfer of humanitarian aid to Gaza and accept my simple position that until the State of Israel receives information about their condition of the abductees and clear evidence that the medicines were delivered to them, no aid truck will enter the Gaza Strip,” Ben-Gvir wrote.

The Forum of Hope, which represents the families of the captives, refused the Tazpit Press Service’s request for a comment.

In January, Qatar and France mediated an agreement in which Israel would approve more humanitarian aid to reach Gaza in exchange for Hamas allowing medicine to be delivered to the hostages. On February 9, Qatar informed Israel and France of Hamas’s assurances that the medicines were delivered to the hostages. However, Israel and France have not received independent verification that the captives received their medicines.

The disclosure about Marman and Har raises questions of whether any of the captives received their medication.

Mor Hershkovitz, the head of data operations with the Hostages and Missing Families Forum’s medical team, told the Tazpit Press Service in January that many of the hostages were likely in critical condition or dead without their medication.

International law explicitly stipulates the obligation of participants in armed conflict to allow impartial humanitarian bodies such as the International Committee of the Red Cross access to hostages.

The ICRC was not a party to the January agreement. Israelis have heavily criticized the Red Cross for failing to use its influence to gain access to the captives.

Humanitarian aid deliveries to Gaza are unpopular among Israelis. For weeks, protesters chanting “Don’t feed Hamas” have tried to disrupt the aid trucks at the Kerem Shalom crossing and other points where the deliveries are inspected.

Netanyahu has defended the aid transfers, saying a degree of aid is necessary to continue the war to free hostages and remove Hamas from control of Gaza.

At least 1,200 people were killed and 240 Israelis and foreigners were taken hostage in Hamas’s attacks on Israeli communities near the Gaza border on October 7. Of the remaining 134 hostages, Israel recently declared 31 of them dead.

Israeli Soldiers Take On Rising Antisemitism with Campus Tour Across America

By Pesach Benson • 14 February, 2024

 

Jerusalem, 14 February, 2024 (TPS) — Aiming to combat rising antisemitism and provide insight into the realities of Israeli military service, a delegation of injured Israeli soldiers took their stories to American college campuses.

The October 7 Hamas attacks shocked the world, as Hamas killed 1,200 Israelis, abducted 240 hostages, and left thousands more injured. However, the tragedy quickly faded from headlines, replaced by anti-Israel rhetoric, particularly on US college campuses. According to the US-based Anti-Defamation League, which fights antsemitism, incidents of antisemitism on US campuses have increased dramatically, with 73% of Jewish students experiencing or witnessing such acts. Many Jewish students feel marginalized and hide their identity, Jewish groups report.

The delegation’s whirlwind 13-day speaking tour in February was organized by Belev Echad, a New York-based non-profit that supports Israeli soldiers wounded in action, providing respite, rehabilitation, and emotional support. The soldiers shared their stories on campuses in New York, Oregon, Washington and Florida.

“So many people view the IDF [Israel Defense Forces] as aggressors, but it’s simply not true. We’re young men and women who are simply defending our right to exist, keeping our brothers, sisters, parents and grandparents safe,” explained Alon Elbaz. The 20-year army medic was at Kibbutz Nir Am when Hamas attacked. He is currently recovering from shrapnel injuries he sustained while treating other injured Israelis.

He described seeing more terrorists than he could count swarming through the kibbutz’s fence as rockets flew overhead, treating a close friend with shrapnel wounds in his head, and later setting up a field hospital at a traffic junction.

“There was no time to think, no time to breathe. It was just a matter of save lives, save lives, save lives. Stopping for even one minute meant that someone could die,” Elbaz recalled.

Reacting to the soldiers’ stories, Mike, a junior studying Computer and Information Sciences, said, “I’m Jewish, but I pride myself on being liberal, and I always looked askance at Israel’s treatment of Palestinians. Meeting soldiers around my age who’ve been through so much in the past few months has changed my attitude, and I realized that this is not a fight for sovereignty but for the safety of innocent civilians.”

Osher Pardo, another injured army medic participating in the tour said, “When we meet others face-to-face and share our personal stories — which for me included losing over 60 buddies and getting very close to losing my life to Hamas terrorists — they are suddenly so much more accepting and willing to hearing the Israeli perspective, which is the perspective of truth.”

The 21-year-old was injured at Kibbutz Nahal Oz and described being woken on the morning of October 7 by the sound of rocket fire, treating injured soldiers in a bomb shelter, running out of ammunition, and collapsing on the ground after his knee was hit by shrapnel.

“That morning, we’d been 90 soldiers in our base in Nahal Oz. By night, we were only 25. We lost a lot of friends that day, but our commander did survive. In the hospital, I was approached by Belev Echad and I’m still in rehab, recovering physically and emotionally from the trauma. But most important, I’m here, representing my country and friends for those who didn’t make it.”

Rabbi Uriel Vigler, who co-founded Belev Echad with his wife, Shevy, explained, “This campus tour has been an eye-opening experience for hundreds of American students who joined the meetings. I don’t think there’s any better way of presenting the Israeli perspective to American college kids than through the eyes of their Israeli peers who, instead of going to college and earning degrees are, at the age of 18, 19 and 20, putting their lives on the line to defend their families and fellow citizens.”

In addition to giving American students a better understanding of the war, Elbaz noted that recounting their stories has been beneficial to the soldiers as well.

“Allowing us to share our challenges, tragedies and victories with our American peers also enabled us to see, firsthand, what Jewish students in the U.S. deal with, and we appreciate their support.”

Ozzy Osbourne rips Kanye West: He’s an antisemite, I want no association with him

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Black Sabbath lead vocalist blasts controversial rapper for using a sample of his music without permission: He is an antisemite and has caused untold heartache to many.

Black Sabbath lead vocalist Ozzy Osbourne ripped rapper Kanye West for using a sample of his music without permission on Friday, saying he refused West’s request to use the music because of his antisemitism.

In a post on X, Osbourne wrote that West “asked permission to sample a section of a 1983 live performance of ‘Iron Man’ from the US festival without vocals and was refused permission because he is an antisemite and has caused untold heartache to many.”

He added that West “went ahead and used the sample anyway at his album listening party last night. I want no association with this man!”

Later on Friday, Osbourne’s wife and manager, Sharon Osbourne, said she was exploring options to resolve the matter.

“We are considering legal action,” she said in a statement quoted by Rolling Stone magazine. “Ozzy has not spoken to Kanye but our team have spoken with theirs.”

Rolling Stone noted that West later released the song without the sample of the Osbourne recording. The “Iron Man” sample was previously audible at the 1:45 mark of leaked audio of the track, and video of the song from a Chicago event on Thursday, in which West and Ty Dolla $ign held a listening party for the new album, includes the sample as well.

West, who now calls himself Ye, caused outrage in 2022 after saying during an interview that the Abraham Accords between Israel, the UAE, and Bahrain were signed because former White House senior adviser Jared Kushner, who is also Trump’s son-in-law, wanted to “make money” from the deal.

He later threatened to go “death con 3 on the Jews” in an apparent antisemitic Twitter rant. West followed this up by claiming that he can’t be antisemitic “because black people are actually Jew.”

West’s antisemitic comments caused a host of companies to cut ties with him, including Adidasthe Creative Artists AgencyFoot Locker and Apple Music.

West has since seemingly backtracked his comments, citing actor Jonah Hill’s acting in the 2012 movie “21 Jump Street”.

This past December, the rapper published a Hebrew-language post on Instagram in which he apologized to the Jewish community for the various antisemitic statements he had made.

Sharon Osbourne is of Jewish descent. She was born Sharon Rachel Levy and her father was Jewish while her mother was not, but she was nevertheless raised Jewish.

“We were brought up in basically a Jewish household,” Osbourne told The Jewish Chronicle last month. “My family, my father’s family, my aunt, my cousins, are all Jewish. And observant Jews who practice and love their religion. So Judaism is the only religion I have, and the only one with which I feel comfortable.”

Source: Arutz 7

Former White House doctor – Biden ‘not cognitively fit’ to lead the country.

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Now a Texan congressman, Dr. Ronny Jackson said the president’s mental decline endangers national security.

By Batya Jerenberg, World Israel News

The White House doctor during the Obama-Biden administration said Saturday that it is obvious to him that President Joe Biden has declined mentally since his years as vice president and that he is not fit to serve as the country’s leader.

“I watched the man every day, you know, in and around the West Wing for eight years when he was vice president. There’s a drastic, drastic difference between then and now,” Dr. Ronny Jackson, who is now a Texan Republican congressman, told Fox News Digital.

Americans don’t need a medical degree to see the change, according to Jackson.

 

“Go back and look at the videos from whenever he was first vice president and compare them to now. It’s not even the same person,” he stated. “He’s got some serious issues.”

The congressman said that last week’s report by the special counsel investigating Biden’s allegedly improper possession of top-secret documents which described the president as a “well-meaning, elderly man with a poor memory” was backed by “all kinds of gaffes” Biden has made since then, as well as for the last three years.

Last Tuesday, Biden seemingly blanked on the name “Hamas” when talking to reporters about a possible hostage deal in Israel’s months-long war on the terror group, calling it “the opposition.” He also called Egypt’s president the leader of Mexico at the same press conference.

After the report came out, Biden defended his memory skills and insisted that he was still the “best man” in the country to be president.

Jackson, who is a former admiral in the U.S. Navy, thinks differently, saying there is a real danger now to America’s national security.

“He’s cognitively unfit to be our commander in chief, and it’s going to be a problem for us,” he said. “It’s a real national security issue. I mean, it’s always been a national security issue, but it’s a national security issue that just gets worse by the day.”

“We have lots of stuff going on overseas,” the GOP lawmaker continued. “Our adversaries absolutely, positively have no respect for us. They have no fear of us and our allies. I mean, they don’t trust us, and they don’t really know if we’re going to be there if something bad happens.”

Last February, after the president received his annual physical that made no mention of a psychological exam, Jackson told Fox that he had sent the White House three letters already “demanding that Biden receive a cognitive test and that the results be made public, all of which have been ignored. Everyone can see something is wrong — the cover-up needs to end.”

While many Democrats attempted to deflect the concerns raised in the report by attacking Republicans for “pouncing” on Biden, former presidential candidate and secretary of state Hillary Clinton acknowledged to MSNBC that his age was “a legitimate issue.”

She then added immediately that it’s “a legitimate issue” for Republican front-runner Donald Trump as well, since he is “only three years younger, right?”

The Democratic powerhouse suggested that a good elections tactic would be for Biden to “kid more” about his age, and “lean into the fact that he’s experienced, and that experience is not just in the political arena, it’s like, the stuff of, you know, human experience, character, wisdom.”

Source: World Israel News

New Bill Proposes Labeling Blocking NYC Streets as “Domestic Terrorism”

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A proposed bill aims to classify intentionally blocking traffic on New York City streets as an act of “domestic terrorism.” Assemblywoman Stacey Pheffer Amato (D-Queens) introduced the bill in response to the chaos often caused by protests, particularly those related to recent events like the Israel-Hamas war.

The bill’s introduction coincides with Amato’s upcoming rematch against a Republican opponent she narrowly defeated in 2022, with insiders suggesting that the bill could serve as an effort to appeal to a district that has shifted more conservative in recent years, according to The New York Post.

Documents supporting the bill emphasize that while individuals have the right to protest, they should not have the right to instill fear, panic, or endanger the lives of others by blocking traffic. Under the proposed legislation, individuals convicted of this offense could face up to seven years in prison for a class D felony, as reported by The New York Post.

Source: (YWN World Headquarters – NYC)

 

Israeli Ads Raise Awareness of Captives Ahead of Super Bowl

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Israel kicked off an advertising campaign in the United States on Super Bowl weekend to bring attention to the plight of the 136 hostages still in the hands of the Hamas terrorist group in Gaza.

Ahead of Sunday’s big game in Las Vegas between the Kansas City Chiefs and San Francisco 49ers, millions of Americans are being exposed to the campaign launched by Israel’s national information system in coordination with the Government Advertising Agency.

The ads are being seen on smart TVs and outdoor signage in large cities, and being heard on a radio broadcast. They are running on the Paramount+ streaming platform, which is airing the live CBS broadcast of Super Bowl LVIII.

In addition, a video will be uploaded highlighting the need for the captives to be released, targeting content and current affairs websites. The video will also be displayed on billboards in Washington and New York and broadcast on sports and current affairs-focused digital radio.

“All the contents of the campaign, according to estimates, will eventually reach tens of millions of exposures throughout the United States, when already in its first days it reached almost 10 million exposures,” the Israeli government said.

30-second Super Bowl ad

The man who helped Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. write the “I Have a Dream” speech will appear in a Super Bowl commercial from the Foundation to Combat Antisemitism (FCAS).

The organization, founded by New England Patriots owner Robert Kraft, purchased a 30-second advertisement for the Super Bowl that will include lawyer and speechwriter Clarence B. Jones, who once counseled King. A book chronicling Jones’s life story was published in 2023, Last of the Lions: An African American Journey in Memoir.

FCAS released a video of Kraft calling Jones to inform him of the commercial’s placement during the game. After telling him the news, Jones responded: “You know what? You know how to make a 93-year-old man cry.” Choking up, Jones said, “Martin would have loved you.”

In an interview with USA Today last week, Kraft expressed fear about the state of hate in the country, particularly directed at Jewish people.

“I don’t recognize parts of this nation,” Kraft, who is Jewish, said. “I don’t like where we’re headed. I’m worried about our country right now.

“We’re the greatest country in the world but it’s starting to look like Germany in the 1930s to me…, and I want to prevent us from getting to the 1940s.”

Kraft continued: “Why am I doing the Super Bowl ad? The majority of people in America, who are good people, I think they believe there’s nothing they can do. But there is. What we need is non-Jewish people to stand up to this hate.”

The Foundation to Combat Antisemitism has been running its #StandUpToJewishHate campaign over the last year, with a series of short videos highlighting non-Jews helping Jews in the face of antisemitism.

Source: Matzav

Israel Discovers Hamas Compound Directly Under UNRWA’s Gaza HQ

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By Pesach Benson • 11 February, 2024

Jerusalem, 11 February, 2024 (TPS) — Israeli officials blasted the embattled UN Relief and Works Agency for Palestinian refugees amid Saturday’s revelations that a Hamas compound was found directly under the agency’s Gaza City headquarters, connected to the UNRWA’s electricity, along with a statement by the agency director denying knowledge of the tunnel.

Israel disclosed the compound in a tweet by the Coordinator of Government Activities in the Territories (COGAT), a unit within the Israeli Defense Ministry that coordinates civilian issues between the Israeli government, military, international organizations and the Palestinian Authority.

“EXPOSED: A Hamas terror tunnel right under UNRWA’s main headquarters in Gaza, using its electricity and infrastructure. A Hamas server room was also located inside the tunnel, along with large amounts of weapons inside the UNRWA building,” COGAT said on X, formerly known as Twitter.

A video accompanying the tweet showed an underground tunnel with computer servers and extensive electrical cables.

UNRWA chief Philippe Lazzarini denied any knowledge of the data center. In a lengthy tweet on Saturday night, Lazzarini said UNRWA staff evacuated the headquarters on October 12 and that Israel never notified the agency of the tunnel’s existence.

COGAT fired back shortly after, “Oh, you knew. Digging a tunnel takes longer than 4 months. We invited senior @UN officials to see, and during past meetings with you and other UN officials, we stated Hamas’s use of UNRWA’s headquarters. You chose to ignore the facts so you can later try and deny them.”

Israeli Ambassador to the UN Gilad Erdan added, “We exposed terror tunnels under UNRWA schools and supplied evidence that Hamas’ exploits UNRWA. We implored you to carry out a comprehensive search of all UNRWA facilities in Gaza. But not only did you refuse, you chose to stick your head in the sand.”

COGAT also tweeted a separate video showing the weapons found inside the UNRWA compound, including suicide bomber belts, grenades, rifles, explosives, bullets and Hamas flags.

Embattled UNRWA

Since October 7, the agency has been under fire numerous times, prompting Israel to demand that UNRWA be stripped of its authority in Gaza and defunded amid revelations that members of the agency’s staff participated in Hamas’s October 7 attacks on Israel. The US and 14 other countries have suspended funding for the agency and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has instructed the military to find alternatives to distributing humanitarian aid in Gaza that bypass UNRWA.

Israel intelligence incriminating 12 staffers of their participation, including using UNRWA vehicles and facilities as 1,200 Israelis were massacred was leaked to The New York Times. Afterward, The Wall Street Journal reported that one in 10 UNRWA employees is either an active member or has ties to Hamas or Palestinian Islamic Jihad.

Israel’s largest bank froze UNRWA’s account over suspicious financial transfers that the agency failed to adequately explain.

Reports released by IMPACT-SE and UN Watch documented UNRWA employees expressing support for the attacks on social media.

Soldiers found missiles hidden among UNRWA relief supplies while sacks belonging to the agency were filled with dirt and used in the lining of tunnels.

Jerusalem’s deputy mayor accused UNRWA of undermining Israeli sovereignty over the city, among other things.

Palestinian refugees are the only refugee population with its own dedicated UN agency. The rest of the world’s refugees fall under the mandate of the UN High Commissioner for Refugees. Israeli officials have called for UNRWA to be closed and for Palestinian refugees to be brought under the responsibility of the UNHCR.

The UNRWA’s definition of refugees not only includes the original refugees but also their descendants in perpetuity, including those who have citizenship in other countries. The UNHCR definition does not confer refugee status on descendants.

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