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Bedouin officer killed in terror attack has a Hasidic Jewish cousin

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The Bedouin Border Police officer killed during terror attack in Jerusalem has an Orthodox Jewish cousin from the Chabad movement in Australia.

By World Israel News Staff

An Israeli-Arab Border Police officer from the Bedouin community who was recently killed in a terrorist stabbing attack has an Orthodox Jewish cousin, Charedim10 reported Tuesday.

On Monday evening, 22-year-old Staff Sgt. Asil Sawaed succumbed to wounds sustained earlier in the day in a terrorist attack at a checkpoint to Shuafat in northeastern Jerusalem.

During the attack, a 13-year-old Arab terrorist stabbed Sawaed after he and a civilian guard had boarded a bus during a routine inspection. The guard then opened fire at the suspect, accidentally hitting Sawaed.

The morning after Sawaed’s passing, Israeli entrepreneur Maor Farid eulogized Sawaed and shared his family connection to the slain offi

“The late Sergeant Asil Sawaed, who was murdered yesterday in the attack, is a relative of mine. No, it’s not an expression – for real.”

Farid explained that his father-in-law, Rami Ben-David, is a Bedouin convert to Judaism.

Born Hasan Sawaed in the village of Wadi Selma in northern Israel, Ben-David joined the IDF, serving as a paratrooper.

After converting to Judaism, Ben-David joined the Chabad-Lubavtich movement and eventually moved to Australia, while maintaining ties with his Bedouin family in Israel.

“My wife Michal’s father was born as Hasan Sawaed in the village of Wadi Selma in the Galilee,” wrote Farid. “He served in the paratroopers, converted, and over the years became Rami Ben-David – a Chabad Hasid. From then until today, the Sawaed family is flesh of our flesh, family members – in moments of joy and of hardship.”

‘Family of heroes…serve in top combat units’

“The Sawaed family is a family of heroes,” he continued. “Bedouins from the Galilee who serve in the top combat units in the IDF, who sacrifice their lives for this land and the people living in Zion with sacrifice. You can see it from the second you enter every house in the village – shelves full of certificates of appreciation and pictures of them in uniform next to books of the Quran.

“The late Asil was only a 22-year-old boy at the time of his death. A boy who made the decision to enlist in the Border Police out of pride, mission, love for our homeland and our people.

“May your soul be bundled in the bundle of life, my dear brother.”

Bedouin-Israeli activist Mohammad Kabiya noted in a tweet Monday night that Sawaed is the 17th member of his clan to die in the line of duty as a soldier or police officer for the State of Israel.

“Officer Asil Sawaed, who died tonight following the terror attack in Shuafat, is the 17th member of the Sawaed clan to fall in the line of duty!”

“His death is the another price that we pay as part of our covenant we made with our brothers, the Jews, in the Land of Israel, and is a reminder that terrorism does not differentiate between anyone, we are all Israelis.”

Source: World Israel News

 

Amazon Unit Zoox Tests Robotaxi On California City’s Streets

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Zoox, a self-driving vehicle company owned by Amazon, says it has successfully carried passengers on public roads — a development that helps the California company inch closer to bringing the vehicle to the general public.

The company conducted the first run of its four-person “robotaxi” with employees on board Saturday, the Amazon subsidiary said Monday.

The vehicle, which doesn’t have a steering wheel or pedals, ran a mile-long (1.6-kilometer) route between two Zoox buildings at the company’s headquarters in Foster City, California. The carriage-style interior of the vehicle has two benches that face each other. It measures just under 12 feet (3.7 meters) long, about a foot (a third of a meter) shorter than a standard Mini Cooper and can travel up to 35 miles per hour (56 kph).

Zoox, which was founded in 2014 and bought by Seattle-based Amazon six years later, says its vehicle can navigate roads and avoid collisions. Before Saturday’s test, the company said it completed testing on private roads and got necessary approvals from California’s Department of Motor Vehicles.

With the test now completed, Zoox says its planning to launch a shuttle service exclusively for its employees.

(AP)

Source: The Yeshiva World

The Lubavitcher Rebbe’s Letter Arrived 55 Years Late, But At Exactly The Right Time

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JERUSALEM (VINnews) — Journalist Yossi Elituv, who recently lost his father Rabbi Shimon Elituv, one of the prominent disciples of the Lubavitcher Rebbe, described how a letter addressed to his father by the Rebbe and sent 55 years ago had arrived at exactly the right time.

Elituv, who is the editor of the Mishpacha magazine, tweeted that “to receive a condolence letter from the Rebbe over the passing of our father during the shloshim seems like a message from heaven.

“This is how it happened. On the 5th of Av 5728 (1968), 55 years ago, the rebbe sent a letter full of comforting words about the month of Av to our father. However the letter never arrived as our father had moved to Romania and the letter, addressed to Jerusalem, was returned.

 

“An hour ago a person who was close to the Rebbe called with a message: I discovered by chance a condolence letter the Rebbe sent to your father which never reached him. Now is its time, I’m sending you a copy with shaking hands, or more correctly, the Rebbe is sending the family condolences.”

In the letter the Rebbe wrote that “may Hashem, the merciful father, comfort his people Yisrael with a double comfort, double strength. This double does not mean two times as much but rather a number which is priceless, and soon these days will become joyous and festive.

Elituv concluded, stating that “My father got 130 letters from the Rebbe in his lifetime and only one with words of comfort arrived tonight, when we most needed comforting.”

Source: VosIzNeias

Russia Put 6,000 Ukrainian Kids in Re-Education Camps

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(Bloomberg News/TNS) — Russia has placed thousands of Ukrainian children in camps where they’re subjected to Russian propaganda and forcible adoption by Russian families, with some even undergoing military training, a U.S. government-backed report from Yale University found.

The campaign violates the Geneva Conventions and could constitute war crimes, crimes against humanity and possibly genocide, researchers from the Yale School of Public Health’s Humanitarian Research Lab said. It has involved children from 4 months to 17 years old.

The research was supported by the State Department’s bureau of conflict stabilization operations.

While at least 6,000 children could be confirmed to have participated in the camps, the researchers “think the number is probably significantly higher,” Nathaniel Raymond, a Yale researcher who worked on the report, told reporters in a phone briefing on Tuesday. “The primary purpose of the camps appears to be political re-education.”

In many of the cases, the report found, children were sent to the camps from occupied parts of Ukraine including Zaporizhzhia, Kharkiv, Kherson, Donetsk and Luhansk. At two military-style camps in Chechnya and Russian-occupied Crimea, children were taught how to “handle military equipment, drive trucks, and study firearms,” the researchers said.

Some Ukrainian orphans were eventually adopted or placed with Russian foster families, but the report said that not all of these children were technically orphans — with some simply coming from families that were “in difficult circumstances.”

Russia has portrayed its adoption program as humanitarian aid to abandoned children.

The researchers said many parents gave consent under duress for their children to be taken away, with some wanting to get their loved ones out of a war zone or wanting them to be fed properly. Some children were returned to their parents, but others couldn’t communicate with their parents or were blocked from going home.

Source: Hamodia

Knesset Passes Law to Strip Citizenship of Terrorists

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By Pesach Benson • 15 February, 2023

Jerusalem, 15 February, 2023 (TPS) — Knesset lawmakers gave final approval to legislation to strip Israeli citizenship from Arab terrorists and their families.

The legislation was passed with 94 votes, with 10 Knesset members, all from Arab parties, voted against. The legislation was supported by the opposition and was widely expected to pass.

The bill empowers the Interior Minister to revoke citizenship or temporary residence status for people convicted of terror and other security offenses. It could also be applied to families that receive terror stipends from the Palestinian Authority.

The Interior Minister will also be empowered to act against terror convicts who do not have a secondary citizenship elsewhere, as long as they have a permanent residence status somewhere outside of Israel. It also enables individuals to be deported to the Palestinian Authority.

The Interior Minister is required to hold a hearing before revoking anyone’s citizenship.

MK Oded Forer of the opposition Israel Beiteinu party, who was one of the law’s initiators, said, “Today we took another step in the fight against terrorism. The law I passed today is a closure order for the terrorist camp funded by Abu Mazen! From now on every terrorist will know that he will pay a heavy price for harming the citizens of Israel.”

The Palestinian Authority is legally mandated to allocate seven percent of its annual budget for its so-called “Martyr’s Fund,” which provides stipends to Palestinian terrorists in Israeli prisons, and the families of terrorists killed in attacks. The size of the monthly payouts depends on various factors such as how many Israelis were killed, how long the terrorist has been incarcerated and family size.

Ramallah has been paying out stipends for years, but the issue came under a spotlight following the murder of Taylor Force, a U.S. citizen killed by a Palestinian who went on a stabbing rampage in Jaffa in 2018. Congress passed the Taylor Force Act, which halted U.S. aid to the Palestinians as long as terror stipends are being paid out

Democratic Sen. Dianne Feinstein to retire, opening up California seat

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  • Sen. Dianne Feinstein of California announced she will retire at the end of her current term.
  • Feinstein, 89, is the oldest sitting U.S. senator and the longest-serving senator from her state.
  • Reps. Adam Schiff and Katie Porter, both California Democrats, have already launched campaigns for Feinstein’s Senate seat.

Sen. Dianne Feinstein of California announced Tuesday that she will retire at the end of her current term, setting up a major Democratic competition for her coveted seat.

Feinstein, who at 89 is the oldest sitting U.S. senator and the longest-serving senator from her state, said she intends to “accomplish as much for California as I can through the end of next year when my term ends.”

“Even with a divided Congress, we can still pass bills that will improve lives,” Feinstein said in a statement.

The fight for the open Senate seat in the powerful, reliably blue state of California promises to be one of the most competitive — and expensive — races of the 2024 election cycle.

While Feinstein’s announcement officially puts her seat in play for the 2024 election cycle, multiple California Democrats had already launched Senate campaigns weeks earlier.

Rep. Katie Porter was first out of the gate, announcing her Senate bid on Jan. 10 and touting an endorsement from Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., soon after.

Rep. Adam Schiff, the former chairman of the House Intelligence Committee, threw his hat in the ring late last month.

Those candidates have projected deference toward Feinstein, even as they entered the race to succeed her prior to the announcement of her widely anticipated retirement.

“She has so much to teach all of us,” Porter said of Feinstein last month, adding that she had tried to reach out to the senator before launching her Senate campaign.

Former House Speaker and current Rep. Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., earlier this month issued a qualified endorsement of Schiff that heaped praise on Feinstein and vowed to back her if she decided to run again.

More California Democrats, including Reps. Barbara Lee and Ro Khanna, are expected to announce their Senate campaign plans soon.

Source: CNBC

US military recovers key sensors from shot down Chinese spy balloon

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Debris found off South Carolina coast shows electronics ‘used for intelligence gathering’

  • The US military’s Northern Command made the announcement in a statement 
  • Beijing continues to deny the downed balloon was a spy vessel 
  • It spent a week flying over the US and Canada before Biden ordered it shot down

The US military have announced they’ve recovered critical electronics from the Chinese spy balloon downed by a US fighter jet off South Carolina’s coast on February 4.

Recovered fragments from the aircraft include key sensors presumably used for intelligence gathering, the US military’s Northern Command said Monday.

The revelation comes less than a week after Navy seamen were pictured pulling portions of Chinese spy balloon from the chilly waters of the Atlantic – with the Pentagon releasing sensational photographs of the retrieval operation.

Pentagon reports 'high-altitude abject' over Alaska was brought down

The Chinese balloon, which Beijing denies was a spy vessel, spent a week flying over the United States and Canada before it was shot down on the orders of US President Biden – a decision officials reportedly agonized over for days, amid fears of harming the already tenuous relationship between the two countries.

The spy balloon was the first of four airborne objects gunned out of the sky by the US in eight days.

Recovered fragments from the balloon shot down on February 4 include key sensors presumably used for intelligence gathering, the US military's Northern Command said

 

Recovered fragments from the balloon shot down on February 4 include key sensors presumably used for intelligence gathering, the US military’s Northern Command said

The Pentagon released photos showing the Navy's retrieval of a suspected Chinese spy balloon shot down over the Atlantic Ocean

The Pentagon released photos showing the Navy’s retrieval of a suspected Chinese spy balloon shot down over the Atlantic Ocean

In the end, the episode inevitably strained ties between Washington and Beijing, and spurred a sprawling U.S. military scouring effort across US skies for other objects of interest – leading to an unprecedented shooting down of three suspected spy craft between Friday and Sunday.

On Monday, US military’s Northern Command, the agency tasked with defending the American homeland, revealed in a statement that debris from the first craft included sensors likely used for the gathering of intel.

‘Crews have been able to recover significant debris from the site, including all of the priority sensor and electronics pieces identified as well as large sections of the structure,’ the statement said.

While much about the more recent, unmanned aircraft remains unknown, officials this week said they are continuing to look for debris.

On Monday US Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin, sought to calm any fears Americans are having regarding potential risks posed by the three other unidentified objects.

‘I want to reassure Americans that these objects do not present a military threat to anyone on the ground,’ Austin said, speaking to reporters as he landed in Brussels for a NATO gathering.

‘They do, however, present a risk to civil aviation and potentially an intelligence collection threat.’

The US military has said that targeting the latest objects has been more difficult than shooting down the Chinese spy balloon, given the smaller size and the objects’ lack of a traditional radar signature.

The suspected spy balloon was the first of four airborne objects gunned out of the sky by the US in eight days

The suspected spy balloon was the first of four airborne objects gunned out of the sky by the US in eight days

Trudeau: US fighter jet shot down object flying over Canada.

In an example of the difficulty, the latest shootdown of an unidentified object on Sunday by an F-16 fighter jet took two sidewinder missiles – after one of them failed to down the target, a US official said, speaking on condition of anonymity.

Austin said the US military has not yet recovered any debris from the three most recent objects shot down, one of which fell off the coast of Alaska in ice and snow. Another shootdown occurred over the Yukon territory in Canada.

US officials have so far shied away from saying that the incidents are connected.

However, on Monday, Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau suggested the four aerial objects shot down in recent days are somehow connected, but did not elaborate as to why his office believes that to be the case.

‘Obviously there is some sort of pattern in there, the fact we are seeing this in a significant degree over the past week is a cause for interest and close attention,’ Trudeau told reporters in a news conference not far from where the plane was shot down in Whitehorse, Yukon’s capital.

Search and recovery efforts for the first craft, shot down on February 4 off the coast of South Carolina, had to be halted at the end of last week due to bad weather over the icy Atlantic

Search and recovery efforts for the first craft, shot down on February 4 off the coast of South Carolina, had to be halted at the end of last week due to bad weather over the icy Atlantic

Military seen recovering China spy balloon remains from SC coast
The search off Myrtle Beach began not long after debris from the craft hit the water on February 4. The balloon is seen being pulled out of the water by sailors on February 5

 

The search off Myrtle Beach began not long after debris from the craft hit the water on February 4. The balloon is seen being pulled out of the water by sailors on February 5

The downing of the first balloon, meanwhile, sent both figurative and literal waves throughout the American populace, occurring at the end of a week that saw the craft spotted multiple times during its journey over the continental US.

The unrest, for the most part, played out behind closed doors, as Biden and other White House officials engaged in heated situation room talks over whether to shoot down the suspected surveillance craft, which Beijing insists was designed for ‘meteorological purposes.’

The public quickly became aware of the incident – as well as the possible implications it held in regards to the increasingly stormy relationship between the US and China.

Adding insult to injury, the Pentagon later confirmed that another suspected ‘Chinese surveillance balloon’ had been spotted flying over Latin America, near the Colombian port city of Cartagena, and was too being investigated.

General Glen VanHerck, the head of US Northern Command, last week said that the Defense Department ‘did not detect’ the balloons sighted after the one near South Carolina, saying that the intelligence community instead was made aware of them through other means of information collection.

Defense officials then revealed there had been a further five suspected spy balloon sightings during Trump’s presidency, seemingly swept under the rug to keep up the façade of a favorable relationship between the two countries.

Compounding the unrest is that several similar balloons had also recently been spotted in at least two highly-sensitive military sites in Virginia and California – but  were disregarded as UFOs at the time by the intelligence community.

Navy and Coast Guard officials descended on a stretch of ocean to search for the fallen balloon

 

Navy and Coast Guard officials descended on a stretch of ocean to search for the fallen balloon

Austin says unidentified objects ‘no threat to people on the ground’
The episode inevitably strained ties between Washington and Beijing, and spurred a sprawling U.S. military scouring effort across US skies for other objects of interests - leading to an unprecedented shooting down of three suspected spy crafts between Friday and Sunday

 

The episode inevitably strained ties between Washington and Beijing, and spurred a sprawling U.S. military scouring effort across US skies for other objects of interests – leading to an unprecedented shooting down of three suspected spy crafts between Friday and Sunday

The downing of the balloon has sent both figurative and literal waves over the weekend, occurring at the end of a week that saw the craft spotted multiple times during its journey over the continental US, with another balloon seen over Latin America

China has not commented on those sighting, but maintains the craft shot down near South Carolina was a civilian balloon used for meteorological research.

Officials, however, have refused to say to which government department or company the balloon belongs.

On Monday, US military made another development in their retrieval of wreckage from the first aircraft, after putting a pause on the effort last week due to bad weather and rough seas.

That said, the Navy and Coast Guard resumed the retrieval mission this week, and on Monday successfully raised a significant portion of the balloon’s payload from the ocean floor, defense officials confirmed Monday

 The payload measured roughly 30-feet-long, and reportedly contained much of the craft’s high-tech gear and several surveillance antennas.

Concerning the object shot down over Canada, officials said the Canadian government has since taken the helm of that operation, but has yet to locate the debris.

The object shot down Sunday over Michigan, the official said, is also still being searched for, in a joint effort between the the US Coast Guard and Canadian authorities.

Officials said that officials already have a decent idea where the aircraft may have landed, and that they are confident its wreckage will be recovered.

All of the incidents are currently being investigated.

Source: Daily Mail

Antisemitism dramatically undercounted in 2022, AJC report says

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Nearly half of American Jewish respondents approved of President Joe Biden’s response to antisemitism; 56% disapproved of Congress’ record in that regard.

 Despite well-documented surges in antisemitism in America, new data suggests official numbers dramatically undercount the problem’s scope.

In 2022, more than one-quarter (26%) of U.S. Jews said they were targets of either physical or in-person or online verbal antisemitic attacks. Yet 84% of those targeted by antisemitic violence and 44% of those who experienced antisemitic remarks in person or online did not report the incident to police, social media companies nor Jewish organizations.

That’s according to the American Jewish Committee’s newly released State of Antisemitism in America report, which draws on phone and online interviews between Sept. 28 and Nov. 3 of last year with representative samples of Jews (1,507 people) and non-Jews (1,004 people), ages 18 and older.

AJC saw an increase of 10 percentage points in the number of Jews who feel less safe than they did in the previous year. In 2022, 41% felt less safe than in 2021, while in 2021, 31% reported feeling less safe than in 2020.

Per the report, 89% of Jewish and 68% of non-Jewish respondents said antisemitism is at least somewhat of a problem in America today. Forty-three percent of Jews and 22% of non-Jews said it was a very serious problem. Eleven percent of Jews and 24% of non-Jews said antisemitism is not much of a problem or not at all a problem in America.

Jewish and non-Jewish respondents were also divided on the degree to which U.S. antisemitism has increased in the past five years. Among Jews, 43% said it has increased a lot and 39% said it increased somewhat (total of 82%), compared to 16% of non-Jews saying it has increased a lot and 31% saying somewhat (total of 47%).

The general public was slightly likelier (91% compared to 89%) than Jewish respondents to say that antisemitism affects society at large, and not just Jews.

Among Jews surveyed, 2% were victims of a single antisemitic physical attack over the past year, with 1% experiencing more than one such attack. Eleven percent experienced one in-person antisemitic remark, and 9% multiple such remarks; 6% experienced a single online antisemitic remark, and 7% had repeated encounters with such hatred. More than half (57%) had seen repeated online antisemitic comments in the past year, and that number climbed to 69% among those ages 18 to 29.

The overwhelming majority of Jewish respondents said they did not alter behavior that would identify them as Jews. Seventy-six percent reported that they did not avoid wearing a Star of David, or other public means of self-identifying as Jewish, in the past year, while 23% said that it did so out of fear of antisemitism. Sixteen percent avoided certain spaces or situations out of fear of their comfort or safety as Jews, while 84% did not.

“In all, 38% of American Jews changed their behavior in the past 12 months out of fear of antisemitism,” the report stated.

Less than a quarter (23%) of Jews are involved with Jewish institutions that have been targeted by antisemitism in the past five years, although 50% said the Jewish institutions with which they are affiliated have increased security in the past two years.

Those who affiliate with Jewish organizations overwhelmingly feel safe in those Jewish spaces, according to the report: 28% very safe and 45% somewhat safe. Seventeen percent feels somewhat unsafe, and two percent very unsafe. Thirty-five percent think law enforcement is not too effective (26%) or not at all effective (9%) responding to Jewish security needs.

President Joe Biden received a 47% approval rating and 34% disapproval rating from surveyed U.S. Jews on his responses to antisemitism, while respondents approved of Congress at a rate of 21% and disapproved at a rate of 56% of its handling of antisemitism. When it came to state and local governments, 40% approved and 37% disapproved of responses to antisemitism.

Thirty-five percent of Jews were unfamiliar with the BDS movement, while 86% of those who were at least somewhat familiar with BDS found it antisemitic or associated with antisemitism (39% said it is antisemitic, while 47% said it has some antisemitic supporters). Sixty-five percent of non-Jews were unfamiliar with BDS, and about the same number of Jews called BDS antisemitic (38%) and a movement with some antisemitic supporters (50%).

Among non-Jewish respondents, 31% were unfamiliar with the meaning of the term “antisemitism”—with 9% having never heard it at all—while 69% were familiar with the term. Sixty-eight percent said antisemitism is a problem in America (22% a very serious problem), while 24% said it was not a problem.

Respondents were divided on the statement “Jews control the media,” with 90% of Jews saying that was antisemitic, compared to just 66% of non-Jews. Fifty-eight percent of Jews said comparing COVID-19 protocols to Jewish experiences during the Holocaust is antisemitic, while 44% of non-Jews agreed.

Feds Probe United Plane’s December Dip Near Ocean Off Hawaii

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WASHINGTON (AP) – Federal investigators are seeking more information about an incident in which a United Airlines plane dropped to within about 800 feet (250 meters) of the ocean surface after taking off from Hawaii.

United says the pilots are getting additional training.

The Boeing 777 dropped more than 1,400 feet (470 meters) before climbing again, according to data from tracking service Flightradar24. The plane then continued on to San Francisco. No injuries were reported.

A spokesman for the National Transportation Safety Board said Monday that the investigative agency is still seeking information about the Dec. 18 incident, which only recently came to public attention after a report in The Air Current, an aviation-industry publication.

The Federal Aviation Administration, which oversees airlines, said the United crew reported the incident under a voluntary safety-reporting program. The FAA said it reviewed the incident “and took appropriate action” without providing further details.

United said it worked with the FAA and the pilots’ union on an investigation that led to additional training for the two pilots, which is still going on. The airline did not explain why the pilots chose to continue the long, overwater flight to San Francisco instead of returning to Kahului Airport on the island of Maui.

Source: VosIzNeias

Israeli Foreign Minister Arrives in Turkey for Solidarity Visit

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By Pesach Benson • 14 February, 2023

Jerusalem, 14 February, 2023 (TPS) — Israeli Foreign Minister Eli Cohen arrived in Turkey on Tuesday morning to pay a solidarity visit to the earthquake-stricken nation.

During his visit, Cohen will meet Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdo?an, and Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu. Cohen will also visit Israeli teams providing medical care and assisting in search and rescue efforts in southern Turkey.

Israel has so far provided Turkey with more than 60 tons of humanitarian aid, including winter clothing, medical equipment and medicine.

The Israeli rescue mission rescued 19 people alive, while Israeli medical personnel have treated about 400 Turks and Syrian refugees.

The official death toll from Turkey and Syria climbed past 36,000.

 

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