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HILCO REAL ESTATE ANNOUNCES TWO COMMERCIAL CONDOMINIUMS AVAILABLE THROUGH A BANKRUPTCY SALE IN GREENWICH VILLAGE

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HILCO REAL ESTATE ANNOUNCES TWO COMMERCIAL CONDOMINIUMS AVAILABLE THROUGH A BANKRUPTCY SALE IN GREENWICH VILLAGE

Hilco Real Estate, LLC, announces May 17, 2024 as the bid deadline for the Chapter 11 bankruptcy sale of two commercial condominiums in New York City’s historic Greenwich Village. These condominiums occupy the first and second floor of the building located at 350-354 Avenue of the Americas. With 176 feet of prime, wraparound frontage on the corner of 6th Avenue and Washington Place, these offerings promise high visibility and heavy foot traffic.

The ground-floor retail space, totaling over 7,850± square feet and zoned C1, boasts 15-foot ceilings, exceptional location and can accommodate single or multiple tenants. While currently not built out, the versatile layout can be retrofitted, taking advantage of three separate entry points, which present a unique opportunity for various uses.

The second-floor space, spanning 8,942± square feet and zoned C2, offers ample flexibility for community-oriented endeavors. Previously occupied by a daycare, the space retains its built-out infrastructure, providing a turnkey solution for a new operator. This setup can also offer potential investors the ability to combine both floors and potentially increase the value for a prospective tenant.

The condominiums sit just one block from Washington Square Park and four blocks from NYU, ideally positioned to take advantage of excellent foot traffic. Additionally, eight subway lines, including the A, C, E, B, D, F, M and 1, and the PATH train are within walking distance, ensuring easy accessibility for both employees and customers.

Greenwich Village, on the west side of Lower Manhattan, is known for its history of fostering art and creativity, with notable former residents including Edgar Allen Poe, Jackson Pollack and Bob Dylan. The neighborhood also features multiple attractions, including Washington Square Park, the Village Vanguard jazz club, the Comedy Cellar, the historic Jefferson Market Library and several historic districts dedicated to preserving the Village’s character and charm. In addition to being lauded for its creative culture, Greenwich Village is home to New York University (NYU), The New School and Cooper Union, with over 64,000 students in attendance between the three universities. Despite the pandemic, the neighborhood also saw a 1.85% population increase from 2020 to 2021 and a 4.29% increase in median household income.

The sale of 350-354 Avenue of the Americas is being conducted by Order of the U.S. Bankruptcy Court District of the Southern District of New York (Manhattan), Bankruptcy Petition No. 23-10068-JPM, In re: Nuovo Ciao-Di LLC. Bids must be received on or before the deadline of May 17 at 5 p.m. (ET) and must be submitted on the Purchase and Sale Agreement available for review and download from Hilco Real Estate’s website.

Interested buyers should review the requirements in order to participate in the bankruptcy sale process available on Hilco Real Estate’s website. For further information, please contact Jonathan Cuticelli at (203) 561-8737 or [email protected].

Illegal Immigrant Allegedly Attacked Victims In ‘Rape Dungeon On Wheels’: REPORT

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Dana Abizaid (Daily Caller)

California police said they arrested a man accused of being a serial rapist, and the incidents allegedly took place in a “rape dungeon on wheels,” FOX 11 reported Wednesday.

Police said they caught Eduardo Sarabia, a Mexican transient and illegal immigrant, allegedly committing sexual assaults inside a white van in the Angeles National Forest, according to FOX 11. Prosecutors charged Sarabia with two counts of forcible rape linked to two incidents that allegedly occurred May 12 and 13 in a 2015 Ford Transit van with no windows in the back.

 

Sarabia used that van, which sources said was a “rape dungeon on wheels” and “disgustingly outfitted for rape,” to allegedly commit the crimes, FOX 11 reported.

Citizens who live near where the alleged crimes occurred told FOX 11 they’d like to see the suspect never return to the streets.

“I think it’s terrible that we can’t even be safe on the streets. It’s hard to believe the way things are today and the way they used to be. You can’t even be on public transportation with two people being stabbed. It’s scary,” Rita Miller, a local resident, said.

“It’s scary. It’s not safe, you know I have kids and it worries me. It’s really scary, and I’m glad he’s been caught. I’m glad that it’s over with him,” Anna Dueñas, another resident, said.

Sarabia, who faces another court date in June, is being held without bail, FOX 11 reported.

Egypt rejects Israeli proposal to reopen Rafah Crossing

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JNS) Egypt has rejected an Israeli proposal to work together with Israel to reopen the Rafah Crossing into the Gaza Strip and manage its operation jointly, two security sources in Cairo told Reuters on Thursday. The Egyptian government demands the crossing be managed only by Palestinians, the sources said, adding that Jerusalem had offered a mechanism for how to manage the crossing after its forces withdraw. Officials from the Israel Security Agency presented the plan during a visit to Cairo on Wednesday, amid rising tension between the two countries following Israel’s military advance last week into Rafah, believed to be the final Hamas terrorist stronghold in the enclave. The Israel Defense Forces took control of the Gaza side of the Rafah Crossing with Egypt on the morning of May 7. A day earlier, Israel’s War Cabinet decided unanimously to “continue the operation in Rafah to exert military pressure on Hamas in order to promote the release of our hostages and the other goals of the war.” Jerusalem wants to allow humanitarian aid through Rafah but is unable to do so without Egyptian cooperation. Cairo’s refusal to coordinate with Israel is preventing aid trucks from passing through the border, even as Egyptian President Abdel al-Fatah al-Sisi blames the Jewish state. The Ramallah-based Palestinian Authority has reportedly also rebuffed an Israeli offer to help manage the border crossing, local media reported earlier this week, citing U.S. government officials. On Tuesday, Israeli Foreign Minister Israel Katz placed the onus for averting a humanitarian crisis squarely on Egypt’s shoulders. Katz said he had spoken with his British and German counterparts “about the need to persuade Egypt to reopen the Rafah Crossing to allow the continued delivery of international humanitarian aid to Gaza.” While the world places the responsibility for Gaza’s humanitarian situation on Israel, the top diplomat added, “the key to preventing a humanitarian crisis in Gaza is now in the hands of our Egyptian friends.” Katz emphasized that Hamas cannot be allowed to control the crossing. “This is a security necessity on which we will not compromise,” he said. The Rafah operation, which Israel estimates will last around two months, is being carried out in phases as opposed to a full-scale invasion. The phased nature of the operation allows for it to be paused should a hostage release deal be reached between Israel and Hamas. Egypt has reportedly threatened to suspend its 45-year-old peace treaty with Israel if the IDF further expands its offensive against Hamas, and has lodged formal protests with the U.S. and European governments.

The Egyptian government demands the crossing be managed only by Palestinians, the sources said, adding that Jerusalem had offered a mechanism for how to manage the crossing after its forces withdraw.

Officials from the Israel Security Agency presented the plan during a visit to Cairo on Wednesday, amid rising tension between the two countries following Israel’s military advance last week into Rafah, believed to be the final Hamas terrorist stronghold in the enclave.

The Israel Defense Forces took control of the Gaza side of the Rafah Crossing with Egypt on the morning of May 7.

A day earlier, Israel’s War Cabinet decided unanimously to “continue the operation in Rafah to exert military pressure on Hamas in order to promote the release of our hostages and the other goals of the war.”

Jerusalem wants to allow humanitarian aid through Rafah but is unable to do so without Egyptian cooperation. Cairo’s refusal to coordinate with Israel is preventing aid trucks from passing through the border, even as Egyptian President Abdel al-Fatah al-Sisi blames the Jewish state.

The Ramallah-based Palestinian Authority has reportedly also rebuffed an Israeli offer to help manage the border crossing, local media reported earlier this week, citing U.S. government officials.

On Tuesday, Israeli Foreign Minister Israel Katz placed the onus for averting a humanitarian crisis squarely on Egypt’s shoulders.

Katz said he had spoken with his British and German counterparts “about the need to persuade Egypt to reopen the Rafah Crossing to allow the continued delivery of international humanitarian aid to Gaza.”

While the world places the responsibility for Gaza’s humanitarian situation on Israel, the top diplomat added, “the key to preventing a humanitarian crisis in Gaza is now in the hands of our Egyptian friends.”

Katz emphasized that Hamas cannot be allowed to control the crossing. “This is a security necessity on which we will not compromise,” he said.

The Rafah operation, which Israel estimates will last around two months, is being carried out in phases as opposed to a full-scale invasion. The phased nature of the operation allows for it to be paused should a hostage release deal be reached between Israel and Hamas.

Egypt has reportedly threatened to suspend its 45-year-old peace treaty with Israel if the IDF further expands its offensive against Hamas, and has lodged formal protests with the U.S. and European governments.

Five IDF soldiers mistakenly killed by tank fire in Jabalia

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An Israeli military tank on the border with Gaza, April 7, 2024. Photo by Chaim Goldberg/Flash90.

Five Israeli soldiers were killed by friendly fire in Jabalia in northern Gaza on Wednesday.

A platoon commander and four soldiers from Battalion 202 of the Paratroopers Brigade died and eight additional soldiers were wounded by IDF tank fire, three seriously. The rest of the wounded soldiers were evacuated to hospital in moderate and light condition.

The casualties were identified by the IDF on Thursday morning as Capt. Roy Beit Ya’akov, 22, from Eli; Staff Sgt. Gilad Arye Boim, 22, from Karnei Shomron in Samaria; Sgt. Daniel Chemu, 20, from Tiberias; Sgt. Ilan Cohen, 20, from Carmiel; and Staff Sgt. Betzalel David Shashuah, 21, from Tel Aviv.

The incident brings the Gaza death toll since the start of the ground invasion on Oct. 27 to 273 and to 621 on all fronts since the start of the war on Oct. 7.

Beit Ya’akov is the son of Hadas and Avidan, the chairman of Eli.

“The family, the town of Eli—whose residents and alumni are on the front lines of the war—and the entire Binyamin Region, are in great pain,” said Binyamin Regional Council head and Yesha Council chairman Israel Ganz.

“How great is the pain involved in the nation of Israel’s renewal in its Land. How many heroes do we have, who sacrifice their lives so that we will win and live here, in the Land of Israel, with peace and security. In their merit, we will win,” he added.

Israeli forces are currently conducting a major operation in Jabalia to quell a Hamas insurgency there. The friendly-fire incident occurred at an axis captured on Wednesday morning in a raid that included two tanks.

At around noon, soldiers entered a three-story building some 10 meters from the tanks. According to a preliminary investigation, the tank crews were unaware that the deputy commander of the 202nd Battalion had set up field headquarters in the building, and fired on what they thought were enemy fighters.

“The army still does not know the reason for the shooting and the apparent deviation from the boundaries of the sector, since the armored force that erred organically belongs to the 202nd Battalion’s combat team, so it is not clear how such a fatal mistake occurred,” Ynet reported.

Three brigade combat teams are operating in Jabalia, and around 130 terrorists have been killed so far. Most of the city’s civilian population has been evacuated.

Israel releases new Gaza death toll, claims historically low civilian deaths

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Netanyahu’s statement, “If Israel is forced to stand alone, Israel will stand alone,” resonates as a stark reminder of Israel’s readiness to act independently while still acknowledging the global support for its cause from numerous international quarters. Photo Credit: AP

(JNS) The ratio of terrorists to Palestinian noncombatants killed during Israel’s ongoing war against Hamas in the Gaza Strip is approximately one to one, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu revealed this week.

“What Israel has done is take the effort to minimize civilian casualties as no other army has done,” the Israeli leader said in an interview with U.S. author and political adviser Dan Senor on Monday.

“We use leaflets, we use millions of text messages, phone calls. We actually call the people, give up the benefit of surprise, tell them: ‘Get out of the way. Get out of the war zone so that we can accomplish our military objectives while you’re in a safe place,’” said Netanyahu.

“We’re facing 35,000 Hamas terrorists. We’ve killed already about 14,000, wounded many others, and we’re progressing towards that goal” of destroying the terror group, he added.

Israeli government spokesman Avi Hyman on Monday reinforced Netanyahu’s message, saying that the Israel Defense Forces had killed more than 14,000 terrorists and approximately 16,000 civilians since the outbreak of the war on Oct. 7.

“Israel is setting the new gold standard for urban warfare with what appears to be the lowest civilian-to-combatant casualty ratio in history,” stated Hyman.

Last week, the United Nations admitted it overcounted the number of Gazan children who have been confirmed killed in the war by a staggering 42%.

In March, the U.N. Children’s Fund stated that 13,450 children had been killed, citing figures from the Hamas-run Gazan Health Ministry. Last Wednesday, the U.N. Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) released updated casualty figures according to which 7,797 Gazan children have died in the war as of April 30.

“The revisions are taken…you know, of course, in the fog of war, it’s difficult to come up with numbers,” Farhan Haq, deputy spokesman for U.N. Secretary-General António Guterres, told JNS on Friday.

The 13,450 statistic was cited frequently in the international press, leading to accusations that the Jewish state had committed war crimes, including intentionally targeting children.

NYC Council’s Ban on Political Signs Includes Israeli Hostages Posters; Sparks Debate Over Free Speech

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- “There are now five Republicans in the council who are going to be the voice countering the progressive wing of the Democratic Party,” said Inna Vernikov, a newly minted lawmaker who was elected in November’s backlash against the blue wave. Photo Credit: Courtesy

NYC Council’s Ban on Political Signs Includes Israeli Hostages Posters; Sparks Debate Over Free Speech

Edited by: Fern Sidman

In a contentious move, New York City Council Speaker Adrienne Adams has directed lawmakers to remove all political signs from their desks, including pro-Israel posters and flyers, as was reported by the New York Post on Wednesday. This decision has sparked significant outrage among council members, with some viewing it as an infringement on their freedom of expression.

The directive was first proposed during a conference with other council Democrats on Monday. Speaker Adams, who is not related to Mayor Eric Adams, initiated the plan in an effort to mitigate the heated rhetoric between lawmakers over the Israel-Hamas conflict, according to sources, the Post reported. The council’s general counsel formalized the directive in a memo on Wednesday, informing members that they could no longer “affix on furniture or otherwise display signs or flags” in the chamber or during any meetings without prior approval from the speaker.

The directive has been met with strong opposition from several council members. Councilwoman Inna Vernikov (R-Brooklyn) was particularly vocal, criticizing the move as a blatant power play. “This is a shameful, disgusting excuse of a power flex, used to curtail my freedom of expression,” Vernikov declared, as was indicated in the Post report.  She emphasized the constitutional right of her colleagues to display signs, regardless of differing opinions. “My colleagues have a constitutional right to hang a ‘Cease-fire now’ poster, no matter how much I disagree with them. I have a right to display a poster of a hostage, no matter how much my colleagues disagree with my message,” she asserted, according to the report in the Post.

Historically, council members have used signs and displays on their desks to express political views or make points during meetings. However, the information provided in the Post report said that the practice has become increasingly contentious amid the ongoing war between Israel and Hamas terrorists in the Gaza Strip, with displays supporting both sides of the conflict appearing in the chamber.

Council leaders have defended the directive, stating that the ban on political signs has always been part of the chamber’s guidelines and Robert’s Rules of Order, which are widely accepted parliamentary procedures, as per the Post report. “This is a common type of regulation observed by many legislative bodies at the state and federal level,” a spokesperson for the council explained.

As the conflict between Israel and Hamas continues to provoke strong emotions and opinions, legislative bodies across the country are grappling with similar issues. The directive in New York City reflects a broader trend of legislative bodies seeking to regulate expressions of political views to maintain order and focus on legislative duties.

Officials defending the directive have cited the historic and irreplaceable nature of the council members’ desks. They argue that affixing signs and posters to these desks could cause damage, justifying the need for the ban, as was detailed in the Post report.   While the preservation of historic furniture is a valid concern, the move has sparked fears of setting a dangerous precedent that could stifle political discourse.

Despite these preservation concerns, the directive has faced significant opposition from some council members who see it as an infringement on their right to free speech. Councilman Kalman Yeger, a Brooklyn Democrat, was particularly vocal in his criticism. “There is no member of the council to determine unilaterally what members put on their desk,” Yeger stated, according to the Post. He expressed his intention to defy the directive by putting his signs back up.

Yeger’s stance reflects a broader sentiment among some lawmakers who view the ban as an encroachment on their ability to express political views. This sentiment was echoed by another council member who spoke to The Post, emphasizing that political positions among politicians are a normal part of democratic discourse. “Curbing free speech sets a dangerous precedent,” the source warned, as was noted in the Post report. The source added that while there is a need to lower the temperature in the chamber, the approach taken by the speaker threatens fundamental democratic principles.

The directive comes at a time when the Israel-Hamas conflict has heightened political tensions within the council. Displays of support for both sides of the conflict have appeared in the chamber, contributing to a charged atmosphere. The Post reported that a council source criticized progressive members for what they described as “militarizing” their causes and making them overly political, which has forced other members to deal with the fallout.

Despite the backlash, council sources expect that all signs will be removed by Thursday. The council spokesperson defended the directive, noting that similar regulations are observed by many legislative bodies at the state and federal levels, the report added. This adherence to broader legislative practices aims to ensure order and decorum within the chamber.

The Shifting Sands of NY Real Estate: RFR’s Struggles and the Gowanus Project

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NYC is set to welcome a new architectural marvel into its iconic skyline—a multi-billion-dollar office tower at 350 Park Avenue. Credit: Foster + Partners

The Shifting Sands of NY Real Estate: RFR’s Struggles and the Gowanus Project

Edited by: TJVNews.com

In the bustling neighborhood of Gowanus, Brooklyn, a significant real estate development has become the center of a high-stakes financial skirmish. According to a report on Monday on The Real Deal web site,  at the heart of this contention is the sprawling 827-unit multifamily project located at 175 Third Street, directly across from the local Whole Foods. This project, spearheaded by Aby Rosen’s RFR, has fallen into precarious waters due to a default on an $80 million mortgage.

RFR’s financial woes began after acquiring the site in 2018. The property, a block-long development stretching over three acres, was purchased from SL Green and Kushner Companies for $115 million. As was reported by The Real Deal, to finance this acquisition, RFR secured a loan from Union Labor Life Insurance Company. However, the developer soon found itself unable to meet the terms of the loan, resulting in a default.

The fallout from this default quickly attracted attention from opportunistic investors. Josh Zegen’s Madison Realty Capital, a notable player in real estate investment, recognized an opportunity in RFR’s misfortune, as per the information in The Real Deal report. In a strategic move, Madison Realty Capital acquired the distressed debt from Union Labor, aiming to seize control over the site by initiating a foreclosure on RFR’s interests.

This development is a significant indicator of the current turbulence within New York City’s real estate sector, particularly in multifamily developments. Indicated in The Real Deal report was that while construction across the city has seen a general slowdown, Gowanus has remained a hive of activity, making any major shifts in property ownership particularly noteworthy.

Madison Realty Capital’s acquisition of the debt was not done in isolation. The firm collaborated with Marvin Azrak’s Maguire Capital Group, calling attention to the potential value seen in this troubled asset, as was detailed in The Real Deal report. The partnership has scheduled a UCC foreclosure, which if successful, could dramatically alter the landscape of ownership and development in Gowanus.

This situation also casts a spotlight on the broader challenges facing RFR. Already having lost several properties, and with more facing foreclosure, the firm’s struggles are symptomatic of larger issues within the sector, including rising costs and a cooling market.

RFR’s financial difficulties have been mounting, with several of its trophy properties slipping from its grasp. Notably, RFR has lost control of iconic sites such as the Lever House and the Gramercy Park Hotel, landmarks that once symbolized the company’s prowess in the high-stakes arena of New York real estate, as was noted in The Real Deal report. Adding to the company’s woes, in March, the $104.5 million mortgage on its office building at 90 Fifth Avenue was transferred to special servicing due to payment failures. Shortly thereafter, Rialto Capital Partners reported that RFR had defaulted on $39 million in promissory notes, which were part of a loan sale by Signature Bank last year, according to the information provided in The Real Deal report.

In this turbulent real estate climate, Madison Realty Capital, in partnership with Maguire Capital Group, has emerged as a keen player, capitalizing on distressed properties. The report on The Real Deal also said that this partnership had previously manifested in March when they acquired a distressed loan on the Fifth Avenue Hotel in Nomad, marking a continued strategy of seizing opportunities amid others’ financial distress.

One of RFR’s largest and most troubled ventures is the Gowanus multifamily project. Located next to the Gowanus Canal, this site was set to become one of Brooklyn’s largest apartment developments. Despite its potential, the site has remained inactive, as was indicated in The Real Deal report. RFR attempted to offload the property in 2019, pricing it over $200 million, but failed to attract buyers.

The neighborhood’s rezoning two years later sparked a flurry of multifamily building plans, spurred by developers racing to take advantage of the soon-to-expire 421a tax abatement program. Although the state recently extended the construction completion deadline for 421a by five years, to 2031, this extension offers a lifeline to projects like RFR’s that had a late start, according to the information contained in The Real Deal report.  Yet, even with this extension, the development market remains daunting, stifled by high interest rates and a stringent lending environment.

The stalled Gowanus project remains a symbol of potential that is yet to be realized, emblematic of the uncertainties pervading New York City’s development landscape. As RFR struggles to stabilize its holdings and rethink its strategies, the real estate community watches closely, anticipating the next moves in a city that continues to evolve, albeit unpredictably.

 

NYC kosher restaurant’s window smashed after anti-Israel protest

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Rothschild TLV Facebook

(A7) The windows of a popular kosher restaurant in New York City’s Upper East Side were smashed by vandals following anti-Israel protests early Wednesday morning, the New York Post reported.

The front window of the Rothschild TLV restaurant was smashed overnight, chef Guy Kairi told the Post. Kairi blamed the vandalism on anti-Israel protesters who targeted the restaurant on Tuesday.

“There were people passing by yesterday saying bad things, things like, ‘No wonder this place is empty, free Palestine,’” Kairi said.

Another Israeli-owned business, the Nuts Factory candy store, also had its windows shattered overnight.

The Combat Antisemitism Movement stated, “Jewish-owned businesses in New York were targeted in a cowardly rampage last night. Windows at Rothschild TLV and the Nuts Factory in Manhattan’s Upper East Side were smashed. These spiteful attacks must be swiftly prosecuted as the hate crimes they are.”

Users on X posted pictures of the shattered window and compared the incident to Kristallnacht.

Multiple kosher and Jewish-owned restaurants in Manhattan have been targeted by anti-Israel activists since the Hamas massacre of October 7.

Two weeks ago, the owner of the ZiZi restaurant, found two swastikas spray painted on the restaurant’s outdoor dining shed.

In December, Hummus Kitchen, a kosher restaurant on the Upper East Side owned by the same person as Zizi, saw two incidents within a few days of each other. During the first incident, a woman tore down an American-Israeli flag and threw soup at a restaurant employee. A few days later another woman attempted to cover up the flag displayed outside the eatery and shoved an employee, four days after the original incident.

Jewish students sue Haverford, alleging antisemitic civil rights violations

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Haverford College in the Philadelphia suburbs, May 15, 2024. Photo by Carin M. Smilk.

The plaintiffs in the case are five students—one of whom was named—who are all part of the group, which consists of faculty, students, alumni and parents. The five say that the college has engaged in discrimination against pro-Israel Jewish students in violation of Title VI of the 1964 Civil Rights Act.

The suit is the latest in a wave of legal actions against colleges and universities that Jewish students have filed in court or with the U.S. Department of Education’s Office for Civil Rights. Harvard University, Columbia University, the University of Pennsylvania and New York University are among the institutions that Jewish students have sued for antisemitic discrimination in the wake of Oct. 7.

Jews at Haverford is a group represented in Monday’s suit by the Deborah Project, a public-interest law firm that defends the civil rights of Jews on campus.

In its suit, the group details what Jewish students at Haverford have experienced since Oct. 7 and how administrators have responded—or failed to do so—to their complaints about antisemitic violations of Haverford’s conduct policies. (Haverford told JNS it doesn’t comment on pending litigation.)

In one example, Haverford president Wendy Raymond was asked about a series of social-media posts by a professor at the college who reposted an image of a bulldozer used in the Oct. 7 attacks with the text, “We should never have to apologize for celebrating these scenes of an imprisoned people breaking free from their chains. This was a historic moment to be recorded in the history books.”

Several attendees at a Jewish student event asked the college president whether the post by Tarik Aougab—who remains a Haverford math and statistics professor—qualified as antisemitism.

“President Raymond answered that his statement ‘could be perceived in many ways,’” per the lawsuit. “Asked how she perceived it, she answered ‘I hear people breaking free from their chains.’”

Haverford CollegeHaverford College in the Philadelphia suburbs, May 15, 2024. Photo by Carin M. Smilk.

‘Impossible for the complainants to ignore the hostility’

Lori Lowenthal Marcus, legal director at the Deborah Project, told JNS that the complaint, which runs just under 100 pages long, “is stuffed with incident after incident of horrible, vile antisemitic statements, actions, activities, chants, disruptions, intimidation, harassment and oppression by members of the Haverford College community.”

“Haverford is a very small liberal arts college, and it is impossible for the complainants to ignore the hostility towards Jews permeating the campus if you live, eat, attend classes and/or participate in any events at Haverford,” she told JNS.

Two issues make the lawsuit alleging Jew-hatred and breach of contract different from other similar suits, she said.

Jewish students, faculty and leaders engaged “with the highest-level administrators, who still chose to not only rebuff the impassioned pleas for understanding and action by those administrators, but also to publicly praise the hostility and harassment towards the Jews at Haverford,” she said.

Haverford CollegeHaverford College in the Philadelphia suburbs, May 15, 2024. Photo by Carin M. Smilk.

Unlike other complaints alleging antisemitism against colleges and universities, this suit was filed in federal court, rather than with the U.S. Department of Education, Lowenthal Marcus said.

The Haverford suit is similar to many other recent complaints about Jew-hatred on campus in that the students allege that Haverford has instituted a double standard, with hyper-vigilance for potential infractions against other minorities and a systematic decision by the administration to ignore antisemitism.

“Hate speech about Jews and Israel is permitted to the full extent of the First Amendment, whereas anything that might conceivably be understood as hate speech about any other minority group—as defined by the recipient minority group—is not tolerated, even when such speech would otherwise be protected by the First Amendment,” according to the lawsuit.

In another instance, McKnight and the school’s athletic director, Danielle Lynch, told Ally Landau—the named plaintiff and a guard on the women’s basketball team—that she had to cancel an antisemitism awareness event at a game or else the game would be forfeited.

“An antisemitism awareness basketball game might prove too antagonistic to the pro-Palestinian students on campus,” she says administrators told her.

“The college might not be able to control the anticipated mob of antisemites from storming the basketball court and refusing to leave,” the administrators added, per the suit. “Were that to happen, Ally was informed, the Haverford women’s basketball team would have to forfeit the game, as required by the NCAA rules.”

Raymond, McKnight and Jesse Lytle, a vice president and chief of staff at the college, “subsequently claimed to complaining parents and alumni that Ally Landau decided on her own to cancel the antisemitism awareness component of the game, and that Dean McKnight had offered to support the team if she chose to go forward with it,” the suit adds. “This is a lie.”

Westchester County Offers Anti-Israel Protesters at SUNY Purchase a Choice: Crime Prevention Course or Jail Time

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SUNY Purchase Facebook

Westchester County Offers Anti-Israel Protesters at SUNY Purchase a Choice: Crime Prevention Course or Jail Time

Edited by: Fern Sidman

Westchester County prosecutors are offering a unique resolution for the 68 anti-Israel protesters arrested at a campus demonstration at SUNY Purchase, as was reported on Wednesday by the New York Post.  Instead of facing jail time, nearly all the arrested individuals can enroll in a crime prevention course, according to the Westchester District Attorney’s office.

On May 2, a demonstration at the state university led to the arrest of 68 protesters by university police. The protest, driven by a pro-Hamas fervor for the continuation of terror targeting Israel and the West, escalated when participants, including both students and faculty, refused to disperse, according to the Post report. Most of those arrested faced charges of trespassing. The demonstration’s disruption and the subsequent police response sparked controversy and debates about appropriate conduct and free speech on campus.

Westchester District Attorney Mimi Rocah announced that nearly all of the protesters would have the option to participate in a three-hour “Fresh Start” course instead of facing prosecution and potential jail time, as per the information provided in the Post report. This decision is part of a plea deal aimed at keeping first-time offenders out of the county lockup.

“After evaluating the facts and circumstances, the WCDAO is offering our pre-arraignment diversionary program to eligible individuals, as we routinely do when first-time defendants face trespass violations,” a spokesperson for Rocah stated, the Post report said.

The “Fresh Start” program, established by Rocah in 2021, serves as an alternative to traditional prosecution. It is designed to provide first-time offenders with education and resources to prevent future legal issues. The report in the Post indicated that the course emphasizes understanding the consequences of illegal activities and encourages positive community involvement.

The decision to offer the “Fresh Start” program comes amid ongoing tensions between pro-Hamas activists and university administration. The arrests at SUNY Purchase have intensified discussions about the balance between campus security and the right to protest. Indicated in the Post report was that the student group involved in the demonstration has accused the police of overreacting, leading to strained negotiations between protesters and school administrators.

The university police’s decision to break up the protest and arrest participants was met with mixed reactions. The Post report said that supporters of the police action argue that it was necessary to maintain order and ensure the safety of all campus members. Critics, however, believe the police response was disproportionate and stifled free expression.

Moving Forward

Student protester Kaelin Martin expressed outrage over the handling of the May 2 protest at SUNY Purchase. “It was completely uncalled for,” Martin told lohud.com. “We actually began sitting in a circle quietly, even respecting the quiet hours that our school implements. It’s completely ridiculous and they couldn’t have handled it worse.”

The SUNY Purchase protest is part of a larger wave of anti-Israel demonstrations occurring on college campuses across the United States. These protests are often organized by student groups advocating for Hamas terrorism while criticizing Israel’s actions in the Gaza conflict.

On May 7, police cleared an anti-Israel encampment at the Fashion Institute of Technology (FIT). This action followed a similar incident at Columbia University’s Morningside Heights campus in April, where the NYPD arrested more than 100 protesters, according to the Post report.  Of those arrested at Columbia, 44 had broken into Hamilton Hall and barricaded themselves in the historic building, prompting a strong police response.

Days later, police also dismantled a tent encampment at New York University (NYU) and the New School, resulting in the arrest of over a dozen demonstrators, as noted in the Post report.

Moreover, the national trend of anti-Israel protests reflects broader geopolitical tensions and the increasing involvement of young people in movements that espouse virulent anti-Semitism.

Stopping The Pro-Hamas College Protests

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Members of a negotiation team speak during a press conference on Friday, April 26th near a pro-Hamas encampment at Columbia University. Credit: AP Photo/Yuki Iwamura

STOPPING THE PRO-HAMAS COLLEGE PROTESTS

By: Kenneth Abramowitz 

Ivy League universities and college campuses have been overtaken by well-funded and well-organized supporters of US-designated radical Islamist terrorist groups Hamas, Hezbollah, and al-Aqsa Martyrs’ Brigades, to name but a few. These demonstrations began on October 8, 2023, less than 24 hours after Hamas and other Palestinian terrorists attacked and brutally massacred 1,200 naïve civilians who erroneously believed in peace with their Palestinian neighbors across the border, neighbors who also violently kidnapped 240 men, women, and children, including Americas and other foreign nationals. The terrorists videotaped and boasted about their massacres on social media. They celebrated the slaughter of the Jewish Israelis (though several Arab Muslims and Christians were also murdered).

The second stage of the radical Islamist groups, the psychological warfare propaganda campaign, was launched on October 8, when the Islamist murderers and their woke supporters twisted and denied the facts, blaming Israel for the atrocities and claiming victimhood.

In the seven months since October 7, the Biden administration and the UN have been continually hindering the IDF’s efforts to eliminate the terrorists in Gaza. Ongoing vilification of Israel is rampant, with calls to eliminate the Jewish State as well as Jews everywhere. Shouts from thousands of demonstrators are increasing in the US and elsewhere in highly organized, well coordinated, and increasingly violent demonstrations and encampments. These terror-supporting protests are occurring at many universities, in public places, and across major roads throughout the country. Yet, the US President has been largely mum until very recently.

The protesters, Arabs, Muslims, and many ‘woke’ progressive Leftists claim to be anti-‘colonialist’ Israel (which has no colonies) and pro-Palestinian. They support Hamas and Hezbollah, the proxies of Iran, which, together with Qatar and Turkey, are behind this psychological propaganda war, calling for the elimination of Israel, the Jews, and “Death to America,” which is 90% Christian.

In effect, all of these demands are in the interests of Iran and Qatar, both of which are supporting the Hamas death cult. These demands are also in the interest of China and Russia, both of whom, like the radical Muslims, also seek regional and world domination.

None of these demands are in the interest of the Arabs in Gaza, who are being manipulated and intimidated by Hamas and its ilk. The demands are also 100% contrary to American (Christian) and Israeli (Jewish) values and self-interests. In a normal world, key protesters would be arrested for supporting terrorism. Others should be arrested for creating unsafe environments for students and faculty in schools where intimidation, hate speech, and slander are rampant. We are witnessing clear incitement to commit genocide of those brave enough to oppose the Iran/Qatar/Hamas death cult.

Why have the huge numbers of trespassing students not been expelled or arrested? Where is the American patriotic public push-back? Where are the cultural counterattacks from university faculty and administration? Where are the Boards of Trustees? Where are the large donors? Where are the parents? Where are the voices of the patriotic students? Where is the media push-back? Where are the City mayors? Where are the State governors? Where is the President of the United States? Where are the supporters of the Constitution and Bill of Rights? Where is equal protection under the law? Where are the police and the Courts?

What should be done?

1) Private universities should be declared political organizations and not educational organizations, and therefore lose their tax-exempt status immediately.

2) University faculty should enforce new government affirmative action plans so that at least 50% of the faculty positions are held by real patriots who believe in the Constitution, the Bill of Rights, and Life, Liberty, and the pursuit of Happiness for 100% of the population.

3) All past and current contributions from foreign donors must be disclosed immediately, and no contributions can be accepted from cultural enemies such as Iran, Qatar, Turkey, China, and Russia.

4) If the major universities refuse to protect their students from the demonstrators, the States should call in the National Guard and arrest the students involved (particularly the ringleaders), and indict them for providing material support for terrorism.

5) The Department of Justice should make an example of one targeted university, by suing it and its Administration and Board of Trustees for violating the human rights of its students.

6) Jewish students should file individual and class-action lawsuits against the universities that fail to protect them, and against the organizers of the demonstrations and their funders.

This war against Jews and Christians must be stopped immediately, before it metastasizes further. The fingerprints of our outside enemies can be clearly seen. The cultural war by our outside and inside enemies must be won by the forces of ‘good’. It is time for us to make our final stand now!

Columbia U Commencement Speaker Slams Israel for “Genocide” & University’s “Silence” On It; Mic Cut Off

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Columbia U Commencement Speaker Slams Israel for “Genocide” & University’s “Silence” On It; Mic Cut Off  

Edited by: Fern Sidman

In a surprising turn of events at Columbia University’s Mailman School of Public Health’s commencement ceremony on Tuesday, the class speaker’s microphone cut off multiple times during her speech, which sharply criticized both the university and Israel. According to a report that appeared on Wednesday in the New York Post, the incident, involving student Saham David Ahmed Ali, has sparked widespread discussion and controversy.

Ali, chosen as the class speaker, began her address by expressing her dissatisfaction with Columbia University’s stance on the ongoing Gaza conflict. Describing her experiences on campus as “dystopian,” she criticized the administration’s perceived silence and lack of action regarding what she termed the “genocide of the Palestinian people,” the Post report said.  Midway through her hate filled address, her microphone appeared to malfunction, cutting off her words just as she was condemning the university’s silence.

Video footage from the event shows the microphone glitching several times, each interruption met with chants of “let her speak” from the audience. The information in the Post report indicated that despite these technical difficulties, Ali managed to continue her speech after a brief pause, ultimately delivering a 15-minute address filled with scathing critiques of Columbia University and Israel.

In response to the incident, a spokesperson for Columbia University stated that the audio issues were purely technical and unintentional. “The momentary loss of audio during the speech was an unintentional technical glitch,” the spokesperson told The Post. This explanation, however, has done little to quell suspicions among some students and observers who believe the interruptions were a deliberate attempt to silence Ali’s anti-Israel message.

Ali’s speech did not shy away from strong language and stark imagery. She described the emotional toll of walking through the university’s halls while witnessing what she called “the most televised genocide of our lives” on social media, as was reported by the Post. She lamented the disconnect between the administration’s reassurances and the grim reality she felt was being ignored.

Furthermore, Ali echoed the demands of the anti-Israel student group Apartheid Divest, which has been active on Columbia’s Morningside Heights campus for several weeks. The group has called for the university to divest from companies they believe are complicit in the occupation of Palestinian territories, as was indicated in the information contained in the Post report.  Ali also advocated for the removal of NYPD officers from the campus and the granting of amnesty to students who were arrested during protests.

The incident has intensified ongoing debates at Columbia University regarding free speech, academic freedom, and the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Supporters of Ali argue that her speech highlighted crucial issues and called for necessary action from the university. Critics, however, view her remarks as divisive and potentially harmful to the university community.

Arab-Israeli Journalist Yoseph Haddad, Assaulted at Columbia, Says Campus Protests Are Middle Eastern Phenomenon

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Yoseph Haddad (Via Yoseph Haddad)

TEL AVIV—Arab-Israeli journalist Yoseph Haddad hates extremists, and the feeling is mutual.

While Haddad was fighting for the Israel Defense Forces in the 2006 Lebanon war, Hezbollah terrorists nearly blew off his right leg with an anti-tank missile. In August, a group of Palestinian men attacked Haddad and his family on an airplane in Dubai. And, last month at an anti-Israel rally outside Columbia University’s main entrance, a protester wearing a keffiyeh and a face covering punched him in the mouth.]

“I’m not saying the anti-Israel protesters at American universities are the same as terrorists, but I am saying they are bringing the same extremist mentality from the Middle East,” Haddad, 38, a reporter at Israel’s i24News and a pro-Israel activist, told the Washington Free Beacon. “I know the mentality because I’m an Arab. I know what they mean when they chant for ‘intifada.’”

In a three-hour interview at a Tel Aviv cafe on a Friday afternoon last month, Haddad said the anti-Israel protests that have roiled more than 100 universities across the United States in recent weeks are misunderstood as a feature of American democracy. In fact, according to Haddad, the protests are an anti-democratic import from the Middle East—and should be handled accordingly.

“The anti-Israel and [Boycott, Divestment, and Sanctions] activists behind these protests are people who are from the Middle East or whose families are from the Middle East,” said Haddad, who has long been involved in opposing the BDS movement and has given talks at dozens of U.S. universities. “These people fled horrible dictatorships, but instead of embracing democracy and flourishing, they are abusing democracy for their own anti-Israel and anti-America agenda.”

The protesters have occupied university campuses with tent encampments, violently taken over school buildings, clashed with police, bullied Jewish students, and advocated genocidal violence against “Zionists.” The protests’ core demand is that universities divest from Israel amid its war against the Palestinian terror group Hamas, which carried out a historic bloodletting in the Jewish state on Oct. 7.

Many of the protesters are among the surging ranks of foreign students at U.S. universities, and others are outside agitators, according to students and authorities. Students for Justice in Palestine, one of the campus groups organizing the protests, has documented links to charities that the U.S. government shuttered for funding Hamas.

Haddad recalled that the crowd of protesters he confronted at Columbia’s New York City campus last month was mostly Arabic speaking, “and if I didn’t speak with them in Arabic, it wasn’t because they were locals but because they were from [non-Arabic-speaking Middle Eastern countries] Afghanistan or Pakistan.”

After Haddad was assaulted, he filed a police report and canceled his planned talk with Columbia campus group Students Supporting Israel. He later identified a local Arab-American man as his assailant.

“There are no arrests and the investigation remains ongoing,” the New York Police Department’s deputy commissioner of public information told the Free Beacon.

 

Haddad argued that various Middle Eastern forces have fueled the protests: Radical anti-Israel faculty from the region indoctrinate students, and Persian Gulf regime Qatar, a key backer of Hamas, ideologically “weakens the administrations” with billions of dollars in funding.

“The people who know what’s going on here are lying and brainwashing the people who don’t know what’s going on, and it’s working,” Haddad said. “Especially among the progressive extreme, it’s easy for them to feel affiliated with the Palestinian cause because the pro-Palestinian groups draw the Palestinians as the victim, as the one who is oppressed by the ‘apartheid’ State of Israel.”

Kyle Shideler, the director for homeland security and counterterrorism at the Center for Security Policy, a think tank in Washington, D.C., recently gave a similar analysis to Tablet magazine:

What you’re seeing is a real witches’ brew of revolutionary content interacting on campuses. … On the left-wing side, you have a broad variety of revolutionary leftists, who serve as rent-a-mobs, providing the warm bodies for whatever the leftist cause of the day is. And on the other side you have the Islamist and Palestinian networks: American Muslims for Palestine and their subsidiary Students for Justice in Palestine, CAIR, the Palestinian Youth Movement. We’re seeing a real mixture of different kinds of radical foment, and it’s all being activated at the same time.

Many university administrations have wavered in enforcing their own rules against the protesters, with Harvard University on Tuesday becoming the latest to make concessions as part of a hudna of sorts with the reprobate students.

Haddad likened such attempts at appeasement to Israel’s policies toward Hamas in the years before Oct. 7.

“Part of the reason we got Oct. 7 was our weakness toward terrorism,” Haddad said. “Part of the reason American universities are about to undergo total destruction is their weakness toward the protesters.”

Haddad’s rhetoric once sounded overblown to some Israelis. During an April panel discussion on Israel’s left-leaning Channel 13 news, Haddad called for the IDF to immediately respond “with power” to an uptick in Palestinian violence led by Hamas. Otherwise, he warned, the country would pay a “much heavier” price in the future.

“I’m an Arab who knows this region well. I mean no disrespect to anyone here, [but] it’s time for the IDF to speak Arabic,” Haddad said, using a term that refers to embracing Middle Eastern ruthlessness. “When we won’t speak this language … this postpones the end. And remember, when you postpone the end, the payment is much heavier, much heavier.”

Haddad’s co-panelists objected, with the host quipping: “Violence has always solved things around here amazingly.”

But Haddad continued: “Do you know what I’m hearing from people from Lebanon, from Syria, from Gaza, from the West Bank? They tell me, ‘Yoseph, Israel fell off—you’re fighting among yourselves, your army is not prepared.’ In response to [Hamas] rockets, the heaviest bombardment since the second Lebanon war, this is how you respond? Wow, great, wonderful—we will continue like this.”

Haddad also raised the alarm before Oct. 7 about the Arab threat to U.S. universities. Following an April 2022 visit to a university in Santiago, Chile, home to the largest Palestinian population outside the Middle East, Haddad told Hebrew media that the fearful state of Jews on the campus was a preview of where American universities were headed.

“Jewish students, of whom there are less than a hundred, are vastly outnumbered by Palestinian students, and are routinely harassed each time tensions with Israel arise. Some former students even reported having pictures of injured Palestinians being put on their classroom desks every day,” Haddad’s fiancée, Emily Schrader, wrote in a Jerusalem Post op-ed expanding on his argument.

“The problem with ignoring what’s happening in Chile … is that the same path Chilean campuses have followed over the last few years is the path that U.S. campuses are now rapidly taking. … We must stand united with Chilean Jews in the fight against anti-Semitism and anti-Zionism, and we must take Chile’s situation as an example, before it gets to that point on U.S. campuses.”

Already famous in Israel before Oct. 7, Haddad has since become something of a national icon. Israel’s Channel 12 news in late October aired a profile that lauded him as the closest thing the country has to an official spokesman. On Monday, Haddad served as one of the torch lighters in Israel’s national Independence Day celebration, a high honor in recognition of his public diplomacy. As he lit the flame, he shouted in Arabic, “The people of Israel live!”

During Haddad’s interview with the Free Beacon, at a table on the street in south Tel Aviv, Israelis constantly interrupted to solicit selfies, handshakes, or hugs.

Yoseph Haddad, center (Andrew Tobin)

“This is what gives me the strength to continue—the unbelievable, endless support and love,” Haddad said after posing for a photo with a pair of rifle-toting IDF commandos. “Israelis are grateful for what I do because I’m proud of my identity as an Arab, but I’m also proud of my identity as an Israeli, and I fight for my country.”

Haddad acknowledged that his relationship with other Arab Israelis is more complicated. Last year, partly in response to death threats from the community, he started carrying a pistol whenever he left his apartment in Nazareth, the Arab city in northern Israel where he grew up.

 

But the Oct. 7 attack has apparently inched Arab Israelis, who comprise about one fifth of the population, closer to Haddad, who is Christian, even as Arabs and Muslims around the world have sided with Hamas. A March survey by the Israel Democracy Institute think tank found that 44 percent of Arab Israelis support the IDF, more than double the rate before the war.

“When the protesters in the United States chant, ‘From the river to the sea, Palestine will be free,’ they are not helping us, and they are not helping the Palestinians,” Haddad said. “What they are really calling for is total death, because I can tell you, if the Jewish people go down, they are not going down quietly.”

Pro-Hamas Tech Workers Protest Google’s Contacts with Israel at Developer Conference

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Google execs are ready to make changes to the company’s message board in a bid to ease tensions. Credit: AP

Dozens of protesters blocked the entrance to Google’s developer conference on Tuesday, demanding an end to the tech giant’s collaboration with the Israeli government amidst the country’s war with Hamas in the Gaza Strip.

The Los Angeles Times reports that the Google I/O conference in Mountain View, Calif., faced a protest on Tuesday by a group calling itself No Tech for Genocide, which accuses Israel of committing genocide against Palestinians in Gaza. The group held two events, including a rally at a nearby park and a protest at the conference’s entrance, where roughly 90 people gathered for 90 minutes, chanting slogans and holding signs.

Pro-Hamas protesters at Google event
Pro-Hamas protesters at Google event

The protest at Google’s developer conference began at around 9:30 a.m., with protesters moving toward a bag checkpoint, leading to the conference’s entrance being closed. Attendees were redirected, causing a delay in the event’s proceedings.

Protesters demanded that Google cancel its cloud computing contract with the Israeli government, known as Project Nimbus. They believe the company’s technology is being used by the Israeli military for surveillance of people in Gaza through facial recognition, leading to the arrest and detention of Palestinians. Google has stated that its technology is used to support numerous governments around the world and that the Nimbus contract is for work running on its commercial cloud network and not for sensitive or military workloads.

One of the protesters, Ariel Koren, a former Google employee, shared her thoughts with the crowd: “We want to make sure that every single person who comes here and who might think that today’s a day about celebrating technological advancements — every single one of those people needs to understand that the reality is much darker than what Google has painted.” Koren alleges that the company retaliated against her in 2021 after she raised concerns about the contract. Google investigated the case and found no evidence of retaliation.

Andres Haro, a software security engineer, expressed his concern after witnessing the protest: “I feel that it is worth a shot to listen to others when they have a point of view.” Haro shared his plan to research Project Nimbus further, indicating the protest’s impact on attendees.

Roni Zeiger, who participated in the rally on Tuesday at Charleston Park, near the Google event, stated, “We’re asking more questions about what role we and our employers are playing in the world. World events have continued to evolve, and… people, including employees, are asking harder questions and wanting to work at places that are consistent with their values.”

The protest at Google’s developer conference coincided with Palestinians’ commemoration of their displacement during the 1948 Israeli-Arab war. The protest also comes after more than 50 Google employees were fired following sit-ins and protests that took place at Google office locations last month protesting Project Nimbus.

Read more at the Los Angeles Times here.

Lucas Nolan is a reporter for Breitbart News covering issues of free speech and online censorship.

Netanyahu clashes with Defense Minister over possible Israeli control of Gaza

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Benjamin Netanyahu, Yoav Gallant. Fenton/Flash90)

By David Rosenberg, World Israel News

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his Defense Minister, Yoav Gallant (Likud) clashed Wednesday over the future governance of the Gaza Strip after the current war with Hamas, revealing cracks within the ruling Israeli coalition government.

In a televised statement released Wednesday evening, Gallant called on the prime minister to make “tough decisions” regarding Israel’s exit strategy from the Gaza Strip, pressing the premier to commit to not restoring Israeli governance, either military or civil, over the coastal enclave.

While Gallant emphasized that Israel must “dismantle Hamas’ governing capabilities in Gaza,” it must also establish “a governing alternative in Gaza,” and avoid extended Israeli control over the Strip.

“The end of the military campaign must come together with political action.”

“The ‘day after Hamas,’ will only be achieved with Palestinian entities taking control of Gaza, accompanied by international actors, establishing a governing alternative to Hamas’ rule. This, above all, is an interest of the State of Israel.”

Gallant warned that he “will not agree to the establishment of Israeli military rule in Gaza. Israel must not establish civilian rule in Gaza.”

“I call on Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to make a decision and declare that Israel will not establish civilian control over the Gaza Strip, that Israel will not establish military governance in the Gaza Strip, and that a governing alternative to Hamas in the Gaza strip will be raised immediately.”

The defense minister said that the government had thus far refused to debate competing plans for the post-war Gaza Strip, putting off such discussions until after Hamas has been defeated.

Netanyahu responded to Gallant’s address Wednesday evening with a brief video statement rejecting the defense chief’s call for Israel to hand over control of the Gaza Strip to an alternative Arab governing body.

“I am not willing to replace Hamastan with Fatahstan,” Netanyahu said, referencing Fatah, the largest faction in the Palestine Liberation Organization, which rules the Palestinian Authority.

“After the terrible massacre of the 7th of October, I ordered the destruction of Hamas. IDF soldiers and our security forces are carrying that out.”

“So long as Hamas continues to exist, no other force will be allowed into Gaza to manage civil affairs – and especially not the Palestinian Authority.”

“Eighty percent of the Palestinians in Judea and Samaria support the terrible massacres of October 7th. The Palestinian Authority supports terror, encourages terror, and funds terror.”

15 terrorists killed in Hamas command center at UNRWA school

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A Palestinian man outside an UNRWA office in Gaza City protests cuts to aid, June 20, 2023. Photo by Anas-Mohammed/Shutterstock.
(JNS) Some 15 terrorists were killed on Tuesday in an Israeli air strike on a Hamas command center located in a United Nations Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA) school in Nuseirat in central Gaza.
Among those killed in the strike were members of Hamas’s Nukhba force who participated in the Oct. 7 massacre, according to the Israel Defense Forces.

The incident was yet another example of Hamas’s cynical use of Gaza’s civilians as human shields, according to the IDF.
“The Hamas terrorist organization systematically exploits international institutions and uses the civilian population as human shields in order to perpetrate terrorist attacks against the State of Israel,” said the military.
מטוסי קרב של חיל האוויר תקפו על בסיס מודיעין מדויק של שב״כ ואמ”ן בשיתוף חטיבת האש של אוגדה 99 חדר לחימה מרכזי של חמאס הממוקם בבית ספר של אונר”א בנוציראת, בו שהו מחבלים מהזרוע הצבאית של ארגון הטרור חמאס>> pic.twitter.com/uPtdp7Sg7e
— צבא ההגנה לישראל (@idfonline) May 14, 2024
Throughout the war against Hamas, which is now in its seventh month, Israeli soldiers have found missiles and military gear hidden among U.N. relief supplies in Gaza.
In January, Israeli soldiers in Khan Yunis destroyed an underground weapons factory belonging to Palestinian Islamic Jihad where arms were found hidden in sacks belonging to UNRWA.
In February, the IDF announced the discovery of a massive Hamas tunnel complex underneath UNRWA’s central headquarters in Gaza.
That same month, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu told a visiting delegation of U.N. ambassadors that UNRWA had been “totally infiltrated” by the terrorist group.
Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Gallant told journalists in February that the Jewish state had intelligence showing that 30 UNRWA employees took part in the Oct. 7 terror attack.
Netanyahu called for the U.N. agency to be replaced.
“I think it’s time that the international community and the United Nations itself understand that UNRWA’s mission has to end,” he said.
“It has been in the service of Hamas [in] its schools and in many other things. I say this with great regret because we hoped that there would be an objective and constructive body to offer aid. We need such a body today in Gaza. But UNRWA is not that body. It has to be replaced by some organization or organizations that will do that job,” he added.