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NYS Nurses Association Ratifies Contract with Montefiore, Mt Sinai & NY-Presbyterian Hospitals

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Mt. Sinai Hospital in Manhattan. Photo Credit: Shutterstock

Members of the New York State Nurses Association have ratified their four-year contract with the NYC Hospital Alliance, a bargaining group that includes Montefiore, Mount Sinai and New York–Presbyterian health systems.

The contract was ratified by a large majority and expires on December 31, 2022.

“The agreement includes staffing ratio language calling for the initial hiring of 1,500 new nurses. The initial hires will include nurses to fill current vacancies, and will also include an additional $100 million dollars to hire nurses for newly added full-time positions,” according to a press release on the association’s web site.

Registered nurse staffing will be based on safe staffing ratios that will be included in the collective bargaining agreements and enforced by an independent neutral party.

“The contract also includes across the board wage increases of 3% in each year of the contract and full retro-pay. For all facilities, the contract calls for millions of dollars for retiree health benefits, tuition reimbursement as well as other monetary benefits. The contract strengthens worker protections including new guidelines to stop workplace violence, a process to improve safe patient handling, and language allowing nurses to aid victims of disasters inside or outside the United States,” the release added.

“Everyone in these negotiations recognized that there are not enough nurses to safely care for our patients. With this contract, we’ve come a long way to resolving the critical under-staffing at the three hospital systems. That’s been our priority throughout. ‘Safe staffing saves lives’ is our reality and with this contract we have made tremendous gains that will help us provide safe, quality care to our patients,” said Anthony Ciampa, RN, NYSNA First Vice President and President, New York-Presbyterian Executive Committee.

“We have made significant strides based on these contracts: Front line Registered Nurses, Nurse Practitioners, Nurse Anesthetists, Case Managers, and Midwives will now have effective input in establishing nurse-to-patient grids that will ensure that our #1 priority, safe staffing, will be achieved. Most importantly, for the first time ever, we now have transparent, enforcement mechanisms that hold all parties accountable in achieving this goal. The combination of staffing-grids, enforceability, and transparency is the winning trifecta for both our patients and our nurses,” said Robin Krinsky, RN, NYSNA Board Member and President, Mt. Sinai Hospital Executive Committee.

“It was the unity and determination of frontline nurses who fought hard to improve conditions for nurses and additional staffing for patients. Our commitment to our patients was the driving force behind this contract,” said Bernita Stewart, RN and Member, Montefiore Medical Center Executive Committee.

Brazilian Pres Bolsonaro to Cancel NYC Trip Amid Controversy Over Award

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President Jair Bolsonaro of Brazil announced last week that he would cancel a trip to New York this month in the wake of several weeks worth of controversy over the Brazilian-American Chamber of Commerce’s decision to honor the far-right leader at its gala later this year. Photo Credit: Shutterstock

President Jair Bolsonaro of Brazil announced last week that he would cancel a trip to New York this month in the wake of several weeks worth of controversy over the Brazilian-American Chamber of Commerce’s decision to honor the far-right leader at its gala later this year.

“The honor set off outrage among environmental groups, gay activists and New York politicians, including Mayor Bill de Blasio, who called Mr. Bolsonaro “a dangerous man” whose “overt racism, homophobia and destructive decisions will have a devastating impact on the future of our planet,” the New York Times reported. “The pushback began when the American Museum of Natural History, which had agreed to host the event before the honoree had been announced, reacted with dismay to Mr. Bolsonaro’s selection.”

The Brazilian-American Chamber of Commerce noted on its web site that it “has learned through the office of the President of the Republic of Brazil that President Jair Bolsonaro, the 2019 Person of the Year Honoree, will not be attending the Gala Dinner on May 14th. The Chamber hereby affirms that the Gala Dinner will take place as scheduled, including the presentation of the 2019 Person of the Year Fellowship Program, and awards recognizing important contributors to Social Responsibility and Digital Innovation.”

Other parallel events scheduled during the week will take place as planned, the group said, promising to provide further updates as they become available.

“President Jair Messias Bolsonaro is the Brazilian recipient of the 2019 Person of the Year Awards,” the message continued. “Jair Bolsonaro was elected President of Brazil in October 2018. His political career began in 1988 as an elected representative of the City Council of Rio de Janeiro. In 1990, he was elected for the first of seven consecutive terms as Federal Deputy for Rio de Janeiro.

“The choice of President Bolsonaro is a recognition of his strongly stated intention of fostering closer commercial and diplomatic ties between Brazil and the United States and his firm commitment to building a strong and durable partnership between the two nations.”

“President Jair Bolsonaro’s first months in office have been marked by frustration because he refuses to horse trade in the murky party system of the Brazilian Congress. Although critics blame his inexperience and naïveté, for his part, Bolsonaro claims that Brazil must adjust to his distinct governing style,” The National Interest recently reported. “However, the impulsive and pugnacious style that swept him to electoral victory now threatens his ability to govern. Rather than identifying a new and productive way to govern for all Brazilians, Bolsonaro is busy placating his base and taunting his leftist critics. Instead of setting himself up for wins, he continues tilting at windmills.”

Isaac Kassirer Purchases Four More Uptown Buildings for $40 Million

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Developer Isaac Kassirer is sweeping up more properties in Northern Manhattan, as his buying sprint continues. As reported by the Real Deal, Kassirer’s firm, Emerald Equity, has purchased quartet of Harlem properties from Galil Management. Property records show the transaction cost Kassirer a total of $40 million. The four properties are located at: 1917 Adam Clayton Powell Boulevard , 110 West 116th Street, 120 West 116th Street, and 110 St. Nicholas Avenue.

Kassirer closed the deal with $30.6 million in financing from Ladder Capital Finance. Steven Vegh brokered the deal for both sides. Vegh declined to comment.

Back in 2014, Galil had purchased the Harlem properties for a total of $29.5 million. The Adam Clayton Powell building purchased is a multi-family building, built in 1921, with seven stories and 39 units. The building at 110 West 116th Street stands five stories tall and has five units, built in 1900. The building at 120 West 116th Street stands six stories tall with 42 units. The St. Nicholas Avenue townhouse has 11 units within five stories.

Kassirer began his career in 2006 with the management of an 800-unit portfolio in the Bronx. The 36-year-old Brooklyn native is now the founder and CEO of Emerald Equity Group, a Midtown Boutique Real Estate Firm established in 2012. Over the past few years, the group has been in the news oft with a good number of high-profile residential acquisitions, dealing with many of the leading institutions in the real estate arena and negotiating some of New York City’s largest multifamily deals. He has become a serious player in NYC real estate.

Last year, Emerald Equity purchased 838 West End Avenue, the 12-story rental building situated between Central Park and Riverside Park, from Thor Equities and Rockwood Capital. The firm turned around and made a quick profit selling it to the local arm of Swedish real estate investor, Akelius, for $72 million. Kassirer’s firm also sold a quartet of Bronx multifamily buildings to a private family for $25 million. Last year, they purchased a 21-building Harlem portfolio for $85 million from E&M. Shortly after, the company went on to purchase a four-building portfolio on the Upper West Side’s Manhattan Valley neighborhood for $116 million from the Orbach Group.

Landlords Want NYS Lawmakers to Consider Impact of Proposed Changes to Rent Regulations

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“Homes and Community Renewal, the state agency tasked with enforcing rent stabilization, declined the Assembly’s invitation to testify Thursday, according to Housing Committee Chair Steven Cymbrowitz. Photo Credit: nyassembly.gov

Rents are in the news again.

Dueling activists were chanting on the streets in New York near City Hall Park last week, each side with their own take on livability. While a tenants group called for lower rents, landlords did just the opposite.

Ah, summer in New York City.

The landlords want state legislators to consider the impact on property owners and contractors of proposed changes to rent regulations.

“On Albany’s chopping block are programs that allow landlords to raise rents following upgrades to their buildings,” reports Crain’s New York Business. “The Taxpayers for an Affordable New York coalition, which includes the Real Estate Board of New York, the Rent Stabilization Association, the Community Housing Improvement Program and the Small Property Owners of New York, was represented by a group that discussed how rent reform would affect them.”

“When apartments become vacant, we want to put in new plumbing, new electrical, we want to insulate all of the walls, to make the apartments more energy-efficient and warmer,” Chris Athineos, who owns 150 apartments across Bay Ridge, Brooklyn Heights and Park Slope, told Crain’s. “But we can’t do this if the government is going to pull these programs or drastically cut back on these programs.”

New York City lost more than 284,000 stabilized apartments between 1994 and 2016, according to the Rent Guidelines Board—attributable, housing advocates say, to a combination of loopholes and lax enforcement.

“Homes and Community Renewal, the state agency tasked with enforcing rent stabilization, declined the Assembly’s invitation to testify Thursday, according to Housing Committee Chair Steven Cymbrowitz. (An HCR spokesperson said they submitted written testimony, and that they plan on appearing in person in another hearing next week.),” reported Gothamist.com.

City Council Speaker Corey Johnson, who drew applause from those in attendance, endorsed all planks of the proposed rent law package. “We need to remove any mechanism that drives landlords to want to deregulate units and destabilize and displace communities,” he said, according to ny.curbed.com.

Seven of the bills would close loopholes that allow landlords to boost rents in vacant apartments and ultimately deregulate them, the web site points out, “while two others would allow municipalities across the state to opt into rent stabilization, and instate “good cause” eviction protections under the umbrella of so-called universal rent control. With the latter, the vast majority of the state’s 3.3 million renting families would be guaranteed a lease renewal and incremental rent increases unless a landlord proves an exception like refusal to pay. (A carve-out in the bill exempts buildings that are also a landlord’s primary residence.)”

Renovated Dumbo Warehouse to be Home for “Rent the Runway”–Online Dress Rental Agency

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Rent the Runway, the online service that provides designer dress and accessory rentals, is reportedly moving to 10 Jay Street. Photo Credit: Twitter

Rent the Runway, the online service that provides designer dress and accessory rentals, is reportedly moving to 10 Jay Street

The company, started by Jennifer Hyman and Jennifer Fleiss in November 2009, will make the move in 2020. The new 83,000 square feet digs are said to hold as many as 500 employees. It will effectively double the size of its current spot on the sixth floor of 345 Hudson St. in Hudson Square.

Its four top floors at 10 Jay St. include a penthouse with a private, 10,000-square-foot terrace, reports the New York Post. “A 5,000-square-foot roof deck is shared by other tenants, including Translation LLC and Soho House’s co-working brand, Soho Works. The latter leased 48,424 square feet earlier this year on the bottom two floors when asking rents were $69 to $75 per square foot.”

Rent the Runway’s interiors will reportedly be designed by WeWork, with which Rent the Runway has dropoff and pop-up partnerships, according to the Post. “The CBRE team of Frederick Fackelmayer, Alex Benisatto and Sam Mann represented the tenant, which has accepted the Excelsior Jobs Tax Credit from Empire State Development.”

The expansion “comes amid a flurry of activity by the retailer, which includes the launch of Rent the Runway Kids and a partnership with West Elm and another with WeWork. Rent the Runway company recently obtained a $125 million investment that brings its total valuation to $1 billion, making it colloquially known as a “unicorn” startup,” according to Chain Store Age magazine.

Occupying four floors in the new office building, the headquarters includes the building’s penthouse floor, which boasts 10,000 sq. ft. of private outdoor terrace space and a 5,000-sq.-ft. communal roof deck with panoramic views of the Manhattan skyline, the trade periodical reports. “JLL completed the transaction for building owners Glacier Global Partners LLC and Triangle Assets. CBRE represented Rent the Runway in the deal. The brokers are Frederick Fackelmayer, Alex Benisatto and Sam Mann.”

CBRE’s Frederick Fackelmayer, Alex Benisatto and Sam Mann represented Rent the Runway in the lease negotiations. JLL’s Howard Hersch, Brett Harvey and Sam Seiler represented Glacier Global Partners, according to the web site globest.com. “Rent the Runway represents the largest lease signed in Dumbo in nearly five years. This is significant for the Brooklyn market, as the brand is the latest highly successful creative company to relocate to the borough from Manhattan,” says Fackelmayer, who has completed transactions totaling 420,000 square feet in the Brooklyn marketplace since 2014.

The office building has been newly developed and modernized, the story added. “Fackelmayer adds the space “perfectly aligned with the unique character and identity that Rent the Runway was looking to capture in its new headquarters.”

Malaysia Extradites Former Goldman Sachs Banker Linked to 1MDB Scandal

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Malaysia has extradited former Goldman Sachs banker Roger Ng to the United States to face criminal charges linked to a multibillion-dollar scandal at state fund 1MDB. Photo Credit: Shutterstock

Malaysia has extradited former Goldman Sachs banker Roger Ng to the United States to face criminal charges linked to a multibillion-dollar scandal at state fund 1MDB.

Ng, who departed from Goldman Sachs in 2014, has been held in Kuala Lumpur since November. Among the charges lodged against him are allegedly laundering funds diverted from the 1Malaysia Development Berhad (1MDB) fund.

“Ng had agreed to be sent to the United States, but the proceedings were delayed after Malaysia’s home minister said he should first face criminal charges in the Southeast Asian nation,” reported the New York Post. “Following negotiations, the two countries have agreed for Ng to be temporarily surrendered to the United States for 10 months and for the US case against him to proceed first, Malaysia’s attorney general, Tommy Thomas, said in a statement. Ng was sent to the United States on May 3 and will be returned to Malaysia to face charges as soon as the US proceedings are concluded.”

“Ng, 47, who left the investment bank and financial services company in 2014, was slapped with a provisional warrant of arrest in late October by the DOJ, which had sought Malaysia’s help to locate him,” noted Straitstimes.com. “Ng was arrested in November by the Malaysian authorities and was charged in a Malaysian court with four counts of abetting Goldman Sachs in selling US$6 billion of notes and bonds issued by 1MDB by omitting material information and publishing untrue information. He is wanted by the DOJ to face charges in a New York federal court that he helped his former boss, Tim Liessner, to launder money and bribe government officials as part of Goldman Sachs’ work for 1MDB.”

Late last week, Bloomberg reported that American officials were preparing to return about $200 million of funds allegedly misappropriated from troubled state fund 1MDB to Malaysia, citing people familiar with the matter.

“The total includes about $140 million from the sale of a stake in New York’s Park Lane Hotel and some $60 million from a settlement paid by the producer of the “Wolf of Wall Street” movie, said two of the people, who asked not to be named as the details are private. The transfer could happen as soon as next week, they said,” Bloomberg noted.

Ng’s lawyer, Marc Agnifilo, “said he convinced Ng to “come to the U.S. and face the music” because it was evident that prosecutors were not going to drop the case, and his client had become very ill. Ng appears to have lost weight, based on photos of him before his arrest,” Reuters reported. “He was in a very difficult situation,” Agnifilo told reporters. Being detained in New York “is better than a Malaysian jail,” he added.”

Vornado, Rudin Consider Building 1450 Foot Tower at 350 Park Ave

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Rudin’s 23-story building, known as BlackRock Building and opened in 1986, has its own reasons for considering demolition. Photo Credit: Shutterstock

The rezoning of Midtown East continues to propel talk of change in the district. As reported by the Real Deal, Vornado Realty Trust and Rudin Management are considering building a 1,450-foot tower at 350 Park Avenue. A brochure for the potential project shows a tower rising over 100 feet above SL Green Realty and Hines’ One Vanderbilt, and offering 1.68 million square feet of rentable space. The project is still in its early stages and is an option that has not yet been filed with the city’s Department of Buildings.

The New York Post first reported in April that Vornado and Rudin were in talks for a possible joint venture to build a new office tower in Park Avenue. The plan would entail the demolition of Vornado’s existing building at 51st and 52nd streets, and Rudin’s midblock tower at 40 East 52nd Street. Rudin’s 23-story building, known as BlackRock Building and opened in 1986, has its own reasons for considering demolition. Its main tenant, main tenant, BlackRock, is moving to Hudson Yards in four years, and will leave it empty.

Sources have indicated that this plan for a potential joint venture, is only one possibility for the sites. Rudin and Vornado may alternatively decide to each redevelop their properties independently. Renderings for the budding project are similar to the stepped look of One Vanderbilt, though the different levels of 350 Park’s façade have outdoor space. The brochure depicts multiple floors of amenities, including a “sky bar” at the top, fine dining, a sports club, an arts club, and an auditorium. Vornado and Rudin have thus far declined to comment.

The discussed project is possible only thanks to the rezoning of the district, which allows developers to build taller projects. In August 2017, the city rezoned Midtown East, with the intention of encouraging the construction of 6.5 million square feet of new office space over the course of the next two decades. The new zoning has already led JPMorgan Chase to demolish 270 Park Avenue so as to build a new 1,400-foot tower in its place. Harry Macklowe has similarly announced plans for a 1,500-foot tall office building at 14 East 52nd Street.

Of course, tearing down buildings is a controversial business which is sure to attract plenty of critics and uncertainty. Tishman Speyer just gave up its proposal to redevelop 300 Park Avenue, after Colgate-Palmolive renewed about 242,000 square feet of space at the building for its global headquarters.

Amazon Stocks Rise by 3% as Warren Buffett Reveals that Money Manager Has Been Buying Shares

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Billionaire investor Warren Buffett told CNBC last week that a money manager at his company, Berkshire Hathaway, has been purchasing shares in Amazon of late. The result was predictable: shares of Amazon rose by over 3%. Photo Credit: Shutterstock

Billionaire investor Warren Buffett told CNBC last week that a money manager at his company, Berkshire Hathaway, has been purchasing shares in Amazon of late. The result was predictable: shares of Amazon rose by over 3%.

“Yeah, I’ve been a fan, and I’ve been an idiot for not buying” Amazon shares, Buffett said during his interview on CNBC. “But I want you to know it’s no personality changes taking place.”

Berkshire Hathaway Inc., based in Omaha, Nebraska, owns a range of businesses including insurance, railroads, jewelry stores as well as major investments in American Express, IBM and Wells Fargo & Co.

“The idea that value is somehow connected to book value or low price to earnings ratios — as Charlie has said, all investing is value investing,” Buffett told the assembled at Berkshire Hathaway’s latest annual meeting. He added, “I mean you are putting some money out now to get some money later on, and you are making a calculation as to the probabilities of getting that money and when you will get it.”

“The ‘Oracle of Omaha’ disclosed this week that one of his investment managers — either Ted Weshcler or Todd Combs — has bought some of Amazon’s stock in recent months. The purchase likely caught many Buffett watchers by surprise, even when considering Buffett’s praise through the years for Amazon founder Jeff Bezos,” reported Yahoo Finance.

“But there is a catch to the Oracle of Omaha’s admission that Berkshire has been a buyer of Amazon — namely, that Buffett hasn’t been the brainchild behind the buying. Rather, it was either Todd Combs or Ted Weschler, each of which manage portfolios that total more than $13 billion in equities for Berkshire, who did the buying during the first quarter,” reports The Motley Fool.

Buffett “was clear with Quick about Amazon in saying, “Yeah, I’ve been a fan, and I’ve been an idiot for not buying.” In essence, Buffett admits that not personally buying Amazon a long time ago was a mistake, but is quick to note that this purchase was not of his doing or influence, even though he appreciates Amazon’s competitive edge and what Jeff Bezos brings to the table as a leader,” the Motley Fool added.

The company knows what it is doing. Amazon is already capable of offering same-day and next-day delivery to 72% of the total U.S. population, including almost all of the households (95% or more) in 16 of the wealthiest and most populated states and Washington, D.C., according to a report published in March by RBC Capital Markets.

“The vast delivery network is the result of significant investments over the past four years, a period during which Amazon built out fulfillment centers across the country, nearly tripling its U.S. logistics infrastructure, RBC said. Amazon has added roughly double the amount of distribution space Home Depot currently owns.

A Day to Honor the Memory of 23,741 of Israel’s Fallen

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Israeli flags placed by each grave in the military cemetery of Netanya, ahead of the Israel's Memorial Day for fallen soldiers and victims of terror, on May 7, 2019. Photo by Flash90.

Events to commemorate the memories of 23,741 fallen soldiers and civilians began in Israel on Tuesday evening as part of Memorial Day for Fallen Soldiers and Victims of Terrorism.

According to the Defense Ministry’s Families and Commemoration Department, 56 casualties were added to the count this year, including 40 disabled people who died as a result of their condition.

The Defense Ministry said it expected more than 1.5 million Israelis to visit military cemeteries across the country on Wednesday.

Memorial Day marks the memories of fallen from the Israel Defense Forces, the Shin Bet and Mossad intelligence services, the Israel Police and the Israel Prisons Service. It also honors the memories of civilians murdered in terrorist attacks.

A one-minute siren sounds at 8 p.m. on the eve of Memorial Day, and a two-minute siren sounds at 11 a.m. on Memorial Day on Wednesday. Flags on public builds are at half-mast, and ceremonies take place across the country, including in 52 military cemeteries and some 50 memorial monuments.

The Defense Ministry has sent teams to cemeteries and ceremonies around the country to hand out hundreds of thousands of water bottles, plant new plants and place more than 20,000 chairs—one at each gravesite. Tens of thousands of memorial candles and flags have also been set in place.

The Defense Ministry describes Memorial Day as arguably the most prominent day on the calendar that promotes national consensus and identification, and reduces divisions. The day is “designed for the whole of Israeli society and not exclusively for bereaved families,” it said.

In 2017, the state constructed an official Memorial Hall of Israel’s Fallen at Mount Herzl in Jerusalem, officially unveiling it during Memorial Day 2017.

The Hall is where the central memorial ceremony will begin on Wednesday following the 11 a.m. siren, and where the memorial candles will be lit. The ceremony will be attended by Prime Minister and Defense Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, President Reuven Rivlin, the IDF Chief of General Staff Lt. Col. Aviv Kochavi and the Acting Israel Police Commissioner Moti Cohen. The ceremony will also be attended by the head of the Mossad, Yossi Cohen, and the head of the Shin Bet, Nadav Argaman, as well as head of the Prisons Service Asher Vaknin.

The Defense Ministry described the Memorial Hall as a place that commemorates all of the fallen since 1860, including all of those who fell in Israel’s wars. It is a place that “allows personal and collective commemoration,” and an expression of the “moral duty to remember them all,” the Ministry stated.

The Ministry added that the central goal of its Families and Commemoration Department is to express respect and recognition held by the state for its fallen, and to provide an ongoing service to support bereaved families.

Bereaved families receive year-round support from Defense Ministry teams, including home visits and continuous communications. Care-givers tend to the needs of the elderly and provide workshops on how to manage household expenses for bereaved parents, widows and widowers.

This year, the Defense Ministry said that 40 care-giving groups were active, helping aging parents, widows, adult orphans, newly bereaved parents and bereaved Druze mothers.

The Ministry said that Memorial Day is represented by three symbols: “Lighting the candles for commemorating memories, placing flower arrangements for emotional expression and placing small national flags with black memorial ribbons tied around them on each grave, as an expression of national honor for the fallen and the participation of state in the sense of loss of bereaved families.”

            (JNS.org)

Qatar to Transfer $480M to Palestinian Terrorist Entities

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Qatar will send $480 million in support of Palestinians in Judea and Samaria and Gaza, the country’s foreign ministry announced in a statement on Monday. Photo Credit: Flash90/Abed Rahim Khatib

Qatar’s foreign ministry announced it will transfer half a billion dollars to the Palestinians in the Gaza Strip and Judea and Samaria.

Qatar will send $480 million in support of Palestinians in Judea and Samaria and Gaza, the country’s foreign ministry announced in a statement on Monday.

According to Qatar, $300 million will go to the Palestinians in the forms of grants and loans for health and education. The remaining $180 million will be put toward urgent humanitarian needs, supporting U.N. efforts and providing electricity to areas that need it.

The money comes after a ceasefire was reached between Israel and Hamas. The terror group, together with the smaller Iran-sponsored Islamic Jihad, fired an estimated 600-700 rockets into Israel, killing four and wounding 145. It is reportedly the worst round of fighting between the two since 2014’s Operation Protective Edge.

According to reports, the transfer of Qatari money was part of the agreement reached between Israel and Hamas, which included other conditions, such as expanding Gaza’s fishing area and the opening of the border crossings.

However, Israel denies that any conditions were agreed upon.

One Israeli official told Ynet news, “No conditions were set between the sides and there’s no promise that hostilities won’t be renewed in a short time. We hope that the great damage to the organization [Hamas] in the last two days will bring them to understand that it’s not worthwhile to open a campaign against us. But there’s no understanding, just a slide into a ceasefire. Money from Qatar will continue to pass.”

Qatar has transferred over $1.1 billion between 2012 and 2018 to the terror group Hamas. It supplied $200 million in aid just in 2018.

Qatar also gave $50 million to UNRWA, the United Nations relief agency for the Palestinian refugees, propping up the organization after the U.S. pulled its funding on August 31, 2018.

“The United States will no longer commit further funding to this irredeemably flawed operation,” a State Department spokesman said at the time.

In other timely affairs in Israel, it has been reported that Prime Minister and Defense Minister Benjamin Netanyahu condemned the Israeli Supreme Court’s ruling allowing some 100 Palestinians to attend an alternative Memorial Day event in Tel Aviv’s Yarkon Park on Tuesday night, in spite of a closure on Arab entry from Judea and Samaria.

            (World Israel News)

Jewish Schoolchildren Attacked in Mt of Olives Neighborhood

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Arab rioter shoots firecrackers at Israeli police (Sliman Khader/Flash 90)

“While children were boarding the bus, they shot fireworks at us from a distance of only several dozen yards,” said a mother.

Arab teens shot firecrackers at Jewish children on Tuesday in a neighborhood located on the Mount of Olives in Jerusalem, according to residents.

“We were looking out the window. We saw masked individuals throwing at a preschool,” says Mordechai Taub, who lives in Maale Ha’Zeitim. He says that they appeared to be hurling firecrackers.

The children targeted by the Arab teens fled the scene and managed to avoid injury, Arutz Sheva reported.

When local security guards approached the teens, the attackers shot several firecrackers at the guards before escaping, says the website.

In addition to throwing the firecrackers near the preschool, they also targeted an elementary school bus.

“We went out with the kids to the bus, like every morning,” Hodaya Shomron, a mother of two, told Arutz Sheva.

“While children were boarding the bus, they shot fireworks at us from a distance of only several dozen yards,” she added.

“They didn’t shoot in the air or in some other direction, they fired straight at us, it was just like shooting… The guards closed the gates [of the neighborhood], and together with my husband they approached the Arabs, who shot another firework at them, then fled,” said Shomron.

She said that some ten minutes later, the gates were reopened and the children were able to get on the bus and go to school.

“A few years ago, this was almost a daily occurrence,” Taub told World Israel News.

On one side of the neighborhood, he says, a roadblock was set up and Border Police personnel were positioned there. They remained there roughly six months, Taub adds, during which time the situation “quieted down.”

On the other side of the neighborhood, he says, violence persisted with Molotov cocktail attacks carried out by assailants who would hurl the explosives and escape into the nearby Silwan neighborhood.

Though he concedes that he is not privy to the details of Israeli security activity, Taub says of the attackers that “there are no lone wolves.”

They’re affiliated with groups who push them to carry out attacks at particular times, he asserts, though he could not be sure what the motive was Tuesday, perhaps the situation in the Gaza Strip or Israel’s marking of Memorial Day and Independence Day, Tuesday night through Thursday.

            (World Israel News)

Read More at: worldisraelnews.com

Anti-Israel Media Bias Slams IDF Response to Gaza Rocket Barrage

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“Telling one side alone is willfully naive at best, and a worrying betrayal of the truth at worst,” says Simon Plosker of HonestReporting.

While Israel absorbed as many as 700 rockets fired by the terrorist groups Hamas and Islamic Jihad from the Gaza Strip over the weekend, the media turned the tables on the aggression and launched its usual assault on the Jewish state.

“It’s Israel against Palestinian terrorists, so we always know which side the American media will take—the ‘terrorists,’ ” Dan Gainor, vice president of business and culture at the Media Research Center, a media watchdog group, told JNS. “Except they won’t ever call them that. Fire 700 rockets indiscriminately trying to kill men, women, and children, and the press labels you a ‘militant,’ as long as they support your cause.”

Gainor cited a “usual list of errors and fallacies – like how Gaza is ‘occupied’ or ‘surrounded’ – neither of which is true. Israel pulled out of Gaza more than a decade ago and it was rewarded by the creation of a terror state.”

Israel withdrew from the Gaza Strip in 2005.

One straightforward headline in The New York Times in the past few days, “Gaza Militants Fire 250 Rockets, and Israel Responds With Airstrikes,” was attacked by Yousef Munayyer, executive director of the U.S. Campaign for Palestinian Rights, as “a stunningly irresponsible and misleading headline.” His complaint? That it wasn’t slanted in favor of the Palestinians.

That’s how uneven the playing field has become.

“Beyond just inaccurate, it is also dangerous. Israel’s violent oppression of Palestinians is enabled by media willing to tell a story in a way that always justifies Israeli violence at the expense of truth, accuracy and context,” said Munayyer in a subsequent tweet.

“It also highlights the orientalist lens thru which Western media covers Israel/Palestine, where Israeli life is considered far more valuable than Palestinian life. News always starts when Israeli life is threatened, while harm to Palestinian life is not news but ‘normal,’” added Munayyer.

“When will the world stop dehumanizing our Palestinian people who just want to be free? Headlines like this & framing it in this way just feeds into the continued lack of responsibility on Israel who unjustly oppress & target Palestinian children and families. #FreePalestine,” tweeted U.S. Rep. Rashida Tlaib, sharing Munayyer’s Twitter thread.

However, Sean Durns, senior research analyst at the Committee for Accuracy in Middle East Reporting in America, told JNS, “Several major Western media outlets have offered poor and biased coverage of the latest terrorist attacks targeting Israel. Several outlets failed to make clear to readers that Israel’s actions were a response to terrorists launching an unprecedented number of rockets into Israeli territory.”

He cited The Wall Street Journal, which published a story with the headline “Israel and Gaza Trade Deadly Attacks,” providing “readers false equivalency between the actions of a U.S.-designated terror group that targets Israeli civilians and uses human shields as cover – a double war-crime – and the Jewish state, which utilizes the Iron Dome defense system, targeted strikes and roof knocking, to minimize casualties.”

Durns added, “For its part, The Washington Post, CNN and others have continued to treat the Hamas-controlled Gazan Health Ministry as a credible source.”

(JNS.org)

220 New Immigrants From Ukraine Arrive in Israel in Time to Celebrate Independence Day

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Just days before Israel is set to celebrate its Independence Day, 220 Jews from Ukraine landed in Israel, arriving on Monday on three flights organized by the International Fellowship of Christians and Jews (IFCJ), known in Israel as Keren L’Yedidut. Photo Credit: IFCJ

Just days before Israel is set to celebrate its Independence Day, 220 Jews from Ukraine landed in Israel, arriving on Monday on three flights organized by the International Fellowship of Christians and Jews (ICFJ), known in Israel as Keren L’Yedidut.

The Olim (new immigrants) remained undeterred from making Aliyah despite terrorists firing over 700 rockets at Israel over the weekend. 42 of the Olim have chosen to move to the cities of Ashdod, Ashkelon, Sderot, Gan Yavne and Beersheba, which were targeted by the terrorists ‘ fire.

Among the Olim are 50 children. The oldest is 84 years old.

“More than anything else, I am inspired by the immigrants who choose to continue to settle in Israel’s southern region and Gaza Envelope,” said President of The Fellowship, Yael Eckstein.

The Fedorchuk family from Kharkov will be moving to Ashdod. Stanislav said that he and his wife Alina had been preparing to move to Israel for quite some time, and that they chose Ashdod so they can live close to their relatives.

The Sidorenko-Makovetsky family from Nikopol is moving Gan Yavne, despite having some reservations about doing so following the recent rocket attacks.

“The situation in the south of the country is very stressful. We have two small children, and although we are very afraid that they could be harmed both emotionally and physically, we believe in the Israel Defense Forces and the Iron Dome system to protect us,” they said.

The Olim received a pre-arrival training seminar, which included tools in dealing with the threat of rocket attacks on Israel.

“This has been a challenging time of late for Jews everywhere, as increasing anti-Semitism is evident in many countries and reminds us of dark times when defenseless Jews fell prey to persecution and destruction,” said Eckstein. “However, to our great joy, today we have a state and a Jewish people responsible for its own fate. ”

This group is not the only one arriving this week to celebrate Israel’s Independence Day as new citizens. Another 37 Olim from Uruguay, Azerbaijan, Belarus, Brazil, Venezuela and France, will arrive in Israel, thanks to Christian friends of Israel.

For more than 20 years, IFCJ has been helping Jews to make Aliyah and has invested more than $200 million in bringing approximately 750,000 Olim to Israel.

            (TPS)

Tense Quiet Settles Over South After Ceasefire Commences

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A tense quiet settled over southern Israel Monday morning after another ceasefire between the Hamas and Islamic Jihad terror groups and Israel came into effect. Photo by Elior Cohen/TPS on 29 May, 2018

A tense quiet settled over southern Israel Monday morning after another ceasefire between the Hamas and Islamic Jihad terror groups and Israel came into effect.

The IDF announced that all limitations and precautions following the hostilities have been removed, and life can go back to normal. Schools opened at most locations in the south.

Israel and Hamas have reportedly resumed talks on a long-term ceasefire, and Hamas will receive millions in funds from Qatar and an ease on other terror-related restrictions Israel has placed on Gaza.

The supposed end of the hostilities comes after an extremely violent 60 hours of warfare, in which the Gaza-based terror groups fired close to 700 rockets at Israeli cities and towns, killing four Israelis and wounding dozens of others, some still in serious condition.

The victims are Moshe Agadi, 58 and a father of four, Ziad al-Hamamda, 47 and a father of seven, Moshe Feder, 68, and Pinchas Menachem Prezuazman, 21 and a father of a baby.

The Iron Dome defense systems intercepted some 240 rockets on their way to Israeli to civilian targets. While the system had a 90 percent success rate, buildings took direct hits from rockets.

In response to the attacks, the Israeli Air Force (IAF) carried some 350 strikes against terror groups, killing some 20 terrorists and hitting strategic terror targets.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has so far remained silent on the latest developments. Just hours before the ceasefire came into effect he met with a delegation of US ambassadors in Europe led by US Ambassador to Israel David Friedman. He updated the delegation on the security situation, and said that Israel had the right to defend itself, adding that it would “take all necessary measures to ensure this.”

This was the 11th such round of attacks-retaliations between Israel and the Gazan terror groups in the last year.

Alya and Tommy Shapiro were planning to celebrate Liam’s fourth birthday in Ashdod on Saturday when their plans were violently disturbed by barrages of rockets launched by terrorists from Gaza.

They understood that celebrating in Ashdod was no longer an option, so they decided to move further north with the hope of finding peace there.

Liam was subsequently sent to Jerusalem, while Tommy, Alya and the twin toddlers Eliana and Arian returned home to Ashdod. As they were entering the city they came under a massive barrage of rocket fire and saw the explosions in the sky caused by the Iron Dome’s interceptions of the incoming rockets. The babies were shocked.

Tommy, 39 and a lawyer, initially thought the violence would end shortly, like in previous such incidents, but he soon learned that this time was different. The intensity, volume and insistent fire were nothing he had previously experienced.

Seeking shelter, he entered the secured-room in his apartment and did not leave until the fire ceased over 24 hours later. Alya, a nurse, was required at the hospital, so he spent the next day playing with the two babies and calming them as much as possible.

            (TPS)

Friction Between Gaza Factions Intensifies; Iran Seeks a Bleeding Strip

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Photo by Kobi Richter/TPS on 6 May, 2019

Tensions between the Hamas and Islamic Jihad factions in Gaza are running high, as Iran, which backs the Islamic Jihad and factions within Hamas, is seeking to push the area into a bloodbath while weakening Egypt’s sway on the ongoing developments in the Strip.

The friction between the factions exists under the surface. A source within Gaza told TPS that the drama between the factions is ongoing and is part of the reasons that pushed the two terror group to attack Israel.

The Islamic Jihad has learned, through leaks from Iran, that Hamas has made no progress in its negotiations with Israel, despite Hamas’ claims otherwise.

The Islamic Jihad has also learned the Hamas is focusing on the release of terrorists held in Israeli prisons, an achievement that would earn Hamas political clout at its expense.

Therefore, the Islamic Jihad attacked Israel in an attempt to thwart the deal.

Iran is not pleased with its rival Egypt’s sway on the region and has told Hamas that it is likewise unhappy the Hamas and Egypt are growing close. Iran has further told Hamas that it is interested in a bloody front with Israel on the Gaza border that will keep Israel busy and its focus away from Iran’s activities in Syria.

The source further said that while both terror groups fired at Israel, Islamic Jihad led the initiative to serve its Iranian masters and to thwart Hamas’ plans for a ceasefire with Israel.

The Islamic Jihad has gained power and independence in recent months, despite Hamas’ attempts to coordinate its actions with it.

In a related development, The Islamic Jihad terror group has admitted that a rocket it fired on Saturday evening killed a baby in the Gaza Strip, despite initial claims she was killed in an Israeli strike.

Gazan sources identified the victims as 14-month-old Saba Mahmoud Abu ‘Arar and her pregnant mother Falastin, although the initial reports of the identity of the woman appear to have been inaccurate, and it was not the baby’s mother – rather another female victim in the household.

TPS has learned that the baby and woman were killed when Islamic Jihad terrorists launched a rocket towards Israel from within a populated area in the east of Gaza City, but the rocket misfired and landed short, exploding in a nearby house and killing the two.

Mahmoud H., a local resident, told TPS about a massive pit he saw inside the house after the rocket’s explosion.

The rocket was locally produced and may have malfunctioned or exploded prematurely because of the low-grade explosives.

The Hamas-controlled Gazan Ministry of Health initially announced that Saba’s mother was killed, but then claimed that another woman named Falastin Abu ‘Arar was killed in the explosion. She may be Saba’s aunt.

A source in Gaza told TPS that Islamic Jihad representatives met with the Abu ‘Arar family on Sunday morning and offered them full compensation and a registry of the baby as a “Shahid” entitled to long-term support in exchange for their silence.

Arab journalists in Gaza are aware of the facts, but have refrained from reporting on them due to the sensitivity of the situation.

TPS was successful in capturing Hamas’ report on the Islamic Jihad’s culpability.

            (TPS)

On its 71st Independence Day, Israel’s Population Crosses 9M Mark

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Israel’s Central Bureau of Statistics (CBS) released its traditional statistics report on the citizens of Israel in honor of Yom Ha’Atzmaut, Israel’s Independence Day, which is celebrated this year on Wednesday night and Thursday. Photo by Ofra Moshkowitz/TPS on 7 May, 2019

Israel’s Central Bureau of Statistics (CBS) released its traditional statistics report on the citizens of Israel in honor of Yom Ha’Atzmaut, Israel’s Independence Day, which is celebrated this year on Wednesday night and Thursday.

Israel has 9,021,000 citizens, more than 10 times its population of 806,000 at the time of the establishment of the Jewish state in 1948.

On Israel’s 100th birthday, in 2048, the CBS estimate that Israel’s population will grow to about 15 million citizens. According to CBS projections, Israel’s population will surpass 10 million sometime between 2025 and 2030.

The Jewish population stands at 6,697,000 million, 75 percent of the entire population. Israel’s Arab citizens constitute 20.9 percent of the total population, numbering approximately 1,890,000. Non-Arab Christians and other religious groups constitute 4.8 percent of the population.

Since last year’s Independence Day, Israel’s population grew by 177,000, constituting a 2 percent growth, including 188,000 newborn babies; 47,000 people have died.

Israel welcomed 31,000 new immigrants. Some 3.2 million people have made Aliyah (immigration to Israel) since 1948, making up 43 percent of the total population.

About 75 percent of Israel’s population is Israeli-born, known as “sabras.” In 1948, only 35 percent were sabras.

48,000 Israelis are older than 90.

At the time of the establishment of the State of Israel, only one city had more than 100,000 residents – Tel Aviv-Yaffo. Today, 14 cities have over 100,000 residents; eight of them have more than 200,000. They are Jerusalem, Tel Aviv-Yaffo, Haifa, Rishon Letzion, Petah Tikvah, Ashdod, Netanya and Beer Sheva.

Israel’s capital, Jerusalem, is the most populated city, with some 883,000 residents – almost 10 percent of the population.

In 1949, Israel had merely 500 cities and towns. Today, it has over 1,200.

Israel has 68 institutions of higher education.

In 2019, over 70 years after the Holocaust, the largest Jewish population lives in Israel. This figure represents 43 percent of world Jewry.

    (Tazpit Press Service)