Rocket fire still option on the table, terror groups say ahead of Jerusalem Day flag march

“All scenarios are open, including firing missiles from multiple fronts,” the terror official said.

By World Israel News Staff

Despite a message from Israel delivered via Egyptian mediators that Jerusalem is not interested in an escalation, terror groups said that violence is still on the table as a response to today’s Flag March in Israel’s capital city.

Speaking to the Lebanon-based, Hezbollah-affiliated Al-Akhbar newspaper, spokesmen for several Palestinian terror groups repeated their threats that the march passing through the Muslim Quarter of the Old City may see dramatic retaliation, such as rockets fired from Gaza.

“The provocations on the ground, and the attempt to change the status quo, will not pass [quietly],” a senior terrorist told Al-Akhbar, according to a Maariv report.

“Israel’s belief that the resistance in Gaza cannot start a new round is wrong, we are monitoring what is happening in Jerusalem, and we have the right to protect the Al-Aqsa Mosque,” the terrorist continued.

“The Palestinians in Jerusalem and [Judea and Samaria] are the mosque’s first line of defense.”

According to Hebrew language media, Iran and its proxy groups are intentionally spreading misinformation on social media that marchers are planning on gathering at the Temple Mount.

Police have stressed that marchers waving Israeli flags will not be permitted to enter the compound.

“If the extremists take steps that threaten the status quo in Jerusalem, all scenarios are open, including firing missiles from multiple fronts,” the terror official added.

Although defense officials have said they believe the likelihood that rockets will be fired is low, following last week’s Operation Shield and Arrow, Iron Dome batteries were deployed and reinforced across Israel’s south.

“The march of the Zionist flags will not pass, and the response will inevitably come,” Hamas spokesman Salah al-Bardawil told Arabic-language media on Wednesday.

“This is a holiday – the policy is to allow complete freedom of movement for Jews throughout Jerusalem. All the threats of terrorism, all the threats of bullying, all the threats of provocations of one kind or another need to be shut down,” National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir said in a statement on Thursday morning.

Ben-Gvir also added that generally speaking, Jews should be allowed to “ascend to the Temple Mount, without anyone thinking that it is possible to threaten them or harm them.”

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Jordanian MP indicted for attempting to smuggle guns into Israel

The legislator’s immunity was lifted and he can face up to 15 years in prison.

By Batya Jerenberg, World Israel News

Jordanian MP Imad Al-Adwan was indicted Tuesday in Jordan’s State Security Court for his attempt last month to smuggle hundreds of weapons and gold into Israel through the Allenby Crossing.

The pro-Hamas legislator’s immunity was lifted in a special session of parliament so he could be tried. The public prosecutor has now charged him with “exporting weapons four times with the intent to use them illegally, and carrying out actions that would disturb public order and threaten community security.”

While the indictment only mentions four weapons smuggling incidents, Israel’s Shabak says that in the last 14 months Al-Adwan used his diplomatic passport a dozen times to enable him to run all sorts of contraband into Judea and Samaria in his car. These included e-cigarettes, birds, pigeons and gold bars, as well as firearms.

When he was caught in April, he had 194 handguns, over a dozen assault rifles, ammunition and nearly 100 kg of gold in his possession that were allegedly meant for Palestinian terrorist groups. He had been searched on this occasion by customs agents, who were tipped-off shortly before his arrival.

Al-Adwan faces up to 15 years in prison if convicted on both charges, based on Amman’s anti-terror laws. A Jordanian official told Sky News’ Arabic station that if a final verdict is filed against him, Jordan’s Constitution allows for him to be automatically removed from Parliament, without the need to be dismissed. Until then he can participate in its meetings. It was unclear if he could also vote on proposed laws.

According to news site Arab48.com, the 35-year-old parliamentarian comes from one of the most well-known tribes in Jordan. A member of the legislature’s Palestine Committee, he is a harsh critic of Israel and of any normalizing of relations between his country and the Jewish state, despite the peace treaty they signed in 1994.

His motives for smuggling may have been mixed, however, as he admitted to Israeli interrogators that he had received large sums of money for his illicit work.

Following his arrest, Jordanian security detained several of Al-Adwan’s alleged accomplices in the kingdom, who were linked to this smuggling attempt as well as previous ones. Jordan’s Petra news agency reported that they had admitted their crimes to the authorities.

Israeli forces also arrested a number of suspected colleagues in Judea and Samaria following Al-Adwan’s detention.

He was returned to Jordan to stand trial after Amman put heavy pressure on Israel, with the promise to deal with him “harshly.”

 

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Coalition crisis? ‘If the right-wing gov’t falls, it’ll be Ben-Gvir’s fault’

After Likud refuses to transfer promised funds for communities in the Galilee and Negev regions, Otzma Yehudit boycotts critical votes.

By World Israel News Staff

Tensions are running high between National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, after the premier failed to live up to a coalition agreement with the Otzma Yehudit party to provide substantial budget funding to communities in the Negev and Galilee regions.

As an act of protest on Wednesday, Ben-Gvir, who is the head of Otzma Yehudit, ordered his party mates to boycott coalition voting. His party obeyed, with their MKs missing critical votes – leading to the opposition successfully passing a bill.

But Netanyahu’s Likud – which is the largest political party in both the Knesset and among Israeli voters – is reportedly sending a message that they will not cave to threats from their coalition partner.

According to Ynet, Likud officials told Otzma Yehudit officials that it’s “impossible to work like this” and that they would certainly not transfer the funds after the smaller party’s stunt, arguing that doing so would be “giving in to an ultimatum.”

Likud MK Ofir Katz slammed Otzma Yehudit in a statement, charging that they were “paving the way for the fall of the right-wing government.”

An anonymous Likud official told Hebrew-language media that “the fall of the right-wing government will be Ben-Gvir’s fault.”

The official alleged that the lawmaker “cares more about media coverage than maintaining the right-wing government and the integrity of the coalition…Maybe it really is better that they bring down the government. We’ll go to elections and the public will reject the parties that brought down a right-wing government.”

Despite Likud’s chastising, Otzma Yehudit MKs signaled that they are not planning to back down.

In a statement, the party said that “the residents of the Negev and the Galilee, and the periphery, are just as important as coalition discipline.”

Notably, the ultra-Orthodox United Torah Judaism party has also been expressing displeasure with the current government, threatening to bring down the coalition should a law easing the IDF exemption process for yeshiva students not be passed by the end of the month.

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Police finalize preparations for Jerusalem flag march, decry misinformation

Thousands of officers will be deployed along the march route, and special technological means will also be employed to secure the event, including drones and cameras.

By Shimon Sherman, JNS

Jerusalem police have finalized security preparations for Thursday’s annual flag march in Jerusalem. Police have been working “hand in hand” with the Israel Defense Forces Home Front Command and Jerusalem City Hall to prepare for the event, said Jerusalem District Police Chief Superintendent Yoram Segal in a statement on Wednesday.

The march, typically featuring thousands of Israeli youths waving Israeli flags, is part of the annual Jerusalem Day festivities and celebrates the city’s reunification in the 1967 Six-Day War. Setting out from the city center, the procession will pass through the Old City’s Damascus Gate and proceed through the Old City to the Western Wall. The route does not pass through the adjacent Temple Mount.

More than 2,000 police officers will secure the march’s route through the Old City, and more than 1,000 security personnel will be on duty at other celebratory events in the Israeli capital.

Several streets would be closed in the city on Thursday, but the restrictions have been designed to accommodate those living along the march’s route, including in the Old City’s Muslim Quarter, as much as possible, said Segal.

“We will attempt, to the best of our power, to allow everyone who is not participating in the march to go about their daily lives without being affected by this event,” he said.

According to Mirit Ben-Mayor, chief superintendent of the Israel Police spokesperson’s unit, preparations for the event included liaising with local businessmen and community leaders.

“We have been working with everyone, including both Muslim and Jewish leaders, as well as commercial businessmen, to prepare them for this day and make sure everyone is aware of the details. Good communication between police and community leaders is a major part of the work that we have been doing to prepare for this day,” he said.

Ben-Mayor also addressed allegations of radicalism that have appeared in both foreign and local media, dismissing it as “disinformation.”

“There has been a lot of incitement and disinformation surrounding this march. This is a festive event, and 99% of the people that will be taking part in it are peaceful people who are here to celebrate, and to reach the Western Wall” he said. The local population, including the Arab population of the Muslim Quarter, were aware that the purpose of the march is celebration and not provocation, he added.

Police also warned that any attempt to disturb the peace would be met with a harsh response.

“There is a small minority on both sides that may try to agitate or break the law,” said Ben-Mayor. “This minority who may choose to commit illegal action during the march will be prosecuted to the full extent of Israeli law. We will not allow anyone from any side to disturb the peace or endanger people’s safety. It is crucial to understand that this is not the purpose of this march; this march is a celebration of the reunification of the city,” he added.

Segal echoed the message, saying, “We will not allow violence from any part of the community.”

In fact, said Segal, police have already detained several people for incitement and threats.

In addition to officers being deployed along the march route, technological means will also be employed to secure the event, including drones and cameras, said Ben-Mayor.

Segal said that the police view this event no differently than any other major religious festival in the city, whether Christian, Jewish, Islamic or secular.

“We protect Christian festivals, and we also are very involved in religious events during the holy month of Ramadan. In the same way, we will protect the right of Jewish people to march to the holy site of the Western Wall to celebrate the reunification of Jerusalem.”

Sagal further said that Thursday’s events will not influence other religious practices across the city, specifically on the Temple Mount.

“We will maintain freedom of worship in the main religious places open to the public. Jewish visits to the Temple Mount will commence according to the usual schedule and the Muslim entrances to the Temple Mount will not be touched,” he said.

Police had proposed a general closure on Judea and Samaria on Thursday due to threats from Palestinian terrorist groups, but the move was opposed by the Israeli defense establishment, Israel National News reported on Thursday morning, citing Army Radio.

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Man Charged with Murdering Four People and Leaving Their Bodies in a Cornfield

After an extensive trial, Antoine Suggs, 40, was sentenced to 103 years in prison on Monday as retribution for the fatal shootings of four people found inside a Mercedes Benz SUV in a Wisconsin cornfield on September 12, 2021.

The victims of Suggs’ cruel and inhumane act of violence were identified as Jasmine Sturm, 30; her brother, Matthew Pettus, 26; her boyfriend, Loyace Foreman III, 35; and her friend, Nitosha Flug-Presley, 30. In April, Suggs was convicted of four counts of second-degree murder.

At the sentencing hearing, the devastating losses that the victims’ families had faced were made clear. Angela Sturm, the mother of Sturm and Pettus, shared a sentiment of forever-abiding sorrow. “Not a day goes by that I don’t cry,” she said. “Being alone with my thoughts is very hard. I miss their voices. I have this irrational fear that I will forget what they look and sound like.”

Loyace Foreman’s father described the harshness of the situation, noting that the four lives were taken while Suggs still had his. For his part, Suggs declared himself the victim, alleging that the deceased was attempting to rob him and he was acting in self-defense. The judge presiding over the case, JaPaul Harris, responded that while the families may never know the true motive, Suggs must assume full responsibility for the consequence of his actions.

According to a criminal complaint, the incident began with an argument in a St. Paul bar. Following this, surveillance footage showed evidence of Suggs killing the four victims sometime between 3:30 and 3:48 a.m. on September 12.

Additionally, it was revealed that Suggs’ told his father, Darren Lee McWright, that he had “snapped” before killing the four victims. McWright was accused of driving Suggs’ to Minnesota from Wisconsin in the aftermath, for which he later pleaded guilty and was sentenced to five years in prison.

CNN falsely claims Dee family was engaged in ‘shoot-out’ with terrorists

Christiane Amanpour implies that Lucy Dee and her daughters, who were unarmed civilians brutally shot at point blank range, had been exchanging fire with terrorists at the time of their killings.

By Lauren Marcus, World Israel News

CNN‘s Christiane Amanpour falsely claimed Lucy Dee and her daughters Maia and Rina Dee were “killed in a shoot-out” with Palestinian terrorists, implying that they had been armed and defending themselves at the time of their murders.

In reality, the Dee women, who were unarmed civilians, were brutally murdered by terrorists firing upon their vehicle at point blank range, in a clear act of terror.

Pro-Israel advocacy group Honest Reporting posted a clip of Amanpour from several weeks ago discussing the murders on TV, stating that the family was “killed in a shoot-out” and stating that Lucy Dee had died of her injuries.

According to @CNN‘s Christiane Amanpour, three members of the Dee family “were killed in a shootout.”

A shootout is two sides firing at each other.

A mother & her two daughters were shot at close range by Palestinian terrorists.@amanpour, you owe a grieving family an apology. pic.twitter.com/PQUPTfHx5R

— HonestReporting (@HonestReporting) May 11, 2023

“A shoot-out is two sides firing at each other,” Honest Reporting posted as a caption to the clip. “A mother and her two daughters were shot at close range by Palestinian terrorists.”

Addressing Amanpour, they wrote that “you owe a grieving family an apology.”

Israel’s Foreign Ministry said that the Consulate in Atlanta is planning on sending a formal letter of complaint to CNN regarding the falsehood.

Amanpour, a longtime foreign correspondent for the channel, has an extensive history of glossing over Palestinian terrorism and bias against Israel.

During an interview with former Israeli Ambassador to France Yael German in February, Amanpour falsely claimed that the majority of Palestinians are opposed to terror and in-favor of a two-state solution.

“The latest polls from the Palestinian side also show that they want a peaceful, two-state solution to co-exist with you,” she asserted.

However, Amanpour’s claim is demonstrably false.

A March 2023 poll from the Palestinian Center for Policy and Survey Research (PCPSR), a staggering 74 percent of Palestinians had a favorable opinion about the shooting attack that claimed the lives of brothers Yagel and Hallel Yaniv at the Huwara junction – an attack that was very similar to that perpetrated against the Dee family.

According to a June 2022 survey by the PCPSR, just 28 percent of Palestinians are in favor of a two-state solution.

In January, Amanpour made a moral equivocation between the Assad regime in Syria and the actions of the Israeli government.

“Do you feel equally angry about the horrible situation that’s going on in your own country, and the human rights attacks, killings of Palestinians?” Amanpour asked an Israeli guest on her program, who had spoken about mass murder during the Syrian civil war.

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4-Year-Old Shoots Toddler

In East Harris County, Texas, a heartbreaking tragedy unfolded on Tuesday when a 4-year-old child inadvertently shot his 1-year-old sibling after discovering an unsecured gun in the home.

The 1-year-old was quickly taken to a nearby hospital and is being treated for a non-life-threatening injury. Speaking to KTRK-TV, the father explained that his 4-year-old is fond of playing with toy guns and had likely not realized they had stumbled upon the real thing.

Officials from the Harris County Sheriff’s Office are currently conducting interviews to better understand the situation, with Major Saul Suarez taking the opportunity to remind members of the community to heed gun safety measures. Once the investigation is over, the case will be passed on to the Harris County District Attorney’s Office.

Roughly two months ago, a similar tragedy occurred in Houston when a 3-year-old accidentally fatally shot their 4-year-old sibling. Harris County Sheriff Ed Gonzalez branded the incident as “very preventable” and implored adults to understand how vulnerable children are to untended firearms.

4 Young Children Survive 2 Weeks in the Jungle After Plane Crash

The dense jungle of Colombia proved no match for the strength of four young survivors. After a Cessna 206 plane carrying seven people crashed in the Colombian province of Caqueta on May 1st, the entire party seemed lost.

Engine failure on a route between Araracuara and San Jose del Guaviare had alerted an emergency signal just before the aircraft plunged into the lush vegetation.

Three adults, including the pilot of the plane, were found dead in the wreckage, but it appeared that the four remaining passengers – 13, 9, 4, and an 11-month-old – had managed to escape the plane and set off into the rainforest in search of aid.

The four children were found alive after two weeks of grueling search efforts led by members of Colombia’s military, fire services, and civil aviation authority.

The rescuers had pinpointed their whereabouts by searching for clues such as improvised shelters crafted from local vegetation and discarded fruit – a sign that the children had survived on the land. Assistance from both the Colombian air force and the army in the form of airplanes and helicopters was also instrumental in the successful rescue mission.

The four children’s survival filled Columbia’s people with joy and appreciation. President Gustavo Petro praised the heroes that fought “arduous efforts” to bring the kids to safety. This miraculous story of human resilience reminds us of the incredible power of the human spirit.

Ending Apostasy Laws in Sudan

Before there was Sudan, in the region south of Egypt, there was Kush, a legitimate geo-political force in the last millennium before the birth of Christ. Around 715 B.C., the kingdom conquered Egypt and began its regional dominance of lands stretching from the Mediterranean Sea to the southern Nile River for around 90 years. Two decades before Christ’s birth, Kush battled Rome for several years and forced the superpower into a ceasefire. Pyramids and other architectural wonders remind the world of its once influence and prestige. Its successor state, however, possesses neither.

Even so, this little-noticed country did something in 2020 that no other country has done since, at least, the end of World War I: Sudan repealed its law prohibiting apostasy. The repeal was championed as a decisive victory for its religious minorities by religious freedom advocates worldwide. But it was only heralded in the press for a New York minute. A careful look at this religio-civil transformation reveals the impact of three distinct groups who worked both independently and collectively for the law’s repeal: Muslims, women, and Christians.

A pivotal change in the country’s leadership preceded and enabled the repeal. In late 2018, displeasure with President Omar al-Bashir was at an apex after his nearly 30 years of brutal governance. There had been attempts by the Sudanese people to force change. Protests occurred in 2009, 2012, 2013, and 2015, but proved futile. His tyrannical rule, however, began to unravel in 2018. 20 years of U.S. sanctions had debilitated Sudan’s economy and Mr. Bashir’s failure to root out Islamists caused Saudi Arabia and the UAE to turn off the financial aid spigot. Fuel, food, and hard currency became scarce. The Sudanese people had had enough and returned to the streets with more vigor and more voices.  

The protests were comprised mainly of women of all ages. From remote villages to the front steps of Sudan’s military headquarters, estimates indicate 70% of all protestors were female and many were younger. According to Rabah Alsadig, a Sudanese human rights activist, this younger generation was motivated due to the “continuous sacrifices and sufferings” of their parents. 

Female power and influence are deeply etched into Sudan’s annals. Multiple women led Kush for almost 600 years beginning in the latter period of the Iron Age (c. 1200 BC-100 AD), including Queen Amanirenas who led the aforementioned successful defense of her people against Rome. Another case in point is a 19thcentury poet who rode onto the battlefield and rallied her reticent king and his soldiers to fight on.

The Sudanese women of today possess the same spirit of resolve that resided in their ancestral sisters. Despite many having suffered sexual abuse, harassment, and marginalization in Sudanese society, their determination and courage have not been quenched or even diminished. During the protests leading up to Mr. Bashir’s ouster, they “were visible leaders on the frontlines of the protest … They provided food, shelter, and necessary resources for other protesters. They were also victims of physical brutality, tear gas, and death,” the United Nations reported. Their importance is summed up perfectly in a mural of a Sudanese woman encircled with the statement, “A woman’s place is in the resistance.”

On April 5, 2019, an estimated 800,000 people congregated on the doorstep of the Headquarters of the Armed Forces in Khartoum. Unlike past instances, security forces allowed them to remain and the protest grew over the next six days to almost two million people, per the BBC. On April 11th, the military arrested Mr. Bashir and his rule ended. Over the next five months, protests continued and more blood was shed before the Transitional Military Council acquiesced to an interim government comprised of both military and civilian officials.

One of the key appointments in the new government was its justice minister, Nasredeen Abdulbari. Prior to the ouster of Mr. Bashir, he and other Islamic leaders and thinkers had been discussing the importance of religious freedom, specifically removing Article 126 from the penal code which prohibits Muslims from apostatizing. He understands Islam to be an advocate for religious freedom in light of the Quranic verse, “Let there be no compulsion in religion” (Al-Baqarah v. 256). In addition, a number of Muslim families, whose loved ones had converted to another religion, were desirous they be protected and supported a repeal of the apostasy law, according to multiple sources.

Apostasy is typically defined as leaving one’s religion (Islam in this instance), but, in Sudan, apostasy is also characterized as any “objection to any of the [Islamic] laws,” according to Kamal Fahmi, a Sudanese-born religious freedom advocate. It is a deft method to ensure a country’s leadership is not confronted with religious objections to its laws and policies. Mahmoud Mohamed Taha, an Islamic leader and thinker, was one who did challenge the prevailing interpretation of Islam in Sudan. He paid for it with his life. He was executed in 1985 for apostasy because he taught true Islam afforded people of all faiths equality. 

This belief in religious freedom was included in the country’s new constitution. Consequentially, Article 126 was a glaring violation that had to be amended. The barbarism of the law was exemplified in 2014 when a pregnant woman was charged, convicted, and sentenced to death for committing apostasy. Imprisoned and in shackles, awaiting her execution date, Meriam Yahia Ibrahim Ishag delivered her daughter in horrific conditions. Public outcry from the international community was great and the diplomacy of the U.S. and Italian governments eventually secured her release.

Mrs. Ibrahim’s case spurred more women and men to demonstrate for freedom of religion. Specifically, a large advocacy campaign on her behalf was organized by women. It also motivated Sudan’s small Christian population who had been calling for Article 126’s repeal since 1983. 

Raafat Samir, chairman of the Sudan Evangelical Community Council, said Christians fought the law earnestly and partnered with Muslims, underground atheists, international organizations, and with embassies for the law’s repeal. But Mr. Samir stressed it was not done for the sake of just Christians. “We did it as a type of belief for everyone,” he said. 

Ms. Alsadig, a Muslim, also believes anyone should have the option to change his or her religion if the person so chooses. “Article 126 is the outcome of a reactionary interpretation of Islam and the situation of executing Meriam [Ibrahim] or anyone else just because she [or] he changed her religion is absurd,” she said. Numerous Sudanese with Muslim backgrounds believe the same as many were already attending Christian churches before the repeal. That number has only increased since the repeal, Mr. Samir said.  

Ms. Alsadig and fellow activists were determined to push for its repeal even before Mr. Bashir was toppled. “In February 2018, the Democracy First organization initiated the formation of an advisory council for the initiative to combat violent extremism. The issue of apostasy punishment was one of its high concerns. … Hadia Hassaballa and I [were two] of its founders along with some other women,” she said.

In the eyes of Muslim extremists, Sudan being transformed into a country with guaranteed human rights is not welcome. “Sharia, sharia or we die … this is Khartoum not New York,” protestors chanted [shortly after the repeal was announced].  “No to secularism,” they continued. Other extremists are forthright about their displeasure and state they do not want Muslims leaving Islam for Christianity.

Presently, the Sudanese people’s “noble goal of a peaceful, free, and democratic state” is stalled due to two military factions battling to remain relevant and dominant in the post-Bahir era. As a result, the civilian population is suffering significantly. According to the United Nations, over 675 people are dead and over 5,500 have been injured as the two sides strive to maintain their previous roles of power and influence. Hence, it is uncertain whether Sudan will be able to get back on track and become a functioning democracy or if it will slide back into its totalitarian past. What is certain is Muslims, women, and Christians have exemplified the beauty of democracy. They have demonstrated to their fellow countrymen and the world great difference in belief or position in life is no obstacle to protecting and empowering the religiously marginalized.   

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