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Tag: terror attack

  • IDF issues demolition order for home of terrorist who murdered two in northern Israel

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    According to the military, the demolition notice was delivered after security forces completed the sealing of the attacker’s home.

    The IDF has issued a demolition order for the home of the terrorist who killed two people in a combined terror attack in northern Israel in December, the military confirmed on Monday.

    The attack, carried out across multiple locations, resulted in the murder of Shimshon Mordechai and Aviv Maor and wounded additional civilians.

    According to the military, the demolition notice was delivered after security forces completed the sealing of the attacker’s home. The IDF said the action is part of measures approved after operational and legal review.

    Combined terror attack killed two, wounded others

    During the attack, the terrorist ran over and killed Mordechai near Beit She’an. The terrorist then fled in a vehicle, exiting it to stab Maor on Route 71.

    The terrorist continued driving before being neutralized outside of Afula.

    “When we arrived at the scene, we saw the boy sitting inside a car, conscious and suffering from injuries to his limbs.” Daniel Mousai, a Magen David Adom EMT, said. “Citizens who were there told us that he had been hit by a fleeing vehicle, and they helped him in the first moments.”

    Mousai reports that just as they were loading the boy into an ambulance for him to be taken to the hospital, they received a report of an unconscious injured person on a nearby street.

    “I immediately got to him and saw a 68-year-old man lying on the side of the road, suffering from a serious chest injury. Together with the intensive care unit team, we provided medical treatment and performed CPR, but his injury was fatal, and we had to pronounce him dead on the spot.”

    Tzvi Jasper and Gadi Zaig contributed to this report.

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  • Gov’t body grants NIS 25m. to families of terrorism victims from funds seized from PA

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    The victims of the Ramallah lynching, the bus bombing in Kfar Darom, the Ben Yehuda Street bombing in Jerusalem, and the French Hill suicide bombing are among those who will receive compensation.

    The Israel Enforcement and Collection Authority (ECA) announced on Sunday that its operational arm, the Execution Office, collected NIS 25 million for families for the families of those killed and wounded in acts of terrorism.

    The Execution Office is the official government body responsible for enforcing civil judgments in Israel. The funds collected from the Palestinian Authority (PA) are the result of the lines placed on funds related to terrorist activities.

    Funds collected from the Palestinian Authority

    The funds are from monies by the Palestinian Authority to families of those who committed acts of terrorism. The ECA is involved in enforcing civil judgments, including collecting damages awarded against individuals involved in terrorist activities. This includes compensation for victims and families affected by acts of terrorism.

    One notable case involves an enforcement file initiated in 2019 by 41 families who are victims of terror. It rests on a civil ruling against the Palestinian Authority handed down in the Jerusalem District Court.

    The court had ordered compensation for various terrorist attacks, including the lynching in Ramallah, the bus bombing in Kfar Darom, the Ben Yehuda Street bombing in Jerusalem, the French Hill suicide bombing, the Megiddo junction car bomb, the Alon Moreh infiltration, and other terror incidents.

    Israelis attend a memorial ceremony for the victims of the 1948 Ben Yehuda Street bombing in Jerusalem on February 20, 2014. (credit: YONATAN SINDEL/FLASH90)

    In this case, the total debt amounted to NIS 67,636,330. Through enforcement actions, the authority collected 23,698,281 NIS from PA funds held by the State, along with additional amounts for specific families affected by terror attacks in Jerusalem and the Sbarro restaurant bombing.

    These actions are part of Israel’s broader efforts to ensure that victims of terrorism receive compensation, even when the perpetrators or their affiliates are state actors, said the ECA.

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  • Opinion | Why Qatar Changed Course on Hamas

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    Doha had operated with Israeli complicity, but a strike on Qatari soil changed the equation.

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    Amit Segal

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  • Battle over W. Bank Palestinian work permits heats up after Jerusalem terror attack

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    Defense Minister Israel Katz announced canceling 750 Palestinian work permits and demolishing homes after the Jerusalem attack, drawing pushback from security chiefs.

    A battle broke out within the defense establishment on Tuesday as Defense MinisterIsrael Katz announced the elimination of certain Palestinian work permits and the demolition of particular Palestinian residences in response to the terror attack in Jerusalem on Monday.

    More specifically, Katz said that he would cancel the work permits of 750 Palestinian workers from the villages of Qatannah and Al-Qubeibah, where the two terrorists who perpetrated Monday’s attack were from, and that he would order the demolition of Palestinian residences in those areas which had been built illegally.

    The defense minister’s statement generated significant confusion since he mentioned that he had the support of outgoing COGAT chief Maj.-Gen. Raasan Elian, but he did not mention the rest of the defense establishment.

    The Shin Bet and the two IDF commanders who have led the Central Command during the war, Maj.-Gen. Yehuda Fuchs and Maj.-Gen. Avi Bluth, have pressed heavily for the government to restore the over 200,000 West Bank Palestinian work permits approved before the war started, and which the cabinet dropped to around 10,000.

    Although the political echelon said dropping the work permit numbers was necessary to avoid terrorists after October 7, there has been no evidence to date of any statistically significant number of terrorists from those who received work permits.

    Israeli security forces disperse Palestinians in the West Bank city of Hebron, August 31, 2025. (credit: WISAM HASHLAMOUN/FLASH90)

    In fact, the Shin Bet and the IDF are convinced that the cabinet’s decision to cancel work permits drove many normative persons to terrorism by denying them work opportunities and leaving them nothing to do with their time.

    There are no indications that the Shin Bet or IDF Central Command have changed their view after the Monday terror attack, and The Jerusalem Post understands that they are still in favor of increasing, rather than decreasing, work permits for West Bank Palestinians (vs for Gazans.)

    In contrast, the Post can confirm that Elian does support Katz’s policy change.

    While Elian also supports increasing work permits for West Bank Palestinians in general, he believes that a narrow targeted work permit penalty against villages that produce terrorists could be effective in deterring future terror from such villages.

    ‘Only a few bad apples’

    When pressed that such a policy could backfire in the villages that were generally peaceful, with only a few “bad apples,” that would view the collective punishment as unfair, Elian would say that some past targeted penalties had demonstrated the opposite, that normative villages understood they were only being penalized because of the isolated incidents.

    The penalty had led the villagers to increase pressure on extremist elements in their village against perpetrating terror, in order to have their work permits restored.

    Sources did not dismiss the possibility of the work permits being restored if the villages remained quiet, though there was no set timeline for doing so.

    The Post also understands that the announcement regarding destroying Palestinian residences was not coordinated with IDF legal authorities.

    In fact, it is unclear what legal authority the IDF has to destroy Palestinian residences in Area A or Area B of the West Bank under Palestinian control because they were built “illegally,” given that the PA decides what is legal and illegal building in those areas.

    Israel can demolish Palestinian residences built in Area C without approval or in areas under PA control if connected to specific terrorists and approved by Israeli legal authorities and the courts.

    But this would not apply to a general rule against Palestinians who had not committed terror.

    Katz did not specify where or how many residences might be demolished.

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  • Israel behind pager explosions, sources say, as Hezbollah vows ‘reckoning’

    Israel behind pager explosions, sources say, as Hezbollah vows ‘reckoning’

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    Israel was behind the deadly explosion of pagers across Lebanon on Tuesday, sources told ABC News on Wednesday.

    At least 12 civilians were killed and more than 2,750 people injured in the explosions, according to Lebanese authorities. Around 200 of the injuries were critical and required surgery, the Lebanese Ministry of Public Health said.

    The civilians killed include an 8-year-old girl and an 11-year-old boy, according to Lebanese Health Minister Firass Abiad.

    The Hezbollah militant group said it is conducting a “security and scientific investigation” into the explosion of pagers across Lebanon on Tuesday.

    Hezbollah said 11 of its members were killed on Tuesday, though — as is typical in its statements — did not specify how they died.

    RELATED: What we know about the pagers that exploded in Lebanon and Syria

    “We hold the Israeli enemy fully responsible for this criminal aggression, which also targeted civilians and led to the deaths of a number of martyrs and the injury of a large number with various wounds,” Hezbollah said of the pager explosions in a Tuesday statement.

    In a Wednesday morning statement, Hezbollah said it would continue operations to “support Gaza,” and vowed a “reckoning” for Israel for the “massacre on Tuesday.”

    The dead and injured included people who are not members of Hezbollah, such as a 10-year-old girl killed in the eastern village of Saraain, according to Hezbollah-owned Al-Ahed News.

    Israel has not commented on its alleged involvement in the apparent attack, which prompted chaos in the capital Beirut and elsewhere in Hezbollah’s south Lebanon heartland.

    Around 100 hospitals received wounded people, the Lebanese Ministry of Public Health said, with hospitals in Beirut and its southern suburb quickly filling to capacity. Patients were then directed to other hospitals outside the region.

    Most of the injuries were to the face, hand or abdomen, officials said.

    The Iranian ambassador to Lebanon, Mojtaba Amani, was among those who had one of the pagers and was injured in an explosion Tuesday, according to Iranian state TV. The diplomat said in a phone call that he was “feeling well and fully conscious,” according to Iranian state TV.

    At least 14 people were also injured in targeted attacks on Hezbollah members in Syria, according to the Syrian Ministry of Foreign Affairs.

    The alleged Israeli operation has again piqued fears of escalation in the Israel-Hezbollah conflict ongoing since Oct. 8, when members of the Iranian-backed group began cross-border attacks in support of Hamas’ war with Israel in the Gaza Strip.

    Frontier skirmishes, Israeli strikes and Hezbollah rocket and artillery salvoes have been near-constant through 11 months of war in Gaza. Israeli officials have repeatedly threatened to launch a new military operation against Hezbollah along the Israel-Lebanon border. Tens of thousands of Israelis have left their homes in border regions due to the fighting.

    The Israel Defense Forces said warplanes hit Hezbollah targets in six locations in southern Lebanon overnight into Wednesday. Artillery strikes were also conducted, it added.

    Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah is due to make a public address on Thursday afternoon to address the situation. In February, Nasrallah urged members to stop using their cell phones, describing the technology as “a deadly agent.”

    Schools across Lebanon will be closed on Wednesday, Lebanese state media reported, citing the country’s Minister of Education. Schools and offices closed include public and private schools, high schools, technical institutes, the Lebanese University and private higher education institutions, Lebanese state media reported.

    The Lebanese Council of Ministers collectively condemned “this criminal Israeli aggression, which constitutes a serious violation of Lebanese sovereignty and a crime by all standards.”

    It added that “the government immediately began making all necessary contacts with the countries concerned and the United Nations to place it before its responsibilities regarding this continuing crime.”

    The United Nations special coordinator for Lebanon condemned the attack on Lebanon, calling it an “extremely concerning escalation in what is an already unacceptably volatile context,” in a statement released by the U.N. Office of the Spokesperson for the Secretary General.

    U.S. officials said Washington, D.C. had no role in — or pre-knowledge of — the apparent attack. State Department spokesperson Matthew Miller said the administration was “gathering information” on the incident.

    Both Miller and White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre declined to speculate on whether Israel was responsible.

    The U.S. and the European Union have both designated the Hezbollah militant group a foreign terrorist organization.

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