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'Red stop' 24-hour crackdown: Israel police arrest nine suspects, seize weapons, vehicles

'Red stop' 24-hour crackdown: Israel police arrest nine suspects, seize weapons, vehicles

Yahoo6 days ago

Israel Police, in a joint 24-hour crackdown with IDF and Border Police, arrested nine suspects in the West Bank for serious crimes, seizing weapons and stolen vehicles.
Israel Police officers in the West Bank arrested nine suspects during a 24-hour crackdown in an operation titled "Red Stop," which targeted weapons, ammunition, stolen vehicles, and suspects involved in serious crimes, the police announced Wednesday.
The operation, which District Commander Commissioner Moshe Pinchi led, was carried out in collaboration with IDF forces and Border Police units across several areas in the West Bank. According to police, the coordinated effort yielded significant results in combating crime and strengthening governance.
In Hebron, local officers, together with Yehuda Brigade troops, seized a 9mm handgun, 50 bullets, a hunting rifle, and six shotgun shells during a search guided by station intelligence. Two Hebron residents were arrested and taken in for questioning.
In Beit Awwa, near Hebron, an offensive operation led by the Yehuda Special Patrol Unit and detectives from the Yehuda subdistrict crime-fighting unit, with IDF forces, resulted in the discovery of a Carlo-type submachine gun and a matching magazine. A local resident was arrested and taken for further investigation.
In the village of Kabalan, near Nablus, a combined intelligence and detective operation by the Ariel station and IDF forces from the Shomron Brigade led to the arrest of four suspects believed to be part of a vehicle-theft ring. Police seized a stolen 2023 vehicle, a 'Mash-tova' vehicle, break-in tools, and a tow cable. The suspects were transferred to the Ariel station for further questioning.
Modi'in Illit station police officers located a stolen vehicle from the Holon area near the entrance to Rantis. A suspect from Kabatiya was arrested and transferred to the Holon station in the Tel Aviv district for investigation.
In Hebron, Border Police tactical units, along with Shahar Battalion forces from the Yehuda Brigade and Hebron station officers, arrested a suspect considered a main target for property crimes and vehicle theft. The suspect, a resident of Idhna, was taken to the Border Police's southern district Yamar unit and Kiryat Malachi station for further questioning.
Elsewhere, police officers conducted a large-scale traffic operation, including six license suspensions, 10 vehicle seizures, and 16 citations for weight violations. A truck found with a 62% overload was seized, the driver's license was revoked, and a criminal case was opened. Another driver was found driving while disqualified — for the second time — with additional violations, and was sent to Ofer Prison.
The West Bank District Police said they would continue to act decisively, in cooperation with all security branches, to fight serious crime, seize weapons, and enhance the sense of security for residents of the region.

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'Violation of int'l law': Hamas, foreign gov'ts attack Israel over interception of Gaza flotilla
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'Violation of int'l law': Hamas, foreign gov'ts attack Israel over interception of Gaza flotilla

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Left-wing activists like Greta Thunberg care more about fame than facts
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Left-wing activists like Greta Thunberg care more about fame than facts

As yet, Greta Thunberg has not had her money shot. In terms of Insta-activism, her seafaring jaunt to deliver aid to Gaza has been farcical. It was always going to be. First, let me say two things clearly. I totally support more aid going into Gaza: food and medicine are needed. I want us to stop selling arms to Israel. While I support the right of Israel to exist, I do not support its right to keep on killing the people of Gaza. It's unbearable. But the last thing the Israel-Gaza conflict needs is more martyrs, especially cute eco-warriors in short skirts. It also doesn't need hypocrites – particularly ones who also claim to champion women's rights. The great irony is that Greta, with her exposed legs, dissenting views and freedom to express them, would not be tolerated by Hamas. But clearly that's by the by. When it comes to the moral high road, the likes of Thunberg seek to occupy ALL of it, no matter how muddled the thinking. This is precisely the problem. Pretending you can sail into a war zone and 'help' is a grandiose delusion. But, of course, Greta and her 'aid boat' were largely a symbolic protest. What matters above all are the images of the selfie-yacht and the attention they can garner. Being boarded and detained (or, as she puts it, 'kidnapped') by Israeli forces gave her exactly what she had hoped for to kick against. But unfortunately for Thunberg, who had handily pre-recorded a video for just such an event, the actual image of the 'kidnap' is her smiling as she is being handed a pastrami sandwich by an Israeli soldier. This image will forever be compared with the horror show of the actual kidnap of hostages by Hamas and other Palestinian militant groups. There are girls younger than Greta, with bloodied pants, their Achilles tendons cut; a mother clutching her two red-haired children whom we now know are dead; a terrified old lady being abducted. It is said that the Israel Defence Forces (IDF) will force Thunberg and her crew to watch the brutal footage recorded on October 7. I doubt this will make much difference. In 2023, the IDF showed Hamas body cam footage collected after the Nova festival attack to the press in London. Most of the viewers were in tears but certain activist 'journalists' came out saying there was no proof of women being raped as they had not been shown that. Thunberg, like so many of her generation wrapped up in their made-in-China keffiyehs, are not interested in the specifics of this conflict. This is what happens when a young girl with a penchant for protest becomes too feted. She addressed national parliaments and Davos as a climate activist and was interviewed everywhere, so she must have grasped the fact that her youth and passion energised many. Unsurprisingly, then, her symbolic power was soon commodified as she appeared at protest after protest, morphing effortlessly from climate change activism to Palestinian solidarity. Political activism is now algorithmic. Hey, if you liked that cause, then try this one. The 'Left' these days often seems little more than a collection of disparate causes: eco stuff, trans rights and Free Palestine. The contradictions between these beliefs are underplayed as they become bundled together as an omnicause. I first heard that word used in 2023. The omnicause can incorporate everything from animal rights to emptying the jails. Forget the single issues that require specific, often boring campaigning: the omnicause is a moronic vacuum where analysis goes to die. It is a product partly of the horizontalisation of social media. By this, I mean that something such as Black Lives Matter and Defund the Police, which had relevance in America a few years ago, gets picked up here… even though we have a quite different population and methods of policing. Those protesting what is happening in Gaza are not all uninformed, but many are. Younger people recruited from Just Stop Oil (and now presenting as Youth Demand) have stopped soup-throwing in favour of this new pressing cause. But they have not talked about famine in Yemen or the atrocities of Sudan. Interconnectedness has its limits, after all. There may well be links between climate change and war. Many argue that drought was a factor in the unrest that led to the Syrian civil war. The omnicause, though, does not do specifics. It favours symbolic demonstrations that can go viral. These simplistic spectacles of righteousness often backfire. What did Fossil Free Books achieve, for instance? It decided to campaign against companies that had any connection to Israel. The result was that investment firms such as Baillie Gifford stopped funding book festivals. How this helped either the environment or indeed the Palestinian cause is something of a mystery. Thunberg's stunt has been similarly self-aggrandising and vacuous. Watching footage of this climate activist and her mates all chucking their expensive phones into the sea as they were about to be taken by the Israelis showed that, of course, when the chips were down, environmental concerns went out of the window. The omnicause does not require logic, consistency or even coherence. It is closer to acting than activism. It depends on melodrama and a narrative of provocative images. Thunberg may be brave and have been prepared to sacrifice herself – though for what, exactly, I am not sure. But now we have seen the pictures, I am afraid that what she has sacrificed has been her integrity. The omnicause burns itself out in the end because it has no actual strategy. It simply signifies tribal loyalty. It gobbles everything up and spits out its participants, who simply move on to the next 'wrong' thing. You might think that, for Thunberg, her ship has sailed. But that does not mean she won't clamber aboard the next one that hoves into view. Broaden your horizons with award-winning British journalism. Try The Telegraph free for 1 month with unlimited access to our award-winning website, exclusive app, money-saving offers and more.

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