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Fact Check: No Israeli named ‘Yukhal Yulita' arrested in the Netherlands for war crimes, say officials

Fact Check: No Israeli named ‘Yukhal Yulita' arrested in the Netherlands for war crimes, say officials

Reuters2 days ago
An Israeli named 'Yukhal Yulita' has not been arrested by Dutch police, a spokesperson for the Netherlands Public Prosecution Service told Reuters, contrary to social media posts linking an individual of that name to alleged war crimes in Gaza.
'BREAKING: Dutch police have hauled in Israeli officer Yukhal Yulita while she vacationed in Europe — accused by human rights groups of war crimes in Rafah, where Israel massacred civilians and leveled entire neighborhoods,' said Facebook posts, opens new tab on August 10, which shared a picture of a woman next to a police officer.
A spokesperson for the Netherlands Public Prosecution Service's National Office told Reuters in a message: 'I can confirm that we have NOT arrested anybody with this name nor an Israeli national ICC- or international crimes related.'
An Israeli Defence Forces (IDF) spokesperson told Reuters in a message: "The IDF is not aware of any female officer being detained in any country.' A spokesperson for the Israeli Embassy in The Hague in an email said it had 'no knowledge of any such incident or of an individual by the name 'Yukhal Yulita'.'
The image, opens new tab shared in the posts dates to an August 29, 2016, article, opens new tab by British tabloid the Daily Mail on revelers in the northern English city of Newcastle. It describes the photograph as showing police marching 'a petite girl (right) away from the scene in the city centre' and cites xposurephotos.com, a now-inactive website.
There are no credible reports that a 'Yukhal Yulita' was arrested in the Netherlands this year.
A similar narrative featuring the same photo was shared online, opens new tab this month that said an individual with the same name was one of two Israelis arrested in Belgium in connection with alleged war crimes.
Belgium's Federal Public Prosecutor's Office said in a July 30 press release, opens new tab that it had received two complaints from an NGO against two Israeli soldiers attending the Tomorrowland music festival in Belgium. It added that the cases were referred to the International Criminal Court (ICC), but it did not name the individuals.
Belgium's Federal Public Prosecutor's Office did not respond to a Reuters request for comment.
An ICC spokesperson told Reuters in an email that the court has issued three public arrest warrants related to the 'situation of Palestine'., opens new tab The arrest warrants are for Mohammed Diab Ibrahim Al-Masri, Benjamin Netanyahu and Yoav Gallant. 'Yukhal Yulita' is not listed.
The spokesperson added that no one has been arrested at the request of the court following an ICC arrest warrant over the Gaza conflict.
False. The Dutch Public Prosecution Service told Reuters it had not arrested an Israeli national for alleged war crimes, and the Israeli embassy in the Netherlands said it had no knowledge of such an incident or of an individual named Yukhal Yulita. The image used in the posts dates to an unrelated August 2016 Daily Mail article.
This article was produced by the Reuters Fact Check team. Read more about our fact-checking work.
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I had revenge sex after boyfriend bedded my pal – but he thinks what I did was WORSE and constantly brings it up
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time6 hours ago

  • The Sun

I had revenge sex after boyfriend bedded my pal – but he thinks what I did was WORSE and constantly brings it up

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'Not in our name': Israelis protest against Gaza war - but Netanyahu seems unmoved
'Not in our name': Israelis protest against Gaza war - but Netanyahu seems unmoved

Sky News

time7 hours ago

  • Sky News

'Not in our name': Israelis protest against Gaza war - but Netanyahu seems unmoved

The coordinates came through last minute. The instruction was to get there fast. People organising demonstrations, blocking motorways and major intersections, did not want police getting wind of their plans. The one we found ourselves at, near the town of Lod, halfway between Tel Aviv and Jerusalem, felt a bit like a flash-mob protest, done and dusted in less than half an hour. The protestors had set fire to tyres, which blazed across the motorway, filling the sky with thick black smoke. They waved the Israeli flag and other yellow flags to show solidarity with the remaining hostages still in Gaza, whose photos they carried - their faces and names seared on the collective consciousness now - a collective trauma. "We want the war to end, we want our hostages back, we want our soldiers back safe home, and we want the humanitarian disaster in Gaza to end", one of the protestors told me. "We do not want to have these crimes made in our name." And then she was gone, off to the next location as the group vanished in a matter of minutes, leaving police to put out the fire. This was a day of stoppage, a nationwide strike - a change of tactics by the hostage families to up the ante with the government in their calls to stop the war, make a deal and bring the hostages home. Benjamin Netanyahu was unmoved. "Those who are calling for an end to the war today without defeating Hamas are not only hardening Hamas's stance and delaying the release of our hostages, they are also ensuring that the horrors of October 7 will recur again and again", he said at the start of the weekly cabinet meeting. Netanyahu 'broke contract' with us Ahead of the day of strike action, we spoke to a former Air Force reservist who quit in April in protest over Netanyahu's decision to break the ceasefire. "I felt he hadn't broken the contract with Hamas, he'd broken the contract with us - with the people, releasing the hostages, stopping the war. That was my breaking point." He wanted to be anonymous, identifying himself by the call sign 'F'. He had done three tours since the war began, mostly spent with eyes on Gaza - coordinating air strikes to support ground operations and ensuring the Air Force gets the target right. 2:55 'This is eternal war' "It's very complicated, very demanding and very hectic. The main problem is to see that you follow the rules and there are lots of rules - safety rules, international law rules, military doctrine rules. "And to see that there are no mistakes because you can check all the rules, you can make everything perfect, if there's a mistake, it bypasses everything you did and the bomb would fall on someone you didn't want it to fall on." I ask him how he feels about the huge death toll in Gaza. "Look, the uninvolved death toll is tough. It's tough personally, it's tough emotionally, it's tough professionally. It shouldn't happen. "When you conduct a war at this scale, it will happen. It will happen because of mistakes, because of the chaos of war." 1:05 He is softly spoken, considered and thoughtful, but says he's prepared to take part in the more radical protest actions, such as blocking motorways and starting fires, to try and get the message through. "Hamas is probably the weakest enemy we have had since 1948," he says. "In '48, in the liberation of Israel, we fought seven armies, much better equipped, better ordered than us, and the war took less time. "We stopped the war with Iran after 12 days. They are much more dangerous than Hamas. We stopped a war with Hezbollah in a couple of months, and they are still a much bigger threat than Hamas.

Police on the scent as cheese robbery plot crumbles
Police on the scent as cheese robbery plot crumbles

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Police on the scent as cheese robbery plot crumbles

Detectives hunting the gang behind the Grate Cheese Robbery, in which 22 tonnes of the world's finest cloth-bound artisan cheddar was stolen in an elaborate fraud, have arrested six middle-aged men as they stay on the scent of the suspects. A crew of con artists allegedly spent four months convincing Neal's Yard Dairy, the London wholesaler and retailer of artisan cheeses, that they were a well-known French cheese-buyer for a major distributor and supermarket, before making off with £300,000 worth of cloth-bound raw-milk two truckloads they took away 950 wheels of cheese in October last year, including 12 tonnes of Pitchfork Cheddar, nine tonnes of Westcombe Cheddar and two tonnes of Hafod Cheddar. When Neal's Yard weren't paid after delivery they quickly established that they had been conned and went to the police. They paid the three small-scale artisan cheese producers in full 'despite the significant financial blow' to themselves.A week later, detectives from the Metropolitan Police's specialist crime command arrested a 63-year-old man on suspicion of fraud by false representation and handling stolen goods. Since then news of the investigation has fallen silent as investigators sniffed out the trail of the stolen truckles. The Met has now revealed that they began arresting more suspects at the end of last year and made their latest arrest last month. The six men, aged between 37 and 63, have been arrested on suspicion of fraud by false representation and handling stolen goods. A 50-year-old man has also been interviewed under six arrested suspects have been released under investigation pending further enquiries. Ben Ticehurst, the head cheesemaker at Trethowan Brothers dairy, which makes Pitchfork Cheddar ten miles from the Somerset town that gives it name to the cheese, said it was 'very heartening to think that even if we have pushed it to the back of our minds, the police are digging in and finding out what has gone on'. Ticehurst added: 'Thankfully no one was harmed [during the theft] but for any of the small producers it could have been game over if Neal's Yard hadn't taken the financial hit and paid us.' 'Despite that, it will still have had a huge impact on their ability to help small cheesemakers like us, with the incredible amount of work they put into their staff helping cheesemakers with incredibly technical things so we can make the best cheeses we can.' After the initial arrest of the 63-year-old man on October 30 last year, things went quiet until a flurry of activity in the New Year. A 37-year-old man was arrested on January 2, followed by a 45-year-old man on January 13 and another 63-year-old man on January 21. A 57-year-old man was arrested on April 30 and detectives arrested a 54-year-old man on July 3 and interviewed the 50-year-old man under caution on July 4. The alleged con started with an email to Neal's Yard in July 2024, from someone with a seemingly deep knowledge of cheese, requesting 950 cheddar truckles, or uncut wheels of cheese. • Can you freeze cheese? 34 cheese questions answered by an expert Over the course of several months the perpetrators allegedly impersonated a reputable distributor well known within the European cheese industry. An elaborate contract was drawn up, outlining detailed payment terms, and conversations with the alleged representative demonstrated a deep understanding of the sector, further lending credibility to the scheme. At the end of September, a haulier organised by the alleged fraudsters collected half the cheese from Neal's Yard Dairy's warehouse in Bermondsey, southeast London. The second delivery was made by a haulier arranged by Neal's Yard itself, who was instructed to drop the cheese off at a warehouse in north London. The haulier who carried out the delivery reported that the warehouse was 'not a typical food warehouse'. Neal's Yard was supposed to be paid within a week of the deliveries being made, which is typical for the food industry, but by the start of October they had heard nothing from the supposed they contacted the legitimate distributor, who they believed had made the order, they quickly established that they had been conned. The cheeses could conceivably be stored for up to 18 months, at the right temperature, without deterioration but as soon as they are cut they will dry and need to be eaten. The cheese producers believe the thieves may have tried to smuggle the cheese into the Middle East or Russia, away from the watchful gaze of the international artisan cheesemaking community, to avoid detection. News of the fraud, first dubbed the 'grate cheese robbery' by Jamie Oliver, made headlines around the world and shone a spotlight on the world of expensive artisan produce. Ticehurst believes the public were initially shocked that someone would value cheese highly enough to organise an elaborate deception to steal it, but he thinks their produce should be regarded in the same way as fine wines or sports Cheddar is made by hand in small batches and costs about £1,200 per 25kg truckle. After its first year of production it won Best British Cheese at the World Cheese Awards in 2019 and was judged the fourth best cheese on the be considered traditional Somerset clothbound cheddar, it must be made by hand from raw cow's milk, with calf rennet and local starter cultures used in the process.

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