Israeli soldiers kill 18-year-old Palestinian in West Bank
The settlers had attacked the village hours before the killing of the teenager, identified as Hamdan Mussa Mohammed Abu Alia by the ministry.
Israeli forces stormed a village, shot Abu Alia in the back, and detained him while he was injured, Quds News Network reported. He later died of his injuries in a hospital.
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Middle East Eye
18 hours ago
- Middle East Eye
West Bank mourns teen killed by Israeli forces
Palestinians in the occupied West Bank village of Al-Mughayyir, northeast of Ramallah, held a funeral for 18-year-old Hamdan Abu Aliya, who was killed by Israeli forces on Saturday. Mourners carried his body through the streets, waving Palestinian flags and banners of Fatah and Hamas while chanting, 'With our souls and our blood, we will redeem you, martyr.' His father, Musa Abu Aliya, sent a message beyond the village: 'Enough betrayal, enough humiliation, enough insult. No matter how many they kill, time is on our side. It is impossible for us to give up our land.' The Palestinian health ministry confirmed his death late on Saturday, saying he was shot by 'occupation forces in the town of Al-Mughayyir'. Responding to AFP, the Israeli army said its soldiers opened fire after 'terrorists' hurled stones and Molotov cocktails at occupation troops.


Middle East Eye
a day ago
- Middle East Eye
Senior Israel National Cyber Directorate official arrested on suspicion of paedophilia
Israeli media has reported that a senior official in the Israel National Cyber Directorate was arrested in Las Vegas on suspicion of online paedophilia. According to a report on the Israeli news website Ynet, Tom Alexandrovich, 38, was arrested for questioning by the Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department during a conference he had attended on behalf of the cyber directorate last week. He was arrested along with seven other suspects as part of "a multi-agency operation targeting child sex predators [which] led to the arrest of eight individuals over the past two weeks", Las Vegas police said in a statement. The suspects, according to local police, "face felony charges of Luring a Child with Computer for Sex Act". The Israel National Cyber Directorate, which is supervised by the Prime Minister's Office, said in response: "The employee informed the Directorate that during his trip to the United States he was questioned by the US authorities on matters not related to work matters, and returned to Israel on the scheduled date of return. "The Directorate has not yet received additional details through the authorised channels. If it receives, the Directorate will act accordingly. "At this stage, in a joint decision, the employee went on leave to deal with the matter until things will become clear." However, Ynet reported that, contrary to the directorate's statement, Las Vegas police documents indicate that Alexandrovich - head of the cyber directorate's technological defence division - was arrested in the US. According to the report, the Israeli senior official was released on $10,000 bail after appearing before a judge. "The documents indicate that Alexandrovich is suspected of seducing a mentally ill child using computer technology to have sex," Ynet said. In response, the Israel National Cyber Directorate added that it "was not involved in any matter related to the bail". Israel Police refused to comment on Alexandrovich's situation after his return to the country, saying: "As a rule, any complaint or information that raises suspicion of committing a criminal offence is examined by the police, and where there is a reasonable basis for suspicion that a criminal offence has been committed, an investigation is opened in accordance with each case and its circumstances. "We do not provide details regarding the existence or non-existence of investigations, and this does not confirm or deny their existence." The case comes after another senior Israeli official was accused of inappropriate behaviour. Israel's ambassador to the United Arab Emirates (UAE), Yossi Shelley, was recalled last month after senior Emirati officials complained of inappropriate conduct. Shelley, who served as director general of the Prime Minister's Office before becoming ambassador to the UAE, is considered close to Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. A senior Israeli foreign ministry official told Channel 12 on Saturday that "the subject he talks about all the time in an exaggerated way is prostitutes", adding: "That's what he tells everyone about, that's what he likes to talk about the most." According to the report, Shelley used to go to "dubious places" during his time in the UAE. When Emirati officials sought to coordinate these visits, "Shelley went wild and just attacked the security guards by shouting: 'You won't lock me up.'"


Middle East Eye
a day ago
- Middle East Eye
Protests held across Israel calling for end to war in Gaza
Israeli protesters took to the streets on Sunday calling for an end to the war in Gaza and a deal to release captives held there. The demonstrations came days after Israel's security cabinet approved plans to fully occupy Gaza City. Forty-nine Israeli captives remain in Gaza, including 27 whom the Israeli military says are dead. A large Israeli flag covered with portraits of the remaining captives was unfurled in Tel Aviv's so-called "Hostage Square", which has been a focal point for protests. Demonstrators blocked several roads in the city, including the highway connecting Tel Aviv and Jerusalem, where demonstrators set tyres on fire and caused traffic jams. Protest organisers and the main campaign group representing the families of captives called for a general strike on Sunday, the first day of the week in Israel. In Jerusalem and Tel Aviv, many businesses were shut. The Hostages and Missing Families Forum said in a statement that protesters would "shut down the country today (Sunday) with one clear call: Bring back the 50 hostages, end the war". Israeli government ministers condemned the demonstrations. Israel's far-right Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich decried "a perverse and harmful campaign that plays into the hands of Hamas". He stated that public pressure to secure a ceasefire agreement effectively "buries the hostages in tunnels and seeks to push the State of Israel to surrender to its enemies and jeopardise its security and future". Culture Minister Miki Zohar, of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's Likud party, said that blocking roads and disrupting daily life "is a serious mistake and a reward to the enemy". Israeli police beefed up forces, saying no "public order disturbances" would be tolerated. Footage from AFP showed protesters at a rally in Beeri, a kibbutz near the Gaza boundary that was one of the hardest-hit communities in the Hamas attack on 7 October 2023. Reporting by AFP