World
Extreme Israeli group takes root in US with fundraising bid
JERUSALEM (AP) — An Israeli group elevating funds for Jewish extremists convicted in a number of the nation’s most infamous hate crimes is amassing tax-exempt donations from People, in line with findings by The Related Press and the Israeli investigative platform Shomrim.
The data within the case recommend that Israel’s far proper is gaining a brand new foothold in the USA.
The amount of cash raised by a U.S. nonprofit just isn’t identified. However the AP and Shomrim have documented the cash path from New Jersey to imprisoned Israeli radicals who embrace Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin’s murderer and folks convicted in lethal assaults on Palestinians.
This abroad fundraising association has made it simpler for the Israeli group, Shlom Asiraich, to gather cash from People, who could make their contributions by the U.S. nonprofit with a bank card and declare a tax deduction.
Many Israeli causes, from hospitals to universities to charities, increase cash by U.S.-based arms. However having the technique adopted by a gaggle helping Jewish radicals raises authorized and ethical questions.
It additionally comes in opposition to the backdrop of a brand new, far-right authorities in Israel led by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, the place ultranationalists and extremist lawmakers have gained unprecedented energy.
Based on Shlom Asiraich’s promotional pamphlets, its beneficiaries embrace Yigal Amir, who assassinated Rabin in 1995; Amiram Ben-Uliel, convicted within the 2015 homicide of a Palestinian child and his mother and father in an arson assault; and Yosef Chaim Ben David, convicted of abducting and killing a 16-year-old Palestinian boy in Jerusalem in 2014. The group additionally assists an extremist ultra-Orthodox man who fatally stabbed a 16-year-old Israeli lady at Jerusalem’s homosexual delight parade in 2015.
Shlom Asiraich, or “The Effectively-Being of Your Prisoners,” has been elevating cash in Israel since no less than 2018, and formally registered as a nonprofit in 2020 by a gaggle largely consisting of Israelis from hard-line settlements within the West Financial institution. No less than 5 of the group’s seven founders have themselves been questioned by Israeli authorities for crimes associated to their actions in opposition to Palestinians. Some have been arrested and charged.
Recipients of its largesse have hailed the group for coming by in troublesome occasions.
“You don’t have any thought how a lot you assist us,” the household of Ben-Uliel, who’s serving three life sentences, wrote in a hand-written letter posted to the group’s Fb web page.
Being a comparatively new group, Shlom Asiraich’s official submitting to Israel’s nonprofit registry gives little knowledge and doesn’t point out how a lot cash it has raised. However in its promotional flyers, just lately broadcast by Israeli Channel 13 information, the group indicated it has raised 150,000 shekels (about $43,000).
Israeli nonprofits have lengthy sought funding overseas, with the U.S. a significant supply. Based on figures revealed by Noga Zivan, a guide for nonprofits in Israel, between 2018 to 2020 Jewish-American organizations alone donated $2 billion to Israel every year.
Israeli right-wing teams have lengthy raised funds within the U.S. However Dvir Kariv, a former official within the division of Israel’s home safety company Shin Wager that offers with Jewish violence, mentioned it’s uncommon for extremist Jews similar to those who run Shlom Asiraich to take action.
He mentioned the group seems to have taken a cue from different far-right Israeli teams, significantly Kach, an anti-Arab racist group that was as soon as banned as a terror group within the U.S. however which Kariv mentioned was adept at elevating cash there many years in the past.
Itamar Ben-Gvir, a senior Cupboard minister in Israel’s new far-right authorities, is a disciple of Kach’s founder, Rabbi Meir Kahane, who was as soon as barred from Israeli politics.
It’s not clear when Shlom Asiraich started working with the New Jersey-based World of Tzedaka, a nonprofit that claims it really works “to allow any particular person or group to boost cash for his or her particular trigger.”
Donors within the U.S. can enter the Shlom Asiraich web site and click on on a hyperlink that takes them to a donation web page hosted by World of Tzedaka. They’ll additionally donate instantly from World of Tzedaka’s web site.
Based on an tutorial video on the World of Tzedaka web site, fundraisers should record a rabbi as a reference and obtain approval from a Lakewood spiritual committee. World of Tzedaka costs $28 a month and a 3% processing price for transferring funds to an Israeli checking account, the location says.
World of Tzedaka helps different charitable ventures, most of them targeted on helping Jewish households in misery, in line with its web site.
Ellen Aprill, an knowledgeable on tax and charities at Loyola Regulation Faculty in Los Angeles, mentioned convicted criminals and their households could possibly be thought of in want and qualify as a permissible charitable objective.
Whereas supporting somebody convicted of acts of terrorism could possibly be seen as encouraging legal exercise, that might have to be confirmed, she mentioned.
Marcus Owens, a lawyer who ran the IRS’s nonprofit unit within the Nineteen Nineties, took a harder stance.
“The U.S. Division of Justice views help to the households of terrorists as a type of materials help for terrorism,” he mentioned.
With a view to turn out to be a tax-exempt group acknowledged by the IRS, a company should function solely for charitable, spiritual or instructional functions.
Repeated makes an attempt to succeed in representatives of Shlom Asiraich have been unsuccessful. An individual who answered the group’s cellphone quantity hung up on an AP reporter. Moshe Orbach, whose handle within the hard-line West Financial institution settlement of Yitzhar is listed because the group’s headquarters, declined by a lawyer to be interviewed.
A World of Tzedaka consultant hung up when requested for remark.
The IRS refused to reply questions concerning the group, saying “federal legislation prohibits the IRS from commenting.”
Based on paperwork obtained by the AP, Shlom Asiraich was registered as a nonprofit with Israeli authorities by Chanamel Dorfman, an lawyer and a prime aide to Ben-Gvir, Israel’s new nationwide safety minister.
Dorfman can also be listed because the group’s “lawyer/authorized adviser” on Guidestar, the official nonprofit registry’s web site.
In a textual content message, Dorfman denied ever having been the group’s authorized adviser and didn’t reply to extra questions. Dorfman just lately instructed the conservative every day Israel Hayom he was merely performing as a lawyer and that “if I knew that that is what this group does, I wouldn’t have registered it.”
In October, on the eve of the Jewish New Yr, Shlom Asiraich tweeted a photograph of snacks it offered to Jewish suspects below home arrest, and to households of Israelis convicted or charged with crimes in opposition to Palestinians. A observe accompanying the wine and different items the nonprofit offered known as the boys “beloved heroes.”
“Keep sturdy and stay loyal to the individuals of Israel and to the holy Torah and don’t cease being glad!” the observe learn.
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This text was revealed in partnership with Shomrim, The Heart for Media and Democracy in Israel.
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This story has been corrected to indicate the 12 months of Rabin’s assassination was 1995, not 2005.
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World
Palestinian official predicts Trump will 'destroy' Iran, leading to breakdown of remaining Hamas cells: report
A Palestinian Authority (PA) official reportedly predicted that President-elect Donald Trump will “destroy Iran” and that Tehran’s weakening will effectively break down the remaining Hamas terror cells.
Mohammad Hamdan, secretary-general of the PA’s ruling Fatah Party, reportedly made the comments to the New York Post on Dec. 19 during a meeting between the outlet and other top PA leaders in Nablus, about an hour south of the West Bank city of Jenin, where Western-backed PA forces have launched security operations against armed extremists aligned with Hamas this month.
The Post first reported the conversation on Monday.
“We are confronting Hamas’ ideology. Our problem is with Hamas’ link to regimes outside Palestine,” Hamdan told the Post, referencing Iran specifically.
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“We see that Trump and the ruling government in Israel are planning to destroy Iran, so Hamas [followers] will have no other choice than to become Palestinian,” he added.
A group of more than a dozen extremists stole two PA vehicles and paraded them down the streets of Jenin while waving Hamas and ISIS flags on Dec. 6, according to the Post.
Since then, PA forces have killed at least three extremists in the West Bank town and have vowed to arrest or “eliminate” the remaining people responsible.
Fatah suffered a major defeat in the 2006 election, resulting in rival Hamas seizing control of the Gaza Strip, hardening Islamic-extremist rule and launching repeated attacks on Israel.
The tipping point came when Hamas terrorists launched their coordinated attack on southern Israel from Gaza on Oct. 7, 2023, killing more than 1,200 people and taking more than 250 hostages.
As Israel has decimated Hamas in the Gaza Strip since then, the PA, which is backed by the U.S. and other Western governments, appears to be positioning itself to resume governance of Gaza once the war ends.
“Hamas rejects international legitimacy, meaning UN resolutions,” Hamdan said. “The world cannot accept a situation where a party does not accept international resolutions.”
Hamas and other Islamic extremist groups have sown distrust of the PA, accusing it of coordinating closely with Israel on past security raids on Jenin.
The Jewish state in the past has cracked down on Jenin, which has long been considered a terrorist stronghold. The PA security forces had until recently little presence there until its new security operations this month.
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At least three PA security force members have been killed, including a captain in the intelligence services, during armed clashes with extremists, The Associated Press reported. The PA has arrested dozens of people.
The Post said the PA leaders they interviewed condemned Israel’s increased settlements in the West Bank but said they supported the Jewish state’s right to exist.
Hamdan also reportedly told the Post that PA President Mahmoud Abbas – who slammed Israel and the United States before the United Nations General Assembly earlier this year – “still supports realistic relations with the Americans in order to achieve the aspirations of the Palestinians.” However, the secretary-general also argued that failed U.S. foreign policy in the Middle East was responsible for growing Islamic extremism.
“Look what happened in Syria. First, the U.S. declared the rebels to be al Qaeda, and then [last week] an American delegation visited Syria,” Hamdan told the Post. “And the one before that, when the Americans struck deals with the Taliban in Afghanistan. We as Palestinians believe that most of these extremist Islamic groups are produced by America by its effort to create a new Middle East.”
On the issue of post-war Gaza governance, one Israeli official told the Post that the PA remained an option but would need to stop “the corruption” and “funding terrorism” on Israeli settlers in the West bank.
The official acknowledged though that the PA could have “a historically unprecedented opportunity” to return to its control of the Palestinian territories.
The PA’s opposition to Hamas could provide unique leverage to “participate in day-after talks,” the Israeli official added.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
World
Gaza’s 2024: A year of war and misery
Palestinians in Gaza are entering the new year as defenceless and beleaguered as the last.
Israel’s war on the enclave continued into 2024, killing 23,842 people and wounding 51,925 during this year alone, driving the grisly official death toll to 46,376, according to the Gaza Health Ministry.
Israel has used siege and starve tactics, as well as scorched earth bombardment, drawing accusations that it is committing genocide, from rights groups and United Nations legal bodies.
All documented Israel’s systematic targeting of hospitals, displacement shelters, aid workers, journalists and so-called safe zones, which are often anything but.
In northern Gaza, the Israeli army has imposed a full and suffocating siege in an attempt to starve fighters and push out civilians, in what has been called “ethnic cleansing”.
These tactics violate international law and are creating the conditions to kill a people “in whole or in part”, matching the definition of genocide in the UN’s Genocide Convention, rights groups say.
“This last year has been very dark for us. How can I describe it in any other way? It’s been more than torturous,” said Eman Shaghnoubi, 52, from Deir el-Balah in Gaza.
“We have moved from one humiliation to another,” she added, remarking on the perpetual displacement of Palestinians in the enclave.
Within Gaza
Israel has rendered 34 hospitals in Gaza “nonfunctional” and forced 80 health centres to shut down entirely, according to the Gaza Government Media Office.
In the last few days, Israeli forces stormed the only remaining major hospital in Gaza’s devastated north, ejecting staff and patients before setting the medical facility on fire.
Torrential rain is currently lashing the tent villages that stand in place of many of Gaza’s towns and cities, with deaths from hypothermia rising as freezing temperatures continue to flatline.
Shaghnoubi, who has six boys and two girls, said that her children are struggling to survive in the cold and that her small tent does not protect the family from the pouring rain.
“My children sleep on soaked bedding at night,” she told Al Jazeera.
Shereen Abu Nida, 40, also said that she and her four children are coping with hardship due to the terrible living conditions brought on by the war. Worst still, her husband was abducted by Israeli forces about a year ago, leaving her to care for her children all alone.
“I have had to go through this whole year alone, all by myself,” she said, her voice quivering.
Musa Ali Muhammad al-Maghribi, 52, added that his family have little hope for the future.
He said his nine children are ill and he can’t find medication, nor is there enough food or clean water for his family, an ordeal that most of Gaza’s 2.3 million people face.
“[Israel] has destroyed us,” he told Al Jazeera. “Every day, we just hope to die.”
Netanyahu extends the fight
Despite the extreme hardship, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is showing no sign of halting the onslaught.
Efforts at mediating some form of ceasefire, which have been continuing throughout much of the conflict, have floundered in the face of what many, including United States President Joe Biden in June, have slammed as political self-interest on the part of the Israeli prime minister.
Accusations of exploiting the war on Gaza for personal gain have centred upon Netanyahu’s attempts to deflect from his ongoing trial on charges of bribery, fraud and breach of public trust, which he denies.
In addition, the prime minister’s corruption trial suggests that Netanyahu is seeking to prolong the war to distract from accusations of negligence or incompetence during the Hamas-led attack of October 7 2023, which killed 1,139 Israelis.
Charges of opportunism have come from both within Netanyahu’s right-wing cabinet, as well as the street, where tens of thousands of people continue to rally in support of a deal that would see the captives taken during the Hamas-led attack released.
International impotence
The international community has failed to halt – or mitigate – the carnage in Gaza largely due to the US’s unqualified political and military support for Israel’s war on Gaza.
In addition to the more than $20bn in aid provided to Israel since the war began, the US has torpedoed diplomatic efforts within the UN to end the war, including suppressing recent reports of the potential famine under way in northern Gaza.
In January, the International Court of Justice ordered Israel to do all it could to prevent any act that could be considered genocide. Despite this, rights organisations based in Palestine and internationally, including Amnesty, have concluded that Israel is actively embarked upon a campaign of genocide within the Strip.
Similar international action has also been taken against both the Hamas and Israeli leadership. In November, the International Criminal Court (ICC) issued arrest warrants for Netanyahu and former Defence Minister Yoav Gallant, as well as Hamas leader Mohammed Deif.
Israel claims to have killed Deif in July. Netanyahu and Gallant remain wanted for war crimes and crimes against humanity.
In October, Israel defied international pressure and voted to ban the UN’s Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA), widely acknowledged as one of Gaza’s principal lifelines. When the ban comes into effect in late January of next year, Gaza will lose its principal aid agency and with it, much of the network that distributes food, medicine and the infrastructure needed to sustain life.
In December, the UN General Assembly voted overwhelmingly for UNRWA’s work to continue and, for the third time, that a ceasefire be immediately reached. Despite this, Israeli strikes on Gaza have continued and the agency’s future remains uncertain.
Palestinians in Gaza such as Abu Nida just hope the war will end soon this coming year.
“This has been the worst year of my life,” said Abu Nida.
“Nobody in the world has lived through the days that we are living through,” she said.
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