Showing posts with label The Times of Israel. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Times of Israel. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 25, 2017

Germany busts alleged far-right plot to attack Jews, refugees - THE TIMES OF ISRAEL

Illustrative: German police (AFP PHOTO / dpa / Jens Büttner)
Illustrative: German police (AFP PHOTO / dpa / Jens Büttner)

Germany busts alleged far-right plot to attack Jews, refugees

Police raid 12 homes linked to members of extremist ‘Reichsbürger’ movement, arrest 13 people, including several who bought weapons

 January 25, 2017, THE TIMES OF ISRAEL
BERLIN — German authorities on Wednesday carried out dawn raids against far-right suspects accused of plotting attacks on Jews, refugees and police, federal prosecutors said.
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Police swooped on 12 homes and other sites in six states “as part of a federal investigation on suspicion of forming a right-wing extremist organization,” the prosecutor’s office said in a statement. Six suspects, “connected primarily via social media,” are accused of founding the group “and in early 2016 beginning plans for armed attacks against police officers as representatives of the state, asylum seekers and members of the Jewish community.”
Another seven people are believed to have offered assistance to the group, including acquiring weapons.
“The aim of today’s raids is to gather evidence of the formation of a group as well as suspected crimes and potential material for use in those crimes,” it said. “There is not as yet any evidence of specific attack plans.”
Around 200 police officers took part in the coordinated raids.
The prosecutor’s office in the southwestern city of Karlsruhe declined to provide further details.
But news agency DPA said the group was believed to belong to the “Reichsbürger” (Citizens of the Reich) movement, a shadowy far-right outfit blamed for shooting dead one police officer and wounding three others during a raid in the southern town of Georgensgmünd in October.
And in August, a member of the group — a former Mister Germany pageant winner — opened fire on police carrying out an eviction order at his house in the eastern state of Saxony-Anhalt.
The 41-year-old gunman was seriously wounded and three officers suffered light injuries.
The Reichsbürger group does not recognize the legitimacy of the German republic and believes in the continued existence of the German empire or “Reich.”
As a result, many members refuse to pay taxes and fines owed to the state. Authorities believe the movement has several thousand members.
A report Wednesday in Berlin’s daily Tagesspiegel newspaper, citing security sources, said that the number of far-right extremists in Germany believed to be violent had increased to 12,100 last year, up from 11,800 the previous year.

Sunday, January 22, 2017

White House in ‘very beginning stages of even discussing’ embassy move - THE TIMES OF ISRAEL

White House in ‘very beginning stages of even discussing’ embassy move

Trump, Netanyahu set to chat at 8:30 p.m. as US rumored to announce embassy move; Netanyahu announces planned settlement bloc expansion

 January 22, 2017  THE TIMES OF ISRAEL
Family and friends attend the funeral of Malachy Moshe Rosenfeld, 25, at the Kohav Hashahar settlement in West Bank, July 01, 2015. (Yonatan Sindel/FLASH90)
Family and friends attend the funeral of Malachy Moshe Rosenfeld, 25, at the Kohav Hashahar settlement in West Bank, July 01, 2015. (Yonatan Sindel/FLASH90)
The Times of Israel is liveblogging events as they occur on Sunday.
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White House ‘at very beginning stages of even discussing’ moving embassy

White House Press Secretary Sean Spicer says about the rumors of moving the US Embassy to Jerusalem that “we are at the very beginning stages of even discussing this subject, CBS’s Mark Knoller reports.

Netanyahu says he’ll lift restrictions on East Jerusalem construction

Netanyahu also tells the security cabinet that he will lift restrictions on the construction of new buildings in areas of Jerusalem over the Green Line, which was a major sticking point with the Obama administration and runs contrary to international law.

Netanyahu to announce major settlement bloc expansion

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu says he’ll announce major West Bank settlement bloc expansion soon, after coordinating with Washington, Channel 2 reports. The announcement to the security cabinet comes about an hour before Netanyahu is to talk with US President Donald Trump.

Don’t worry about Jordan and Abbas fighting the embassy move, minister says

Energy Minister Yuval Steinitz reacts to Abbas’s comments, saying that there’s no cause for concern about the coordination between the PA and Jordan about responding to the US moving its embassy to Jerusalem. The embassy needs to move to Jerusalem, he says, and other countries’ embassies will follow suit.

Trump, Netanyahu to chat at 8:30 p.m.

US President Donald Trump will speak with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu by phone at 8:30 p.m. Israel time, the White House says.

Monday, January 16, 2017

Israel's Foreign Ministry chief chalks up Paris conference as win for Israel - ALEXANDER FULBRIGHT THE TIMES OF ISRAEL

Foreign Ministry Director-General Yuval Rotem (L) tours in Efrat with the regional council chairman Oded Revivi, in the West Bank, on November 8, 2016. (Gershon Elinson/Flash90)
Foreign Ministry Director-General Yuval Rotem (2nd-R) tours in Efrat with the regional council chairman Oded Revivi, in the West Bank, on November 8, 2016. (Gershon Elinson/Flash90)

Israel's Foreign Ministry chief chalks up Paris conference as win for Israel

Director General Yuval Rotem says despite Israel’s absence from confab, ‘we succeeded in getting our position across’

 January 16, 2017  THE TIMES OF ISRAEL
Israel’s new Foreign Ministry chief on Monday hailed the lackluster outcome of Sunday’s Paris peace conference as a victory for Israel, saying not showing up sent a message to the international community.
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Director General Yuval Rotem took over as head of the Foreign Ministry at the end of December and gave his first interviews to the Israeli press a day after diplomats gathered in Paris to discuss the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and reinforce the need for a two-state solution.“ The fact that the Paris conference has no followup is from our perspective the most meaningful accomplishment,” Rotem told Israel Radio Monday morning.
As far as Israel is concerned, the most important outcome from Paris was that it imposed “no new obligations” on Israel and “finished without any mechanism to apply or follow up” on the provisions it laid out for achieving peace, Rotem said.
“We also succeeded to a certain extent in preventing any followup, any new enforcement mechanism and any new supervision mechanism,” he said.
Rotem also noted in an interview with Army Radio Monday morning the “importance in the direct recognition of a national home for the Jewish people” as part of the concluding declaration, something he said many in the international community do not recognize.
In addition, he said the conference’s declaration affirms Israel’s view that “the only way to arrive at peace is by means of direct negations between the sides.”
Neither Israel nor the Palestinians had representatives present at the conference — the second in the past year hosted by France with the aim of setting a concrete agenda for renewed peace efforts.
However, “even though we did not attend the conference, we succeeded in getting across our position,” Rotem told Army Radio.
International activity on the matter, like Sunday’s peace conference and December’s Security Council Resolution 2334, only further “encourages the Palestinians to refuse direct negotiations with Israel.”
Going into the conference, Israel had feared that the participants would build upon the Security Council resolution against settlements and formulate new measures against Israel.
Officials pose for a group photo during the Mideast peace conference in Paris on January 15, 2017 (AFP Photo/Pool/Bertrand Guay)
Officials pose for a group photo during the Mideast peace conference in Paris on January 15, 2017 (AFP Photo/Pool/Bertrand Guay)
Israeli officials on Sunday credited the efforts of the National Security Council and the Foreign Ministry for a “significant weakening” of the text of the final joint declaration issued by the participants of a peace conference in Paris.
The Israeli officials were jubilant that “problematic passages” from the recent UN Security Council resolution on the settlements were not included in the Paris document. Furthermore, the Israeli officials expressed satisfaction over the fact that no further action against Israeli settlements is planned at the Security Council. US Secretary of State John Kerry promised as much to Prime Minister Netanyahu in a phone call from Paris earlier Sunday.
Rotem also noted the absence of the British and Russian foreign ministers at the conference, as well as that of UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres. He credited them for wanting to develop a coordinated position with US President-elect Donald Trump, who takes office Friday.
“Not just us, but many players in the international arena are waiting to see Trump’s approach,” Rotem noted.
Regarding Trump’s promise to move the US embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem, which French Foreign Minister Jean-Marc Ayrault warned at the conference would result in “extremely serious consequences,” Rotem said the Foreign Ministry’s stance was to wait and see, just as with many other of Trump’s declarations and intended policies.
Raphael Ahren contributed to this report.