Russian court sentences five men for anti-Israel riots at Dagestan airport

Russian court sentences five men for anti-Israel riots at Dagestan airport
Last October hundreds of anti-Israel protesters stormed an airport in the city of Makhachkala where a plane from Tel Aviv had just arrived. (File/AP)
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Updated 23 August 2024
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Russian court sentences five men for anti-Israel riots at Dagestan airport

Russian court sentences five men for anti-Israel riots at Dagestan airport
  • The men, who were given sentences ranging from just over six years to nine years for engaging in rioting, did not admit guilt
  • The trial was moved from Dagestan to Krasnodar due to the sensitivity of the case

MOSCOW: A court in southern Russia on Friday sentenced five men to more than six years in prison each in the first convictions related to a mass anti-Israel protest last October at an airport in the predominantly Muslim Dagestan region.
The men, who were given sentences ranging from just over six years to nine years for engaging in rioting, did not admit guilt, the court in the Krasnodar region said. One protester was also found guilty of committing violence against a government official.
The trial was moved from Dagestan to Krasnodar due to the sensitivity of the case.
Last October hundreds of anti-Israel protesters stormed an airport in the city of Makhachkala where a plane from Tel Aviv had just arrived in a spate of unrest in the North Caucasus over Israel’s war against the Palestinian militant group Hamas in Gaza.
Video footage showed the protesters, mostly young men, waving Palestinian flags, breaking down glass doors and running through the airport shouting “Allahu Akbar” (God is greater).
The crowd converged on the airport after a message on a local Telegram channel urged Dagestanis to meet the “uninvited guests” in “adult fashion” and to get the plane and its passengers to turn around and fly somewhere else.
The channel, which was later banned by Telegram, did not use the word “Jew” but referred to the plane’s passengers as being “unclean.”
More than 20 people were injured before security forces could contain the unrest. No passengers on the plane were hurt.
Police arrested dozens of people, whose cases are now making their way through Russian courts.
President Vladimir Putin blamed the West and Ukraine for the unrest, without providing evidence. Kyiv denied any role and the United States strongly condemned the violence.


Syria must not repeat ‘horrific scenarios’ of Libya, Iraq, Afghanistan: EU’s Kallas

Syria must not repeat ‘horrific scenarios’ of Libya, Iraq, Afghanistan: EU’s Kallas
Updated 5 sec ago
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Syria must not repeat ‘horrific scenarios’ of Libya, Iraq, Afghanistan: EU’s Kallas

Syria must not repeat ‘horrific scenarios’ of Libya, Iraq, Afghanistan: EU’s Kallas
  • Kallas threw her weight behind United Nations efforts to help steward an “orderly, peaceful and inclusive transition”

BRUSSELS, Belgium: EU foreign policy chief Kaja Kallas warned Tuesday of the risks of sectarian violence and an extremist resurgence in Syria, as she urged international powers to help a peaceful transition after Bashar Assad’s fall.
“We must avoid a repeat of the horrific scenarios in Iraq, Libya and Afghanistan,” Kallas told a hearing of EU lawmakers.
“It is our role as international partners to accompany the Syrian people in piecing together a shattered society.”
Kallas said there were questions over whether Islamist group Hayat Tahrir Al-Sham (HTS), which spearheaded the ouster of Syrian president Bashar Assad and once had root in Al-Qaeda, “had changed.”
The EU’s top diplomat said Assad’s ouster was a “huge blow” for his Russian and Iranian allies.
“They are weakened, distracted and overstretched in other theaters in the broader Middle East and in Ukraine,” she said.
Kallas threw her weight behind United Nations efforts to help steward an “orderly, peaceful and inclusive transition.”
She said that Western nations needed to work with regional players including the Gulf states, Turkiye, Lebanon, Iraq and Israel “to address shared challenges.”
Kallas said Syria needed an “inclusive rebuilding process” that involved minorities as well as women and girls.
The EU was monitoring humanitarian conditions to see if more aid was needed and would help efforts to hold Assad’s government responsible for its crimes, she said.
 

 


Australian PM says anti-Israel graffiti in Sydney an ‘outrage’

Australian PM says anti-Israel graffiti in Sydney an ‘outrage’
Updated 29 min 51 sec ago
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Australian PM says anti-Israel graffiti in Sydney an ‘outrage’

Australian PM says anti-Israel graffiti in Sydney an ‘outrage’
  • “The incident in Sydney is an outrage and another anti-Semitic attack,” Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said in a statement on social media

SYDNEY: Vandals daubed anti-Israel graffiti in a Sydney suburb on Wednesday, police said, sparking “outrage” from Australia’s government days after a Melbourne synagogue was set ablaze.
Police said they were seeking two people aged 15-20 who wore face coverings in relation to the incident, in which a car was also torched in the early hours.
Graffiti was spread over the burned car, another vehicle, two buildings and a footpath, state police said.
Images on local media showed the misspelled phrase “Kill Israiel” painted in black on a white wall in the eastern suburb of Woollahra, which has a long-established Jewish community.
A contractor painted over the graffiti soon afterwards.
“The incident in Sydney is an outrage and another anti-Semitic attack,” Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said in a statement on social media.
“I stand with the Jewish community and unequivocally condemn this attack. There is no place for hatred or anti-Semitism in our country.”
The Australian leader said he would be briefed by a federal police task force that was set up this week to investigate anti-Semitic attacks.
Albanese had toured the charred remains of the Melbourne synagogue the day before, urging the country to unite in the face of the “evil” arson attack.
Counter-terror police are hunting for three suspects believed responsible for setting fire to the Adass Israel Synagogue in Melbourne in the early hours of Friday.
The synagogue blaze was met with international condemnation, including from Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who accused the Australian government of harboring “anti-Israel sentiment.”
The war in Gaza has sparked protests from supporters of Israel and Palestinians in cities around Australia, as in much of the world.
A body representing Australia’s Jewish community said the Sydney graffiti and car-burning was designed to “terrorize.”
“How long will this continue and with what horrors will it end?” asked Alex Ryvchin, co-chief executive of the Executive Council of Australian Jewry.
“We ask that you stand with us. March with us. Don’t let this evil tear our country to pieces.”
The New South Wales state premier, Chris Minns, said the Sydney incident was “shocking.”
“This is not the Sydney we want. These racist attempts to divide our city will not work,” the premier said.
The perpetrators “will be found and they will face the full force of the law,” he said.


Ex-human rights lawyer avoids jail in UK over Iraq War fraud

Ex-human rights lawyer avoids jail in UK over Iraq War fraud
Updated 34 min 19 sec ago
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Ex-human rights lawyer avoids jail in UK over Iraq War fraud

Ex-human rights lawyer avoids jail in UK over Iraq War fraud
  • British troops involved in the conflict faced accusations including rape, torture and mock executions

LONDON: A former human rights lawyer who admitted to fraud over false claims of war-crimes against UK soldiers during the Iraq conflict was on Tuesday spared jail at a London court.
A British tribunal struck off Phil Shiner, 67, in 2017 after finding him guilty of misconduct and dishonesty in connection with allegations against veterans of the Iraq War.
British soldiers served in the US-led invasion that began in 2003 and led to the fall of Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein.
Shiner admitted at Southwark Crown Court that he made an application for up to £200,000 ($255,000) of legal aid funding for his firm to represent clients, but failed to disclose that an agent acting on his behalf had made unsolicited approaches to potential clients in Iraq.
He also failed to disclose that he was paying referral fees, which is not allowed when applying for legal aid.
“This man drummed up business by paying fixers to find cases and profited from it by lying to the Legal Aid Board in what the judge called a thoroughly dishonest fashion,” said Hilary Meredith-Beckham, a lawyer who has represented veterans involved in the accusations.
Judge Christopher Hehir on Tuesday handed Shiner a jail sentence suspended for two years for three counts of fraud.
He will only serve time in prison if he commits further offenses during that period.
“You have already suffered professional and personal ruin and I do not consider it necessary to add to that by sending you straight to prison,” said Hehir.
British troops involved in the conflict faced accusations including rape, torture and mock executions.
A subsequent £24 million inquiry found the allegations of torture and murder were “wholly without foundation and entirely the product of deliberate lies, reckless speculation and ingrained hostility.”
Former soldier Robert Campbell, who was wrongly accused of drowning an Iraqi teenager, said outside court that he was “pretty disgusted” Shiner was not sentenced to prison.
“The listing in court was a very benign documents case that didn’t reflect the human element of what he has done in the slightest,” he said.
“Of course he should have gone to jail. His poison has spread far beyond the Iraq war.”


US troops are staying in Syria, White House’s Finer says

US Deputy National Security Adviser Jon Finer. (AFP)
US Deputy National Security Adviser Jon Finer. (AFP)
Updated 11 December 2024
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US troops are staying in Syria, White House’s Finer says

US Deputy National Security Adviser Jon Finer. (AFP)
  • Washington still designates as a terrorist organization the Sunni Muslim group Hayat Tahrir Al-Sham, which was chief among the rebel forces that ended 50 years of brutal dynastic rule by Assad

NEW YORK: US troops will be staying in Syria after the fall of President Bashar Assad as part of a counter-terrorism mission focused on destroying Daesh militants, a top White House official said on Tuesday.
“Those troops are there for a very specific and important reason, not as some sort of bargaining chip,” US Deputy National Security Adviser Jon Finer said in an interview at the Reuters NEXT conference in New York.
US troops “have been there now for the better part of a decade or more to fight Daesh... we are still committed to that mission.”
Asked directly whether US troops are staying, Finer said, “Yes.”
Daesh in 2014 swept through large swaths of Syria and Iraq and established an Islamic caliphate before it was driven out by a US-led coalition by 2019.
Syrian rebels seized the capital Damascus unopposed on Sunday after a lightning advance that sent Assad fleeing to Russia after a 13-year civil war and more than five decades of his family’s autocratic rule.
But Washington now sees its military presence as a hedge against further instability, even as it remains unclear how Syria’s new rulers will view US presence.
Washington still designates as a terrorist organization the Sunni Muslim group Hayat Tahrir Al-Sham, which was chief among the rebel forces that ended 50 years of brutal dynastic rule by Assad.
“There has been no formal change in any policies,” on such groups, said Finer. “Those designations are not made based on what groups say or what they say their intentions are or they intend to do, it’s about actions so we will be watching.”
He characterized as “quite constructive” some of what those groups have been saying in recent weeks but said Washington would wait and see if those statements are followed by action to bring about “credible, inclusive governance for Syria.”
He said the Biden administration is in contact with members of the incoming team of President-elect Donald Trump and keeping them apprised about Syria.

 


Germany arrests suspected Islamists over attack plot

Police stand guard in Munich, Germany. (REUTERS file photo)
Police stand guard in Munich, Germany. (REUTERS file photo)
Updated 11 December 2024
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Germany arrests suspected Islamists over attack plot

Police stand guard in Munich, Germany. (REUTERS file photo)
  • The fall of President Bashar Assad has stoked fears that Daesh could be revived in Syria

BERLIN: Three suspected Islamist extremists have been arrested in Germany on suspicion of preparing a “serious act of violence,” with an assault rifle and knives also seized, authorities said Tuesday.
Police swooped Sunday on the homes of two German-Lebanese brothers aged 15 and 20 in the city of Mannheim, and a 22-year-old German-Turkish man from the Hochtaunus district of Hessen state.
German media reports said they were planning to attack Christmas markets in either Frankfurt or Mannheim.
Local prosecutors and police said in a statement that the act they were planning could have “endangered the state,” without disclosing further details.
Germany has faced a string of attacks and plots by suspected Islamists in recent years and has been on high alert since Hamas’s October 7, 2023, attack on Israel sparked the war in the Gaza Strip.
The brothers detained in Mannheim, who had a “strong religious ideology and profound sympathy” for the Daesh group, had made concrete preparations for an attack, authorities said.
The assault rifle, along with ammunition, was found during a search of the 22-year-old German-Turkish man’s home, they said. Several knives, a balaclava as well as mobile phones were also turned up during searches.
But officials stressed that “at no point was there any concrete danger to the public.” The suspects are in pre-trial detention.
Roman Poseck, Hessen state interior minister, praised law enforcement officials for making the arrests in “good time, before any acts could be carried out.”
“At the same time, it is once again clear that the security situation is tense,” Poseck added.
Germany has in recent times seen a series of allegedly Islamist-motivated knife attacks.
Three people were killed and eight wounded in a stabbing spree at a street festival in the western city of Solingen in August.
Police arrested a Syrian suspect over the attack that was claimed by IS.
In June, a policeman was killed in a knife attack in Mannheim, with an Afghan national held as the main suspect.
The fall of President Bashar Assad has stoked fears that IS could be revived in Syria.
But the international community has so far reacted cautiously to the prospect of the Islamist Hayat Tahrir Al-Sham (HTS), which led the rebel groups that ousted Assad, taking control in the country.