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IDF deploys Iron Dome air defense along Gaza border

July 6, 2018

July 6, 2018

The IDF has deployed several Iron Dome air-defense batteries along the Gaza border, where tensions have heightened dramatically.

By: World Israel News

Latest News from Israel

An Iron Dome system intercepts Hamas rocket in Ashdod. (IDF/File)

The IDF on Thursday deployed several Iron Dome anti-missile batteries along Israel’s border with Gaza, following a military assessment.

The defense ministry reported last week that Palestinian terrorists in the Hamas-ruled Gaza Strip fired 289 rockets and mortar shells into Israel.

According to Ha’aretz, “this is more than any recent year – including the period in 2014 that preceded Operation Protective Edge that began on July 8 of that year.”

“The IDF is prepared for several scenarios and ready to defend the citizens of the State of Israel and its sovereignty,” the IDF said in a statement.

100 days since launch of arson terror from Gaza

Since the start of the Hamas-led “March of Return” on March 30, tensions have heightened dramatically.

Saturday will mark 100 days since the beginning of the arson terror launched against Israel’s southern communities from Gaza, where terrorists have been sending incendiary kites and balloons over the border.

To date, approximately 50 dunams of land in the south has been scorched, including farms and nature reserves. The damaged land is roughly equivalent to the size of Greater Tel Aviv.

 

Europeans Warn Israel: Don’t Move Bedouin from Illegal Shantytown to Modern Village

July 6, 2018

Europeans Warn Israel: Don’t Move Bedouin from Illegal Shantytown to Modern Village

Police clash with Bedouin and supporters at Khan al-Ahmar, July 4, 2018.

Photo Credit: Yaniv Nadav/Flash90

The Europeans are warning Israel against the destruction of the Bedouin village of Khan al-Ahmar, where, as of 2018, there are 173 Bedouin residents, including 92 children, living in tents and huts. Khan al-Ahmar is located between the Israeli settlements of Ma’ale Adumim and Kfar Adumim. In May 2018, Israel’s High Court of Justice determined that its residents could be evicted, as per a 2010 Coordinator of Government Activities in the Territories demolition order.

Three senior European diplomats on Thursday told Channel 10 News that the ambassadors of the five largest countries of the European Union—Germany, France, Britain, Italy and Spain—had met with the deputy national security adviser at the Prime Minister’s Office, Oded Yosef, to warn him that the demolition of Khan al-Ahmar would lead to a stern response from many European countries.

According to the diplomats, the ambassadors asked that Israel reconsider the demolition of the village and stressed that they were very concerned that the demolition was in preparation for building a new settlement in Area C, which would prevent territorial contiguity in a future Palestinian state.

Israel rejected the appeal and announced that the demolition would continue as planned.

Yosef said at the meeting that the Supreme Court had approved the demolition of the village and noted that in its current location it constituted a safety hazard.

He added that the residents had been offered a number of alternatives and that Israel would continue to prepare for the demolition of the village as planned.

Israel has prepared a permanent neighborhood for the residents of Khan al-Ahmar, where each evicted family will receive a developed plot for free.

The Regavim movement issued a statement saying, “The hypocritical European countries have led and financed the illegal construction in order to help the Palestinian Authority take control of the Ma’aleh Adumim area, and with great insolence are exerting unacceptable pressure with the help of radical left-wing organizations, while further exploiting the High Court of Justice in an attempt to delay the enforcement of the law and the implementation of the ruling.”

Ma’ale Adumim at the center of E1 / Courtesy Google Maps

The crux of the struggle is nothing short of the viable future of a Palestinian State. It comes down to who would control Area E1, which stretches along the narrowest part of Judea and Samaria. Should E1, which is part of Area C, according to the Oslo Accords, meaning it is under complete Israeli control, be filled with illegal Arab construction and be kept alive with European pressure, then an eventual Palestinian State could count on a contiguous, north-to-south territory.

But should the city of Ma’ale Adumim, 4.3 miles east of Jerusalem, population 40,000, be permitted to link with eastern Jerusalem, then the dream of a Palestinian State would effectively die, as communication between its southern and northern part would involve crossing a protected, sprawling Israeli urban barrier.

Or, as Regavim put it this week, “Khan al-Ahmar has become a litmus test for the State of Israel, which must stand firm against the pressure campaign and complete the outpost’s relocation.”

Austria’s Kurz to Rouhani: ‘Unacceptable’ to question Israel’s right to exist

July 4, 2018

‘Austria is unconditionally committed to the security of Israel and its citizens,’ says chancellor as Iranian president visits to salvage nuclear deal

Austria’s Chancellor Sebastian Kurz (r) and Iranian President Hassan Rouhani give a joint press conference following a meeting on July 4, 2018 at the Chancellery in Vienna. (AFP/Alex Halada)

In a joint press conference with Iranian President Hassan Rouhani, Austrian Chancellor Sebastian Kurz on Wednesday said he considered it “absolutely unacceptable” to question the right of Israel to exist or call for the Jewish state’s destruction.

Ahead of the meeting in Vienna, Kurz had said he would speak plainly with Rouhani about Iran’s role in the Middle East, as Tehran continues to deny accusations it is destabilizing the region.

The Austrian leader also condemned those who trivialize the Holocaust, in comments apparently directed at Iranian behavior, and said Vienna was “unconditionally” committed to Israel’s security.

“The concerns of Israel have to be taken seriously. Austria is unconditionally committed to the security of Israel and its citizens,” said Kurz, according to a statement from an official spokesperson.

“During this memorial year we are particularly aware of our historic responsibility. We strongly condemn all forms of anti-Semitism as well as any form of downplaying or denial of the Holocaust,” he added.

The Austrian leader had visited Israel last month, during which he pledged to “raise awareness” of Israel’s special security needs in Europe. During that visit, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu signaled Israel was stepping up contacts with Vienna, heaping praise on his counterpart and appearing to signal a thaw in Jerusalem’s freezing out of a far-right coalition party that has been accused of Nazi links.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, right, with Chancellor of Austria Sebastian Kurz at the Prime Minister’s Office in Jerusalem, June 11, 2018. (Ohad Zwigenberg/Pool)

The government headed by Kurz includes the far-right Freedom Party, which Israel boycotts due to its past as a haven for neo-Nazis and its current xenophobic policies.

Israel has forcefully opposed the 2015 nuclear deal between Iran, its arch-foe, and world powers. The Jewish state has also been lobbying world powers and acting to remove Iranian troops from southern Syria over fears Tehran could entrench militarily and launch attacks on the Jewish state from the neighboring country.

Rouhani was in Vienna on the second leg of his European tour to seek assurances over the 2015 nuclear deal. The trip was clouded by the arrest of an Iranian diplomat over an alleged bomb plot against opposition exiles in Paris.

Hoping to boost economic cooperation to help offset the return of US sanctions following Washington’s pullout from the historic deal, Rouhani arrived late Tuesday in Vienna — the city where it was signed.

“Insofar as it is possible for Iran, we shall remain party to the accord, we shall not quit the JCPOA (the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action) on condition that we can also benefit from it,” Rouhani said.

“If the other signatories, apart from the United States, can guarantee Iran’s interests then Iran will stay in the JCPOA,” he insisted.

US President Donald Trump speaks to the press after announcing his decision to withdraw from the nuclear deal with Iran during a speech from the Diplomatic Reception Room at the White House on May 8, 2018. (AFP Photo/Saul Loeb)

In a move staunchly backed by Israel, US President Donald Trump unilaterally pulled out of the agreement nearly two months ago, to the ire of the other signatories — China, France, Germany, Britain and Russia — which along with the European Union have continued to back the accord.

“We need a balance between our duties and the hypothesis of restrictions…. We hope for decisive actions regarding trade and the economy,” added Rouhani in comments sending a message to the other deal signatories, whose foreign ministers are due to meet in Vienna on Friday for the first time since Trump’s decision to dump the deal.

Austria just took up the European Union’s six-month rotating presidency, while Vienna is the home of the UN nuclear watchdog, the IAEA, which monitors Iran’s compliance with the accord.

Rouhani’s European trip will be of “prime importance” as it could “provide a more precise picture of cooperation between Iran and Europe,” the Iranian foreign ministry spokesman said at the weekend.

The Iranian government has itself warned that it will not continue to abide by the nuclear agreement if doing so goes against its economic interests.

Rouhani, a moderate conservative re-elected in 2017, met Austrian President Alexander Van der Bellen on Wednesday, and with Kurz later in the day.

‘False flag ploy’

The nuclear deal has been the cornerstone of Rouhani’s policy of greater openness with the West, and the US departure has seen him severely criticized by ultra-conservatives at home.

Iran’s supreme leader, Ali Khamenei, has demanded Europe provide a number of economic guarantees in order for Tehran to continue its commitment.

Increasing the pressure on Iran’s European partners, he ordered preparations be made to quickly restart nuclear activities in case talks collapse.

Rouhani’s visit follows reports of the Iranian diplomat’s arrest along with five others over a purported foiled attack on a rally of thousands of Iranian opposition supporters in Paris.

Rouhani has not changed his program over what his foreign minister dismissed as a “false flag ploy” designed as a distraction.

“How convenient: Just as we embark on a presidential visit to Europe, an alleged Iranian operation and its ‘plotters’ arrested,” Mohammad Javad Zarif tweeted.

Just hours before welcoming Rouhani to Austria, Vienna summoned Iran’s ambassador and announced that the unnamed diplomat’s status would be withdrawn.

The diplomat attached to the Iranian embassy in Austria, who was detained in Germany, was believed to be a contact of a couple at the center of the alleged plot.

He may soon be extradited to Belgium, which is spearheading a probe into the alleged bomb plot, prosecutors told the German news agency DPA.

“We are waiting for full clarification” on the case, Kurz said at a press conference alongside Rouhani.

Zarif, who is accompanying Rouhani, will on Friday meet top envoys from the five powers for the first time since Washington’s withdrawal.

Putin To Meet Netanyahu Five Days Before Trump

July 4, 2018

PM calls on European leaders to stop appeasing Iran, especially after Iranian-backed bombing plot in Paris.

Lior Sharon
http://www.jerusalemonline.com/news/politics-and-military/politics/putin-to-meet-netanyahu-five-days-before-trump-36276

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu (right) and Russian President Vladimir Putin in Jerusalem on June 25, 2012 Photo: Marc Israel Sellem/Pool/Flash90

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu will travel to Moscow next week to meet Russian President Vladimir Putin, just five days before Putin is scheduled to meet in Helsinki with US President Donald Trump.

The issues that will dominate Netanyahu’s talks with Putin – Iran and Syria – are also expected to be high on the list of topics to be discussed when the Russian and US leaders hold their first summit.

Netanyahu’s meeting with Putin comes just two months after the prime minister last flew to Moscow to discuss the situation in Syria, and comes amid growing concerns in Jerusalem about the situation in southwestern Syria, where Syrian President Bashar Assad, together with Russian air support and Iranian backed Shi’ite militias, are poised to regain control of the area.

Netanyahu made clear Tuesday during a speech at the state memorial service for Theodor Herzl that Israel will strictly enforce the separation of forces agreement it has with Syria from 1974, and expects others to adhere to that agreement as well.

At a speech an hour later at a US Embassy party in Airport City to celebrate July 4th, Netanyahu praised Trump for withdrawing from the Iranian nuclear deal, formally known as the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA), saying this was the “greatest thing for the security of the world and for the security of Israel.”

But, Netanyahu said, “this is not yet universally accepted.”

Netanyahu noted that the other world powers who were involved in the JCPOA – France, Germany, Britain, China and Russia – are to meet on Friday in Vienna with Iranian President Hassan Rouhani to discuss “how to go around the decision that President Trump and the United States made to leave this bad deal, which is funding Iran’s terrorism and aggression with billions of dollars.”

Russia: Complete Iran pullout from Syria ‘unrealistic’

July 4, 2018
Moscow’s FM Lavrov says Tehran is one of the key powers in the region, and it would be ‘absolutely unrealistic’ to expect it to abandon its interests; however, he notes ceasefire agreement includes all non-Syrian forces withdrawal from border with Israel.
https://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-5303857,00.html
Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov said Wednesday that demands for Iran’s complete withdrawal from Syria are “unrealistic.”
After meeting with his Jordanian counterpart, Lavrov said that Iran is one of the key powers in the region, and that it would be “absolutely unrealistic” to expect it to abandon its interests. He said regional powers should discuss mutual complaints and negotiate a compromise.

Russian Foreign Minister Lavrov (Photo: AFP)

Russian Foreign Minister Lavrov (Photo: AFP)

Russia and Iran have provided crucial military support to Syrian President Bashar Assad’s forces, helping them turn the tide in the civil war.

Israel has said it will not tolerate an Iranian military presence in Syria and has launched military strikes against Iranian targets there in recent months.

Russia Foreign Minister Lavrov meets with Jordan Foreign Minister Ayman Safadi (Photo: AFP)

Russia Foreign Minister Lavrov meets with Jordan Foreign Minister Ayman Safadi (Photo: AFP)

Lavrov said Russian President Vladimir Putin and US President Donald Trump would discuss the situation in southern Syria, where government forces are waging a new offensive, at their July 16 summit.

He said a cease-fire in the region brokered by Russia, Jordan and the US had envisioned the withdrawal of non-Syrian forces and the deployment of Syrian troops along the frontier with Israel.

First published: 07.04.18, 14:53

Report: Explosion in Iranian Militias’ Warehouses in Syria

July 3, 2018

Report: Explosion in Iranian Militias’ Warehouses in Syria

Explosion in Damascus (illustration image) Photo Credit: Screenshot

The Syrian opposition news agency Orient Net on Tuesday reported an explosion in warehouses used by the Iranian militias fighting for the Assad regime, near the Dara-Damascus highway.

According to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, it is not yet clear who is behind the explosion. The Observatory noted that in recent weeks there have been several attacks on arms depots belonging to the Iranian and Hezbollah militias which were attributed to Israel.

A week ago, Syrian State TV reported an Israeli attack near the Damascus airport, and a Syrian human rights organization said at the time that two rockets had been fired at Hezbollah arms depots near the airport. According to that report, the rockets attack destroyed an entire shipment of Iranian missiles recently sent from Tehran, and all the anti-aircraft systems deployed in the area over the past month were bombed.

US court: Teen murdered by Hamas to blame because he traveled in Judea

July 3, 2018

July 3, 2018

A US judge ruled that Naftali Frankel, kidnapped and murdered by Hamas in 2014, was partly to blame because he attended a school in an area supposedly prone to terror attacks.

By: World Israel News Staff

Latest News from Israel

A US judge has told the parents of Naftali Frankel, who was kidnapped and murdered by Hamas terrorists together with another two Israeli teens in the summer of 2014, that they were partially to blame for his death because they chose to send him to a school in an area supposedly prone to terror attacks.

The three Israeli teenagers, Eyal Yifrach, Gilad Shaer and Naftali Frankel, were kidnapped and murdered by Hamas terrorists in the summer of 2014 in the Gush Etzion area of Judea and Samaria. Their bodies were found in a shallow grave three weeks later on the route to Hebron. A couple of months later, Israeli Special Forces tracked down and killed the terrorists.

In 2015, Racheli Frankel, Naftali’s mother and a US citizen, filed a lawsuit against Iran and Syria in a federal court in Washington in a bid to hold them accountable for their son’s murder.

During the proceedings, Racheli Frankel recounted the devastating night of her son’s abduction and the subsequent torturous weeks.

Federal Judge Rosemary Mayers Collyer accepted the family’s claims but chose to award them a very small amount in compensation, arguing that the family had taken its chances and endangered itself when it chose to live in Judea and Samaria, according to the ruling obtained by Israel’s Ynet news and published on Tuesday.

‘This is Unthinkable’

Collyer conceded that Frankel’s murder “was a tragic event for which money can never compensate his family.”

She was convinced that Iran and Syria did provide material support and resources to Hamas in Israel, which contributed to the hostage-taking and murder of the boys, but ordered the defendants to pay only $1 million for Naftali’s pain and suffering, $50 million in punitive damages, and $4.1 million to his family in “solatium damages,” a term for the mental anguish suffered. The family sought damages of $340 million.

The Frankel family appealed the low sum in compensation, but Collyer refused to reconsider her decision, stating that the plaintiffs had taken the risk involved in living beyond the Green Line in Israel and sending their son to a school in Gush Etzion.

Explaining the decision to award the family a relatively small sum, Collyer noted that Frankel was kidnapped and murdered for being Jewish and Israeli, not because he was an American citizen. This somehow affects the amount the family is entitled to receive in civil damages, she asserted.

Racheli Frankel was shocked by the judge’s comment. “This is unthinkable,” she said. “The children were on their way home from school. How can the teens be responsible for their own death?”

The family members appealed the ruling through attorneys Nitsana Darshan-Leitner and Robert Tolchin of the Shurat Hadin-Israel Law Center, saying that the court exceeded its authority and involved unlawful considerations in its decision.

Last month, a court ruled that the Frankel family is entitled to a higher level of damages than that awarded by the earlier judgment and handed the case back to Collyer, clarifying that no guilt should be ascribed to the victim. The court also said that it found “no legal basis” to limit damages based on being “targeted for his affiliation with Israel, rather than the US.”

Collyer is expected to rule on the matter soon.

Justifying terror against innocent civilians

“We filed the claim to ‘irritate the bad guys,’” Racheli Frankel explained, according to Ynet. “There are many, ways to fight terror, and in this case we are trying to put financial obstacles in their way. Even if a large sum of money is awarded, no one will enforce the ruling. We don’t actually expect to receive the money.”

Frankel referred to the original ruling as “outrageous,” adding that “the boys were on their way home from school. Does that make it okay to kill them?”

Meir Katz of the Berkman Law Office, who is one of the attorneys representing the Frankels, welcomed the new ruling.

Darshan-Leitner stated that “we are glad that the court of appeals ruled that Naftali shouldn’t have expected to be murdered by Palestinian terrorists because he studied beyond the Green Line. The statement that the Frankel family took the risk of being kidnapped and murdered because of their place of residence justifies terrorism and violence against innocent civilians. Moreover, when such a statement is issued by a court—alongside a financial reward to Palestinian terrorists—it may encourage further acts of terror, in Israel and worldwide.”

Iran will not pay, but the Frankels may receive the money through the US Victims of State Sponsored Terrorism Fund. The Fund is financed by fines paid by entities found to be engaging in business with countries in violation of US sanctions.

 

PA: Law to deduct terrorists’ salaries from tax money ‘a declaration of war’

July 3, 2018

Palestinian President Abbas’ spokesman says Knesset crossed a ‘red line’ in its decision to deduct terrorists’ salaries from roughly $130 million in monthly tax revenues Israel collects on behalf of Palestinian Authority; MK Zahalka slams vote, accuses Israel of ‘murdering 547 children in Gaza.’

Elior Levy|Published:  07.03.18 , 15:10

https://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-5303180,00.html

The Palestinian Authority strongly condemned the Knesset on Tuesday for passing into a law a bill proposal to deduct terrorists’ salaries from roughly $130 million in monthly tax revenues Israel collects on behalf of the Palestinian Authority, defining the move as “a declaration of war on the Palestinian people.”
Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas’ spokesman, Nabil Abu Rudeineh, said the PA considered the law a “red line” and threatened that its implementation would lead to “harsh Palestinian decisions.”

“The Palestinian presidency strongly refuses to accept this severe decision, which damages the foundations of the relations since the Oslo Agreement to this day,” Abbas’ spokesman said. “If this decision is implemented, it will prompt important Palestinian decisions to deal with it.”

Abbas' spokesman says implementing decision would lead to 'harsh Palestinian decisions' (Photo: EPA)

Abbas’ spokesman says implementing decision would lead to ‘harsh Palestinian decisions’ (Photo: EPA)

According to Abu Rudeineh, “This issue is considered a red line which no one can cross. It’s a declaration of war against the Palestinian people, its fighters, its prisoners and its fatalities, who have carried the flag of freedom for Jerusalem and the establishment of the independent Palestinian state. The Israeli government must back down from its decisions and stances so that we don’t reach a dangerous, dead-end road.”

Youssef Al-Mahmoud, a spokesman of the Palestinian Authority government in Ramallah, also condemned Israel’s move, saying the money belonged to the Palestinians and Israel had no right to hold it back and was violating signed agreements.

“This money belongs to the Palestinian people and this is legislation to steal the money of the prisoners and the martyrs who are symbols of freedom for us and they must not be harmed,” Mahmoud said.

In a bipartisan vote Monday, 87 MKs supported the legislation while 15 opposed it.

Under the new law, which was sponsored by MKs Elazar Stern (Yesh Atid) and Avi Dichter (Likud), money that would otherwise go to pay stipends to roughly 35,000 families of Palestinian terrorists and their families will be automatically frozen in accordance with the Paris Protocol—without the need for a special approval from the Cabinet.

Zahalka. 'Israel is screwing the Palestinians' (Photo: Ohad Zwigenberg)

Zahalka. ‘Israel is screwing the Palestinians’ (Photo: Ohad Zwigenberg)

According to the law’s sponsors, the PA paid terrorists over NIS 4 billion over the past four years from its so-called “martyrs’ fund,” with NIS 1.2 billion (roughly $330 million) being paid in the last year alone.

During the stormy session that preceded the vote, Joint List MK Jamal Zahalka accused Stern and Dichter of being “shameless, uncultured. They support the murder of Palestinian children. You all supported the bombing of Gaza. You murdered Palestinian children. Who among you came out against it?”

Speaking at the Ynet studio on Tuesday, Zahalka said: “The Palestinian people are fighting for their freedom and independence against a cruel foreign occupier. The Israeli government murdered 547 children in Gaza. It’s a war crime and it’s terrorism. The Oslo Agreement is being eliminated here. The Israeli government is taking the convenient things from Oslo and screwing the Palestinians.”

Reuters contributed to this report.

 

Nassim Taleb Slams “These Virtue-Signaling Open-Borders Imbeciles” In 3 Short Tweets

July 3, 2018

As liberals across America continue to attempt to one-up one another with the volume of virtue they can signal, specifically on the question of ‘open borders’ – especially since ‘jenny from the bronx’ victory over the weekend, none other than Nassim Nicholas Taleb unleashed a trite 3-tweet summary of how farcical this argument is…

What intellectuals don’t get about MIGRATION is the ethical notion of SYMMETRY:

1) OPEN BORDERS work if and only if the number of pple who want to go from EU/US to Africa/LatinAmer equals Africans/Latin Amer who want to move to EU/US

2) Controlled immigration is based on the symmetry that someone brings in at least as much as he/she gets out. And the ethics of the immigrant is to defend the system as payback, not mess it up.

Uncontrolled immigration has all the attributes of invasions.

3) As a Christian Lebanese, saw the nightmare of uncontrolled immigration of Palestinians which caused the the civil war & as a part-time resident of N. Lebanon, I am seeing the effect of Syrian migration on the place.

So I despise these virtue-signaling open-borders imbeciles.

Silver Rule in #SkinInTheGame

* * *

Law passed to deduct terrorists’ salaries from PA tax money

July 2, 2018
In bipartisan vote, 87 MKs support legislation freezing money that would’ve otherwise gone to terrorists from tax funds Israel collects on behalf of the Palestinian Authority; MK Zahalka slams bill’s sponsors: ‘You support the murder of Palestinian children.’
https://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-5302574,00.html

A bill proposal to deduct terrorists’ salaries from tax money Israel collects on behalf of the Palestinian Authority was passed into law on Monday evening.

In a bipartisan vote, 87 MKs supported the legislation, while 15 opposed it.

Under the new law, which was sponsored by MKs Elazar Stern (Yesh Atid) and Avi Dichter (Likud), money that would otherwise go to pay stipends to roughly 35,000 families of Palestinian terrorists and their families will be automatically frozen in accordance with the Paris Protocol—without the need for a special approval from the Cabinet.

Terrorists freed during the 2011 Gilad Shalit prisoner exchange (Photo: EPA)

Terrorists freed during the 2011 Gilad Shalit prisoner exchange (Photo: EPA)

According to the law’s sponsors, the PA paid terrorists over NIS 4 billion over the past four years from its so-called “martyrs’ fund,” with NIS 1.2 billion (roughly $330 million) being paid in the last year alone.

“May your house come to ruin,” Dichter wished Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas in Arabic, echoing Abbas’ own ill-wish to US President Donald Trump. “Mahmoud Abbas, instead of your Authority investing money in health and education, you invest seven percent of your budget into terrorism?!”

MK Avi Dichter (Photo: Ohad Zwigenberg)

MK Avi Dichter (Photo: Ohad Zwigenberg)

“The PA has turned itself into a factory that employs murderers of people—Jews, mostly, but also Muslims, Christians, Druze, Circassians and others, including tourists,” Dichter continued. “It’s very easy to be accepted to (work in) this factory. All you have to do is murder Israelis, be arrested or killed, and you’re hired. Mahmoud Abbas and his aides—if you don’t change the entry criteria to this factory, you will go to sleep one day and wake up (with your funds) cut.”

According to Dichter, the legislation “is meant primarily to send a values- and principles-based message that the State of Israel will not lend a hand to the transfer of money to terrorists. In addition, we believe the law would force the PA to rethink the financing of terrorists and incentivizing any kind of terrorism.”

Stern, meanwhile, argued that “this historic law will significantly weaken the encouragement of terrorism by the PA. It is our duty to stop the economic incentive the PA gives terrorists, an incentive that encourages others to commit terror attacks. That way, any Palestinian youth will realize it’s not worth it for him to choose the path of terrorism. No more encouraging terrorism at our expense.”

MK Stern takes a selfie with his Yesh Atid party colleagues after the bill's passage (Photo: Ohad Zwigenberg)

MK Stern takes a selfie with his Yesh Atid party colleagues after the bill’s passage (Photo: Ohad Zwigenberg)

Stern said the withheld money would be put aside, giving the Israeli government discretion on whether to return it to the Palestinians at some point.

A previous draft version of the bill stipulated the money would go to Israeli victims of Palestinian attacks, but it was scrapped due to potential legal complications. Stern claimed that the martyrs’ fund pays higher benefits to those involved in more serious attacks.

“It’s not only that they encourage their people to take terror actions. They even encourage them to cause more casualties of innocent people,” Stern said.

During the stormy session that preceded the vote, Joint List MK Jamal Zahalka accused Stern and Dichter of being “shameless, uncultured. They support the murder of Palestinian children. You all supported the bombing of Gaza. You murdered Palestinian children. Who among you came out against it?”

MK Jamal Zahalka (Photo: Ohad Zwigenberg)

MK Jamal Zahalka (Photo: Ohad Zwigenberg)

Dichter, the former director of the Shin Bet, is “responsible for the murder of thousands of people,” Zahalka charged. “You’re hypocrites and thieves, stealing from the Palestinian people the money they deserve. You’re the occupiers, the oppressors, the murderers, the thieves.”

As he took the podium, Joint MK Ahmad Tibi shot a snide remark at Likud MK Nava Boker, telling her “if you don’t like what I’m going to say, get out. (With your) IQ, you won’t understand what I’m saying anyway. Anyone who doesn’t like it, get out.”

Tibi then accused the Israeli government of “holding every year a memorial service for murderers and terrorists right here in the Knesset and calling them national heroes, even though one of them (Meir Har-Zion) slaughtered an entire Bedouin family with his own hands. It’s double standards to call the Palestinians terrorists and the murderers of Palestinians heroes.”

MK Ahmad Tibi (Photo: Ohad Zwigenberg)

MK Ahmad Tibi (Photo: Ohad Zwigenberg)

Outraged by the proposed legislation, Tibi charged that “This is Palestinian money and anyone who deducts it is committing armed robbery by the state. This is the money of the Palestinian workers in Israel.”

Joint List MK Hanin Zoabi joined the chorus of accusations, charging, “What haven’t you done? Occupation, siege, not allowing in food. What war crimes haven’t you committed against the Palestinian people, these brave people? You put 2 million people in the largest prison in the world, in a siege. Keep being stupid. Stupidity is good. You’re a camp (the right wing) that managed to demonize a nation—even the Palestinians are not considered as human beings. I don’t understand the psychology of Israeli politics.”

She also attacked the left-wing parties, saying, “They need to ask themselves what mistakes they’ve made to cause the bad ones to get stronger, cause the fascists to get stronger.”

MK Hanin Zoabi (Photo: Ohad Zwigenberg)

MK Hanin Zoabi (Photo: Ohad Zwigenberg)

Zionist Union MK Itzik Shmuli responded, accusing her that she “wants me in the sea.”

Zoabi continued unabated, “You took the resources, the water, the land—but you won’t take the spirit. Not with a siege and not with the occupation. This camp (the left wing) has no values, and that is why the bad people’s camp grew stronger.”

Dichter shot back at the Arab MKs, accusing that “You’ve been brainwashed by the Palestinian Authority.”

After the bill’s approval, Defense Minister Avigdor Lieberman wrote on Twitter: “We promised to stop the party of terrorists’ salaries, and we delivered. Now it’s final. Every shekel Abbas pays terrorists and murderers will be automatically deducted from the Palestinian Authority’s budget. Effective fight against terrorism also goes through the pocket—of the terrorists, of their families and of Abbas.”

Palestinians condemn ‘theft and piracy’

The Palestinians say the number of people involved in deadly attacks is a small percentage of those aided by the “martyrs’ fund.” They say the tax revenues, collected by Israel for them under past peace agreements, are their money, and that the Palestinian Authority has a responsibility to all of its citizens like any other government.

Saeb Erekat, the chief Palestinian negotiator, accused Israel of “theft and piracy.”

“The Palestinian Authority is responsible for all Palestinians, and is responsible for the families of prisoners and martyrs within the program of social assistance,” he said.

Knesset vote on the law (Photo: Ohad Zwigenberg)

Knesset vote on the law (Photo: Ohad Zwigenberg)

The Israeli law passed the same day that Australia said it ended direct aid to the Palestinian Authority, claiming Australian donations could increase its capacity to pay Palestinians convicted of politically motivated violence.

A few months earlier, the US Congress approved the Taylor Force Act, a bill to halt US funding to the Palestinian Authority until it stops paying stipends to Palestinian attackers and their families.

The United States is now reviewing some $200 million in assistance for the Palestinians. It has also cut some $300 million to the UN agency for Palestinian refugees and their descendants, known as UNRWA, further straining the Palestinian budget.

Stuart Force, the father of Taylor Force, an American student who was killed in a 2016 attack in Israel, attended Monday’s Knesset vote. He said he was “really heartened” by Israeli lawmakers’ support for the Taylor Force Act as it passed through Congress.

“When there was a possibility to come out and show my support, I jumped at it,” Force said. He said the vote “will bring awareness” to the issue and hoped other countries would follow suit.

The cash-strapped Palestinian Authority, which relies heavily on the Israeli tax funds and international aid, has suffered from chronic budget problems.

Issa Qarakeh, the PA’s minister of prisoner affairs, said that even if Israel halts the transfer of funds, the Palestinian government will still pay the stipends.

“When we signed Oslo Agreement, it was clear to Israel that the Palestinian Authority pays these families, and they never objected. Now they are creating a problem just to avoid addressing the real problems, which stems from the Israeli military occupation and building the settlements on our land, not the social welfare money that goes to the families who lost their source of living,” he said.

The Associated Press contributed to this story.