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Veteran Palestine TV correspondent Mohammed Abu Hatab, 49, was killed with 10 of his family members. His colleague Salman al-Bashir delivered an emotional report on live TV scared he could be next. One of the victims, loaded into the hospital morgue with 10 of his family members, was his own colleague, veteran Palestine TV correspondent Mohammed Abu Hatab, 49. 'I don't know when I will be killed,'" Abu Bakr recalled. Before hanging up, he said, Abu Hatab had one last request: "Please, please, pray that God protects us."
Persons: Mohammed Abu Hatab, Salman al, Bashir, , KHAN YOUNIS, Abu Hatab, Abu Hatab's, al, Khan Younis, Rafat, Tidra, Abed Khaled, Abu, Richard Hecht, Nasser Abu Bakr, Abu Bakr, DeBre Organizations: Palestine, Service, Nasser Hospital, West Bank, Palestinian Authority, Hamas, Palestine TV, Health Ministry, Protect Journalists, Palestinian Journalists Syndicate Locations: Gaza, Israel, Ramallah, New York, Nasser, Jerusalem
Pro-Palestinian demonstrators in The Hague urge ICC action
  + stars: | 2023-10-18 | by ( ) www.reuters.com   time to read: +2 min
Fighting began on Oct. 7 when Hamas launched a surprise attack on Israel as part of its goal to end Israeli occupation. Israel has since retaliated by bombing Gaza, and an estimated 1,400 Israelis and 3,000 Palestinians have been killed so far. The ICC is investigating potential atrocity crimes that Hamas militants in Israel and Israelis in the Gaza Strip have committed since 2014, which also covers the current conflict. We came here to say enough is enough," Rafat Alkayyali, 50, said, adding that he came to the ICC to protest because he believes in international law. Protesters carried signs that said: "Justice for Palestine - Stop the Genocide" and "How many children will die until Israel is prosecuted".
Persons: Fighting, Karim Khan, Piroschka van de, Stephanie van den Berg, Josie Kao Organizations: Hamas, Criminal Court, ICC, HAGUE, Protesters, Reuters, Thomson Locations: Gaza, Israel, The Hague, Palestine
In this article HMARBKNG Follow your favorite stocks CREATE FREE ACCOUNTMy hotel bill from a three-night trip to New York City included 21 charges. Nine were for "destination fees." Federal Trade Commission estimates show consumers paid around $2 billion in hotel fees before the pandemic, and mandatory fees have grown since then. The bill, the Hotel Fees Transparency Act, prohibits hotels from advertising rates without mandatory fees. Former presidential candidate and current Senator Amy Klobuchar, D-Minn., introduced the Hotels Fees Transparency Act to the U.S. Senate in late July.
Persons: Joe Biden's, I'd, Munir Salem, Rafat Ali, Joe Biden, Kent Nishimura, Ali, it's, Amy Klobuchar, Bill Clark, Park's Salem, Expedia, Chip Rogers, I'm Organizations: Thompson, Park, CNBC, Thompson Central, Newspapers, Federal Trade Commission, Los Angeles Times, Getty, U.S . Senate, U.S ., Cq, Inc, Biden Administration, United, Frontier, Texas, Holdings, Marriott International Inc, Marriott, American, Lodging Locations: New York City, North America, Joe Biden's State, Park New York, Hyatt, York, U.S, U.S . Senate, Pennsylvania
JERICHO, West Bank, March 14 (Reuters) - Before a group of young men from Aqabat Jabr refugee camp mounted a botched attack on a restaurant in Jericho popular with Israeli settlers in January, they declared allegiance to Hamas. Often with just a handful of fighters, the militant groups springing up across the West Bank over the past year have only loose ties to factions such as Hamas, Fatah or Islamic Jihad. A few days after the attack, which failed when a gun jammed, the young men in the group were killed in an Israeli raid. "All the signs are that the intifada is coming," said the Hamas cadre, who declined to be named for fear of Israeli reprisals. The rally was a classic display of force, with some 250 fighters from various factions parading in a courtyard, its walls plastered with pictures of their dead, posing with guns and the cropped hairstyles popular among young West Bank men.
Three men were indicted on charges of money laundering and murder-for-hire, the DOJ said. The target, Masih Alinejad, told The Associated Press the FBI read her the messages the men exchanged. The indictment did not say if the Iranian regime was directly involved in the murder order. Alinejad told The Associated Press that the FBI read her the messages the men exchanged,"I'm not scared," Alinejad told the AP. While the man behind the plot is in Iran, the DOJ indictment did not say whether the Iranian government was behind the plot.
Soon after the charges were announced, Masih Alinejad revealed that she was the target of the assassination plot. “Fortunately, their plot failed because we didn’t,” FBI Director Christopher Wray said at a press conference announcing the indictment. Amirov, a citizen of Azerbaijan and Russia who was living in Iran during the plot, was taken into custody in New York on Thursday. Omarov then directed Mehdiyev to carry out the plot against Alinejad and Amirov and Omarov arranged to pay Mehdiyev $30,000 in cash. Before he could carry out the plot, however, Mehdiyev was arrested near Alinejad's home in July with the assault rifle in his possession.
Three men have been arrested for a murder-for-hire plot that targeted a U.S. journalist and human rights activist of Iranian origin who has been a prominent critic of Iran, Attorney General Merrick Garland announced Friday. The same victim, who lives in Brooklyn, New York, had been the target of an earlier kidnapping plot, which led the Department of Justice in 2021 to obtain an indictment against four people who had ties with Iranian intelligence. Masih Alinejad, an exiled Iranian journalist, identified herself in 2021 as the target of that kidnapping plot. The latest plot began in 2022, when members of an Eastern European criminal organization with ties to Iran were enlisted to assassinate the unidentified victim, who lives in Brooklyn, New York, an indictment alleges. That group's participation in the plot was directed by a man named Rafat Amirov, the group's leader, who lives in Iran and "who was tasked with targeting the Victim by individuals in Iran," the indictment charges.
The assailants had been monitoring the property and may have observed that she often shares flowers with her neighbors, she said. Omarov then sent those details to Mehdiyev, who lived in Yonkers, New York, prosecutors said. Amirov and Omarov then arranged for Mehdiyev to get $30,000 in cash, which he used to buy an assault rifle and ammunition, prosecutors said. Omarov, 38, was arrested in the Czech Republic earlier this month, and the United States is seeking his extradition. Iran accuses Western powers of fomenting the unrest, which security forces have met with deadly violence.
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