
Israeli drones flying over Beirut and southern suburbs: NNA

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L'Orient-Le Jour
3 hours ago
- L'Orient-Le Jour
French probe Netanyahu lawyer's murder contract claims
French authorities opened an investigation after a lawyer for Benjamin Netanyahu said there was a contract on his head for defending the Israeli leader, the Paris prosecutor's office said on Monday. Olivier Pardo told investigators a former convict, Rudy Terranova, told him on July 16 that he had been approached to carry out a hit on the lawyer, a source close to the case said, confirming a report in the newspaper Le Parisien. Terranova said he was approached to carry out the job while on a trip to Senegal by members of Lebanon's Hezbollah, a key ally of Israel's arch-foe Iran. He said the militants targeted Pardo because of his work for Netanyahu, who has been the subject of an arrest warrant from the International Criminal Court (ICC) since November 2024, accused of crimes against humanity and war crimes over Israel's ongoing war in Gaza. Pardo told AFP he was "calm, it's one of the risks of my job when you defend causes which have sparked debate in France." "I am confident that the judiciary will determine whether this is a real or a phantom menace," said the lawyer, who counts prominent French politicians, including the far-right figure Eric Zemmour, among his other clients. According to Le Parisien, Terranova was taken into custody in the week beginning on July 21 in connection with the case, though AFP was not able to confirm this. A former gang member, Terranova was convicted in 2004 of violence considered to be motivated by Islamist radicalism. He served as a police informant and was later suspected of being behind an attempt in 2007 to murder another lawyer, Karim Achoui. He was acquitted of that charge.


L'Orient-Le Jour
3 hours ago
- L'Orient-Le Jour
Palestinians say activist killed by settlers in West Bank
The Palestinian Authority's Education Ministry accused Israeli settlers in the West Bank on Monday of killing an activist linked to an Oscar-winning film, while Israeli police said they were investigating the incident. The ministry said on social media that Awdah Muhammad Hathaleen "was shot dead by settlers ... during their attack on the village of Um al-Khair" near Hebron, in the south of the occupied territory. The Israeli police earlier said it was investigating an "incident near Carmel," a settlement neighbouring Um al-Khair. "An Israeli citizen was detained at the scene and then arrested by police for questioning," a police statement said. "Four Palestinians were arrested by IDF (Israeli military) soldiers in connection with the incident, along with two foreign tourists who were at the scene." "Following the incident, the death of a Palestinian was confirmed; his exact involvement in the incident is being verified," the police added. Hathaleen was a resident of Masafer Yatta, a string of hamlets located on the hills south of Hebron, which have been declared a military zone by Israel. Their efforts to prevent Israeli forces from destroying their homes were the subject of "No Other Land," which won Best Documentary at the Oscars in March. Its Israeli co-director, Yuval Abraham, posted a video on Instagram showing a man with a gun in his hand arguing with a group of people, while shouts can be heard in Hebrew and Arabic. "An Israeli settler just shot [Awdah Hathaleen] in the lungs, a remarkable activist who helped us film 'No Other Land' in Masafer Yatta," Abraham wrote. About three million Palestinians live in the West Bank alongside nearly half a million Israelis living in settlements, which are considered illegal under international law. At least 962 Palestinians, including many fighters but also many civilians, have been killed by Israeli soldiers or settlers since the start of the Gaza war in October 2023. At least 36 Israelis, including civilians and soldiers, have been killed there in Palestinian attacks or during Israeli military operations, according to official Israeli data.


L'Orient-Le Jour
3 hours ago
- L'Orient-Le Jour
Yemen's Houthis release footage of missing crew from sunken Eternity C ship
Yemen's Iran-backed Houthis released footage Monday of missing crew members from the Eternity C cargo ship, which the rebels sank earlier this month, claiming in an accompanying statement to have "rescued" the mariners. Earlier this month, the Houthis sank the Magic Seas and Eternity C cargo ships in the Red Sea, after a months-long hiatus in a campaign against maritime traffic they accuse of having links to Israel, launched over the Gaza war. The European Union's Operation Aspides naval task force told AFP that 15 out of the 25 people on the ship were still missing – with four of them presumed dead. In the video, the Houthis showed pictures of 10 crew members they said they had "rescued." "11 crew members were rescued at sea, including two injured who were provided with medical care. One body, found aboard the ship before it sank, was transported to the hospital morgue," the Huthis said in their statement. The video appeared to show the moment the mostly-Filipino crew were pulled from the sea wearing life jackets. A man the Houthis said was an electrician was shown lying in bed and speaking in English. Aspides had said a Russian electrician onboard the ship had lost his leg. The captive crew members, who appeared coached on what to say, were filmed saying the ship was headed to the Israeli port of Eilat and at the end of the video nine of them said in chorus: "We are sorry, Palestinians." Last week, Human Rights Watch said the rebels were unlawfully detaining the crew and that their attacks on shipping amounted to war crimes. The United States has accused the Houthis of kidnapping the missing crew members. The rebels previously held captive the mostly Filipino crew of the merchant ship Galaxy Leader for more than a year, before releasing them in January. Rebel leader Abdelmalek al-Houthi had earlier justified the attacks on the two ships, saying they both belonged to companies serving Israeli ports. Late on Sunday, the rebels said they would target any ship belonging to a company that dealt with Israeli ports – despite a U.S. truce signed in May that was supposed to guarantee freedom of navigation in the Red Sea.