logo
Netanyahu's ICC lawyer denounces Hezbollah assassination plot against him in France

Netanyahu's ICC lawyer denounces Hezbollah assassination plot against him in France

Yahoo4 days ago
French authorities opened an investigation following suspicions of a plot to assassinate French lawyer Olivier Pardo, who represents Netanyahu at the ICC.
French authorities opened an investigation following suspicions of a plot to assassinate French lawyer Olivier Pardo, who represents Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu at the International Criminal Court, Le Parisien reported on Monday.
The investigation started after Pardo told the authorities about a meeting he had with 47-year-old Ruddy Terranova, a former convict who had spent 14 years in prison for criminal activities and later adopted radical Islam, who told him about the plot.
According to Terranova, Hezbollah operatives approached him while he was in Senegal and asked him to take out Pardo when he turned back to France. He rejected the proposition and arranged the meeting to warn the lawyer about the plot.
The report also highlighted that Terranova warned Pardo that the reason behind the Hezbollah assassination plot was the fact that he was representing Netanyahu at the ICC, and that there was a real possibility that someone else would try to assassinate him.
After the meeting, which lasted around an hour and a half, Pardo reported the incident to the French Police, who opened an investigation and estimated that the plot was most likely real.
Hezbollah plans to assassinate Netanyahu's lawyer
The report cites three reasons for the veracity of the plot: Terranova's complex background, the fact that he didn't threaten or demand any compensation for the information, and the similarity it would have with other cases centered around the Lebanese terrorist organization.
Terranova was also arrested for questioning, while an official legal investigation was opened under the supervision of an investigating judge and the Anti-Terrorism Unit, with the aim of identifying possible masterminds if they exist.
Pardo, who has had high-level clients before, is facing an assassination plot for the first time. 'I understand that it is part of the job,' he told the French paper.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Starmer's Courtship of Trump May Cost Him at Home
Starmer's Courtship of Trump May Cost Him at Home

Bloomberg

time35 minutes ago

  • Bloomberg

Starmer's Courtship of Trump May Cost Him at Home

'Yo, Blair, what are you doing?' was George W. Bush's cheery greeting to Tony Blair, reportedly picked up by a microphone during the G8 summit in St Petersburg in 2006. 'Yo Blair' became a satirical catchphrase overnight — yet more evidence for Blair's enemies that the prime minister was the US president's poodle. Blair had indeed joined Bush's 'war of choice' against Iraq and later supported Israel's America-backed campaign against Hezbollah in Lebanon. Blair's members of Parliament believed this was one special relationship the UK could do without — a major reason for the three-time general election winner's unwilling departure from office in 2007. Today, Keir Starmer, who opposed Blair's intervention in Iraq, knows there's a domestic price to pay for his successful courtship of Donald Trump, another right-wing Republican in the White House.

ICC prosecutor ordered to recuse himself from Venezuela investigation
ICC prosecutor ordered to recuse himself from Venezuela investigation

Washington Post

time5 hours ago

  • Washington Post

ICC prosecutor ordered to recuse himself from Venezuela investigation

Karim Khan, the chief prosecutor of the International Criminal Court, was ordered by the court to recuse himself from its investigation into alleged crimes against humanity in Venezuela over a conflict of interest in the case. Khan, a British attorney who is on leave from the ICC due to an unrelated investigation, has since 2021 led the ICC's investigation in Venezuela, where President Nicolás Maduro is accused of arbitrarily detaining, torturing and executing his political opponents.

Trump still blames Hamas for crisis in Gaza but has ‘new concerns'
Trump still blames Hamas for crisis in Gaza but has ‘new concerns'

Politico

time9 hours ago

  • Politico

Trump still blames Hamas for crisis in Gaza but has ‘new concerns'

A White House official, granted anonymity to speak candidly about the president's thinking, asserted that Trump 'hasn't changed his fundamental belief' that Hamas is 'largely' to blame for the protracted conflict. Still, referring to Trump's own comments in recent days, the official acknowledged 'some new concerns.' Those concerns, spurred by photos and accounts of starving children, are echoed within MAGA circles and the broader public. A Gallup poll this week showed that American support for Israel's military action has dropped to 32 percent, a new low. Trump 'calibrates his interactions based on what the issues are. And sometimes people make the mistake of not just listening to the president,' said a senior White House official granted anonymity to discuss the president's thinking. 'He's just straightforward on this stuff. … Like, what's going on with Gaza and Israel. He wants to settle it. Yes, you can't negotiate with Hamas. But, like, he doesn't want kids to starve. He doesn't want that to happen. It's just, that's it. You know, there's not more to it than that.' That doesn't mean Trump is ready to embrace some foreign allies' call to recognize Palestinian statehood — although his opposition may not be quite as firm as it was a couple months ago. Trump earlier this summer privately urged French President Emmanuel Macron against recognizing a Palestinian state, according to two people familiar with the conversation, who were granted anonymity to share closely held details. The call, which has not been previously reported, did not produce the intended result and Macron announced his intention to recognize a Palestinian state last week. But when Trump was asked about it while traveling in Scotland last weekend, he was nonchalant about Macron going ahead with something he'd worked privately to forestall. 'What he says doesn't matter,' the president said. During a meeting with British Prime Minister Keir Starmer on Monday, Trump seemed almost agnostic about Palestinian statehood, leaving his counterpart space to fall in line behind Macron.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store