The Times of Israel records Monday’s occasions as they unfold.
A Palestinian was accused of illegally carrying out a loaded weapon and making plans to carry out a shootout with her in the city of Rosh Ha’ayin in central Israel last September, police said.
A gag was placed on the case, but was overdulled after suspect Moataz Musa Hussein charged through an army court.
According to police, police were informed of Hussein’s plan to carry out an attack in Rosh Ha’ayin on 29 September.
“The agents conducted a search for the suspect. Police approached him, subdued him and saw that a loaded pistol, ammunition magazines and a box of bullets were hidden over him. . . Their efforts well prevented the terrorist attack,” according to police.
“After his interrogation, the suspect admitted that he planned to carry out a terrorist attack,” the police added.
The suspect, from the West Bank village of Qalqilya, was prosecuted in an army court in Samaria, police said.
– Judah Ari Gross
After marathon discussions, ministers in the so-called coronavirus closet approve of the reopening of hairdressers, beauty salons and other corporations that attract clients, but one at a time, starting next Sunday.
After-school education and childcare systems will resume for categories 1 to 4, according to a plan in which young people will be divided into separate modules.
A separate assembly will be held on Thursday for the reopening of other department stores and guest houses.
After outrage, the Museum of Islamic Art in Jerusalem called for a postponement of the sale of components from its collection, days before some two hundred pieces passed under the hammer through Sothethrough’s London.
According to Sotheby’s, one hundred and 90 items of Islamic art from the museum’s warehouses and 60 watches from its permanent will be sold on October 27 and 28.
Stern’s Hermann Foundation, a personal base that owns the items, said the resolution was taken due to the planned sale complaint expressed by many, adding President Reuven Rivlin.
Lamenting the planned measure, Rivlin said in a statement: “We will have to locate the means for the State of Israel to have the legal and foreign means to prevent it from selling these cultural goods in the region as a whole.
The base says it has now suspended the motion “because of our wonderful respect for the president of Israel, and even though the sale of the pieces was made in accordance with all applicable laws. “
The Museum of Islamic Art in Los Angeles Mayer had previously said that in the face of monetary pressures, adding up and especially the coronavirus pandemic, he had been forced to sell the items, in order to open them.
It is estimated that the sale of Islamic works, adding artifacts, manuscripts, carpets and tapespers, will generate a total of $4. 13 million to $6. 1 million for the museum. overall between $2. 2 million and $3. 4 million.
Gaza’s Hamas government convicted three Palestinian peace activists who were imprisoned last April for organizing an online video convention with Israeli participants, but say they will spend no more time in prison, according to a rights organization and the main defendant’s family circle.
Rami Aman, 39, arrested in April along with seven members of his Gaza Youth Committee Group after holding a two-hour Zoom meeting. The occasion attracted dozens of pacifist activists, adding Israelis.
Hamas, an Islamic terrorist organization that opposes Israel’s lifestyle and advocates its destruction, imposed treason rates on Aman and a colleague, but released five of the detainees a few days later.
The Palestinian Centre for Human Rights, which defended Aman, said an army had suspended the remaining one-year sentences of the defendants and released them.
Aman’s family circle showed that his son had come home, but refused to comment further.
The infrequent Zoom convention of Israelis and Gazans was announced on a Facebook page and some Israeli participants released a recording of the discussions, prompting strong condemnation from Aman and other Gaza participants. Hamas-led security forces made the arrests.
Since gaining strength in a bloody blow in 2007, Hamas has waged three wars opposed to Israel, and anti-Israel sentiment is not unusual in Gaza.
– Agencies
The Ministry of Health said Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was not obliged to go to quarantine, even though he showed that a secretary in his workplace had contracted COVID-19.
The ministry made the announcement after an epidemiological investigation and said the Prime Minister’s Office worker had won individual orders on what to do.
The rate of positive coronavirus controls reached a new low since the start of the wave at the time in June, with only 1. 9% of the 26282 control effects that have returned so far and tested positive.
The number of patients in severe condition fell below 500 for the first time in about six weeks, according to knowledge disseminated through the Ministry of Health.
Yesterday 569 new instances were shown, 2. 9% of the 19,958 results, and today 495 new ones were added to the count.
The total number of cases since the start of the pandemic is 310,600, of which 13,375 are active, of which 486 are in serious condition, of which 196 are fans, another 142 are in moderate condition and the rest are mild or not. existing symptoms.
The toll is 2440.
There would probably be a lot more water on the moon than previously thought, according to two studies published today, raising the tempting prospect that astronauts on long-term area missions can also locate soft drinks, and perhaps even fuel, on the lunar surface.
It was believed that the moon was seced until about a decade ago, when a series of discoveries warned that our nearest celestial neighbor had water lines trapped on the surface.
Two new studies published in Nature Astronomy recommend that there would possibly be much more water than previously thought, adding ice stored in permanently shaded “cold traps” in lunar polar regions.
Previous has discovered water indications when scanning the surface, but they were unable to distinguish between water (H2O) and hydroxyl, a molecule composed of a hydrogen atom and an oxygen atom.
A new study provides more chemical evidence that the Moon has molecular water, even in sunny areas.
Researchers told the AFP that water may get trapped in glass beads or some other substance that protects it from the harsh lunar environment, co-author Casey Honniball of the Hawaii Institute of Geophysics and Planetology told the AFP, adding that new observations will help better perceive where water can come from and how it is stored.
“If we locate that water is abundant enough in some places, we may use it as a resource for human exploration,” Honniball says. “It can also be used as drinking water, respiratory oxygen and rocket fuel. “
– AFP
After a seven-hour meeting, the ministers of the so-called Coronavirus Cabinet tend to approve the reopening of outlets that have been forming with consumers in the user since Sunday, Hebrew media reports.
But while a majority appears to be being formed to pass the approach, it has been accepted, as the Ministry of Health still strongly opposes it.
Lebanese President Michel Aoun’s daughter has provoked outrage in her country after asking for peace with Israel, but with significant reservations.
Claudine Aoun did this for the first time last month, and has since repeated it several times on television, and responded on Twitter about the factor yesterday.
“Before talking about peace, we will have to demarcate the borders and solve the disorders similar to our land,” he wrote on September 24, referring to a dispute over the maritime border between countries, which is being addressed through indirect talks under the auspices. of the United States and several minor territorial disputes.
– Claudine Aoun Roukoz (@claudineaoun) 24 September 2020
“Then I adopted a defense strategy that would protect us when we were attacked,” he added. “We all have the precept of peace and I hope to make a stopover in Jerusalem, but not before all disorders are resolved. “
In yesterday’s tweet, Aoun added that the Palestinian refugee factor will also be resolved, one of the basic disorders of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, which is likely to only be resolved as a component of a general peace agreement between the two sides.
“Once these disorders are resolved, I will oppose the prospect of a peace agreement between the Lebanese state and Israel,” he said on national television.
At a briefing for the United Nations Security Council, the United Nations Special Coordinator for the Middle East Process, Nickolay Mladenov, requests the Palestinian Authority to resume its security coordination with Israel.
Ramallah stopped coordinating with Israel in May to protest Israel’s plans to annex the West Bank. Since then, these plans have been suspended, but coordination has still been restored.
As an end component of coordination with Israel, the Palestinian Authority refused to settle for the tax revenue Israel collects on its behalf. This revenue is a component of the Palestinian budget.
“I call on the Palestinian leaders to resume their coordination with Israel and to settle for their customs clearance income, cash that belongs to the Palestinians and will be replaced through donor funds,” Mladenov says.
The Palestinian Authority’s refusal to settle for tax revenues has led to wage delays or discounts in the West Bank and has struck the Palestinian economy amid the coronavirus pandemic.
“The viability of the Palestinian Authority is seriously compromised by an economic and fiscal crisis that has been exacerbated by the Palestinian resolution to end civil and security coordination with Israel,” says Mladenov.
Mladenov also called on Israel to “facilitate the Palestinian-free movement and property in Israel and between the occupied West Bank and the Gaza Strip. “
– Aaron Boxerman
For the first time, a vote shows that more Israelis would like to see party leader Yamina Naftali Bennett as prime minister than Benjamin Netanyahu.
Bennett, a recently right-wing clergyman in the opposition, gained popularity after continually criticizing the government’s coronavirus policies, recommending measures that were eventually implemented through Netanyahu months later, and agreed and declared himself a candidate for prime minister.
Channel 12 voting, which is hypothetical because Israel has no direct elections, shows that if Bennett opposes Netanyahu and those are the options, Bennett would get 31. 4% of the vote, while Netanyahu would get 28. 6%.
35% say they would vote for either of the two right-wing leaders.
The UN Security Council is holding an assembly on stage in the Middle East, with UN Israeli envoy Gilad Erdan accusing it of remaining silent on recent Jewish state standardization agreements with the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain and Sudan.
“I have witnessed a discordant mismatch between what this council decides to focus on and what is happening in the Middle East,” Erdan told the council at a video convention meeting.
In his reply, Erdan asked the Council to “free itself from the old paradigms and face the new truth in the Middle East. “
He referred to the Security Council’s “silent response” to recent agreements and their “apparent by other points that threaten the stability and security of the region. “
He mocks recent talks on possible Palestinian elections, which have taken a position since 2004.
“Israel has held more elections in a year than the Palestinians have held in the last 15 years,” he says. Israel held three national elections between April 2019 and March 2020 in the midst of a political crisis.
Erdan speaks after Palestinian Authority Foreign Minister Riyadh al-Maliki and UN Special Envoy for Middle East Peace Nickolai Mladenov.
The Palestinian representative’s speech was interrupted no less than by Erdan, who did not realize that his microphone was on and may be heard aloud preparing for his next speech.
Foreign Minister Gabi Ashkenazi is meeting with his Russian counterpart Sergei Lavrov for the first time on a diplomatic stopover in the Greek capital of Athens, the Foreign Ministry said in a statement.
Ashkenazi briefed Lavrov on the progress of standardization agreements with the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain and Sudan, as well as the factor of Iran and its indirect terrorist teams such as Lebanon’s Hezbollah, he said.
“Israel appreciates ties and coordination with the Russian government to prevent an Iranian withdrawal from it in Syria,” Ashkenazi said, asking Tehran to prevent Hezbollah from joining.
The statement indicates that other bilateral problems have been discussed, adding cooperation in the economy and combat opposed to the coronavirus pandemic.
Russia’s Foreign Ministry tweeted about the meeting, giving additional details.
The Unified Torah Judaism Party made the resolution to oppose the law expanding fines for establishments that violate restrictions on coronaviruses.
Many elementary and secondary ultra-Orthodox ieshiva have operated during the following week, breaking the law and receiving FINES of NIS 5,000 ($1,480).
Ministers propose to increase this amount to make the risk of fines more deterrent.
But the Haredi party, which sees the measure addressed to its community, says that if such an invoice is to be voted on at the Knesset, it will vote for it.
A 26-year-old man was accused of stealing an excavator from a structure in Florida, taking her to a community, and breaking down the symptoms of the crusade of U. S. Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden, according to the government and the owners.
The man took the excavator in the city of Haines on Saturday and destroyed Biden’s symptoms in view of local residents, according to witnesses. James Blight has been charged with car theft and break-in, according to the Haines City Police Department.
Former Mayor Adam Burgess lives in Central Florida, a country he says is more commonly black and calls it a hate crime.
“This guy came to my property, took the two Joe BidenS he had in my garden and then came back with an excavator to tear down my fence,” Burgess told Bay News 9.
A video taken through the media shows the broken fences. Light is also accused of sweeping a speed restriction signal from the city, among others.
Police said Blight claimed he was too much at the time not to forget what happened. It is not transparent without delay if you have an attorney who can comment on your behalf.
Ap
The German calls a series of attacks through Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan opposed to French President Emmanuel Macron as “defamatory” and “unacceptable” and expresses solidarity with Paris.
Chancellor Angela Merkel’s spokeswoman said she strongly condemns Erdogan’s energetic comments about Macron, who took a defiant stance after Professor Samuel Paty was beheaded for showing cartoons of the Prophet Muhammad to academics in France in a lesson on freedom of expression earlier this month.
“These are absolutely unacceptable defamatory statements, especially in the context of the horrific murder of French instructor Samuel Paty through an Islamist fanatic,” spokesman Steffen Seibert said.
– AFP
The high-level coronavirus company is meeting to discuss the additional easing of blocking measures put in place to curb the spread of COVID-19, a day after giving its approval to reopen some schools next week.
Ministers planned to authorize the resumption of after-school care systems and school buses, as well as to allow the reopening of some retail establishments.
U. S. Democratic presidential candidate calls President Donald Trump “George” at a crusader event, which seems to confuse him with former President George Bush and ridicule the outgoing president.
“Not because I’m running, but because I’m running against it, this is the top choice in a long, long, long time,” Biden said.
“And the character of the country, in my opinion, is literally on the ballot. What kind of country are we going to be? Four more years of George, ah, George, heArray . . . they will end up in a position where if Trump is elected, we will be in another world. “
– Steve Guest (@SteveGuest) October 26, 2020
Trump responded with a cheerful tweet, falsely stating that Biden, the interviewer, reminded him of Trump’s name.
– Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) October 26, 2020
Nabil Shaath, a senior Palestinian Authority official, said that “whether Joe Biden or otherwise comes to force [in america’s next presidential election], they can’t be worse than Donald Trump. “
“Biden will be worse than Trump, the madman, who leads the United States toward destruction and acts opposed to the Palestinian cause,” Shaath, a key adviser to Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas, told dunya al-Watan news site.
Shaath says the Palestine Liberation Organization would ask a new Biden management to reopen the PLO’s Washington DC, which the White House ordered closed in 2018, and cancel Trump’s cut in US funding.
“We will ask for it immediately, even if its implementation will possibly take some time,” Shaath said, adding that palestinians will be patient until Biden can also simply “unite his management. “
Ramallah has made little effort to hide his preference to see Trump outside the White House, opposing the U. S. president’s policy on the Israeli-Palestinian confrontation over the past four years.
Palestinian Authority Prime Minister Mohammad Shtayyeh said at a video convention in October: “God do us if Trump is re-elected. “
– Aaron Boxerman
In a tragic incident off the coast of the town of Ashkelon, a 5-year-old boy by bicycle was killed by crashing into a truck on Zevulun Street.
Magen David Adom’s paramedics denounced him at the site.
One of the doctors claimed that he had suffered severe head trauma and showed no major signs.
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan is calling on the Turks to boycott French products, as NATO allies have deteriorated due to Paris’ hardened stance against radical Islam.
“As has been said in France, do not buy Turkish-labeled products,” I call my other people here: never give credit to French-labeled products, don’t buy them,” Erdogan said at a televised conference in Ankara.
– AFP
German Chancellor Angela Merkel’s CDU has said it will postpone a congress scheduled for early December to elect a new leader due to an outbreak of coronavirus infections.
High-ranking members of the Conservative Party will review the stage in mid-December for their next steps, General Secretary Paul Ziemiak said.
The CDU still expects to hold an on-site conference at a post-video conference date, he added.
– AFP
Airstrikes through the regime’s best friend, Russia, killed Turkey-backed rebels in northwestern Syria, according to a monitor, which gave a new price.
Russian warplanes also wounded 90 others when they attacked a camp in the Faylaq al-Sham faction at the last main strong point of armed opposition in Idlib, according to the UK-based Syrian Observatory on Human Rights.
– AFP
The Israeli working group on the coronavirus epidemic is involved in importing instances of controlled West Bank spaces through the Palestinian Authority, raising the highest infection rates there and among Israeli Arabs.
During today’s assembly of the so-called Coronavirus Cabinet, coronavirus tsar Ronni Gamzu would quarantine Israeli Arabs to return after visiting AP-controlled areas.
Designation of Palestinian cities with the highest infection rates as “red” cities is also being considered, which could very likely lead to restrictions for other people who have visited those cities.
The executing organization states in a report that AP spaces have around 400 new instances per day with a positive check rate of 20% (the official AP figures imply that this figure is approximately 10%) and from 30 to 40 new critically ill patients every day, concluding that these figures imply that the real morbidity rate is approximately 4 times higher than the official figures.
He says Israeli Arabs go to those spaces to work, organize opportunities and have fun. It also highlights the fact that some 100,000 Palestinian employees contribute to Israel every day.
A Palestinian was accused of illegally carrying out a loaded weapon and making plans to carry out a shootout with her in the city of Rosh Ha’ayin in central Israel last September, police said.
A gag was placed on the case, but was overdulled after suspect Moataz Musa Hussein charged through an army court.
According to police, police were informed of Hussein’s plan to carry out an attack in Rosh Ha’ayin on 29 September.
“The agents conducted a search for the suspect. Police approached him, subdued him and saw that a loaded pistol, ammunition magazines and a box of bullets were hidden over him. . . Their efforts well prevented the terrorist attack,” according to police.
“After his interrogation, the suspect admitted that he planned to carry out a terrorist attack,” the police added.
The suspect, from the West Bank village of Qalqilya, was charged in an army court in Samaria, police said.
– Judah Ari Gross