Swiss probing Israel-linked computer virus that spied on Iran talks: Zio-Watch, 6/18/2015

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(JTA) — Switzerland has opened an investigation into a computer virus linked to Israel that allegedly was used to spy on European hotels hosting the Iran nuclear talks.

There is an open investigation into “political espionage in Switzerland,” Swiss Attorney General Michael Lauber said Wednesday, Reuters reported.

Swiss authorities have searched hotels in relation to the investigation, Reuters reported, citing an aide to Lauber. Three hotels in Switzerland have served as venues for the talks between Iran and six world powers.

The Wall Street Journal reported last week on the Duqu virus, which has been linked to Israel. Each of the unnamed hotels in the Journal report was targeted by a version of the Duqu virus about two weeks before hosting the negotiations.
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Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas (C) and Prime Minister Rami Hamdallah (R) are seen in this AFP photo in the West Bank city of Ramallah on December 11, 2014.

The Palestinian national unity government formed last year to heal a split between President Mahmoud Abbas’s Fatah Party and the Palestinian resistance movement, Hamas, has resigned, officials say.

Senior Palestinian officials say President Abbas has now tasked Premier Rami Hamdallah to form a new government.

Nimr Hammad, an adviser to Abbas said Wednesday that discussions to form a new government would include consultations with the various Palestinian political parties and factions. “Hamdallah handed his resignation to Abbas and Abbas ordered him to form a new government,” media outlets quoted Hammad as saying.

Amin Maqbul, the secretary general of the Revolutionary Council, which serves as Fatah’s legislative body, had earlier noted that the first Palestinian unity government was stepping down due to its inability to exert authority in the besieged and war-torn Gaza Strip. “The government will resign in the next 24 hours because this one is weak and there is no chance that Hamas will allow it to work in Gaza.”

Reacting to remarks by senior Fatah officials, Hamas spokesman Sami Abu Zuhri has strongly rejected the decision by Ramallah-based Fatah political party to unilaterally dissolve the government.

“Hamas rejects any one-sided change in the government without the agreement of all parties,” Zuhri said on early Wednesday, adding, “No one told us anything about any decision to change and no one consulted with us about any change in the unity government. Fatah acted on its own in all regards.”
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Hamas spokesman Sami Abu Zuhri

The Palestinian resistance movement, Hamas, has rejected an earlier decision by Ramallah-based Fatah political faction to unilaterally dissolve the Palestinian unity government within the next 24 hours.

“Hamas rejects any one-sided change in the government without the agreement of all parties,” Hamas spokesman Sami Abu Zuhri said on Wednesday.

He added, “No one told us anything about any decision to change and no one consulted with us about any change in the unity government. Fatah acted on its own in all regards.”

On Tuesday, Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas announced that his government will be dissolved within 24 hours.

“The government will resign in the next 24 hours because this one is weak and there is no chance that Hamas will allow it to work in Gaza,” Amin Maqbul, the secretary general of the Revolutionary Council, which serves as Fatah’s legislative body, told AFP.
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Kahlon sorry for former envoy’s Obama critique; scandal-ridden MK Oren Hazan booted from Knesset hall amid suspension calls

June 17, 2015, 1:53 pm

The Times of Israel liveblogged Wednesday’s events as they unfolded.

Rebels surround Druze village in Syria

Rebels surrounded a government-held Druze village on the Syrian side of the ceasefire line on the Golan Heights on Wednesday after heavy fighting, a monitoring group says.

The advance came a day after Israel, which has a significant Druze population, said it was preparing for the possibility that refugees fleeing fighting in the area might seek to cross to the Israeli side of the strategic plateau. The IDF chief of staff on Tuesday maintained Israel would act to prevent the slaughter of Syrian refugees near the Israeli border.
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Ayelet Shaked bolsters ministry’s international department in preparation for counter-BDS lawsuits worldwide, report says

June 17, 2015, 10:07 am

Justice Minister Ayelet Shaked at the Justice Ministry in Jerusalem, May 17, 2015 (Flash90/Dudi Vaknin, Pool)

Justice Minister Ayelet Shaked is reportedly going on the offensive against international initiatives to boycott Israel and is preparing to file lawsuits against activists who call for blacklisting the Jewish state.

The tactic came after a review by the international department of the Justice Ministry found that although boycott activists have appealed to many courts in Western countries for sanctions against Israel, they have never succeed in a obtaining a ruling in their favor, the Hebrew-language NRG news site reported on Wednesday.

Ministry officials believe that legal circumstances present the option of suing activists with civil and criminal law suits for damaging Israeli trade, for discrimination and racism, based on the laws in various countries, the report said.

Shaked was said to be putting together a plan of action and has already instructed that the number of positions in the international department be doubled so that it can push ahead with the program as soon as possible.

The legal campaign is to be integrated with a wider plan to combat the “delegitimization” of Israel being put together by Public Security Minister Gilad Erdan, who also serves as Information Minister.
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(JTA) —The head of Israel’s Kulanu party has apologized to the Obama administration for party member Michael Oren’s public criticism of the U.S. president.

In a letter to U.S. Ambassador to Israel Dan Shapiro, Moshe Kahlon wrote, “I distance myself from the statements made by Michael Oren. President Obama has greatly contributed to Israel’s security,” Israel’s Channel 2 reported Wednesday.

The letter reportedly noted that Oren’s comments, made in a Wall Street Journal Op-Ed published Monday, were “only his personal opinion” and did not represent the Kulanu party.

In his Op-Ed, Oren, the American-born former Israeli ambassador to Washington, accused Obama of abandoning the two core principles that undergird the U.S.-Israel relationship: no public disagreements and no surprises.
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JERUSALEM (JTA) — Israel’s religious services minister reportedly called Reform Jews “a disaster for the people of Israel.”

David Azoulay of the Sephardic Orthodox Shas party made the comments during a meeting to discuss the Women of the Wall group, Israel Hayom daily newspaper reported Wednesday. The meeting reportedly took place on Tuesday between Azoulay and Justice Minister Ayelet Shaked of the right-wing Jewish Home party.

Azoulay is trying to clamp down on non-Orthodox practices at the Western Wall. His predecessor, Naftali Bennett, the head of Jewish Home, had agreed to a plan to establish an egalitarian section in an area adjacent to the Western Wall plaza known as Robinson’s Arch. The plan was formulated by Cabinet secretary Avichai Mandelblit and Jewish Agency for Israel Chairman Natan Sharansky to resolve religious conflict at the wall.

But Azoulay appears to be walking back the compromise.
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JERUSALEM (JTA) — Rocket alert sirens sounded on the Golan Heights, sending residents of several communities on the border with Syria into bomb shelters.

No rockets landed on the Israeli side of the Golan following the sirens late Wednesday morning.

The sirens corresponded to the launch of a major offensive by Syrian rebels against the Syrian army in the Quneitra province in the Syrian Golan Heights near the border with Israel, according to reports. It is believed that the rockets that triggered the sirens were fired by one side in the Syria warfare.

Errant fire from the fighting between Syria’s army and rebels as part of the country’s 4-year-old civil war have struck the Israeli Golan in the past.

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The IDF soldiers implicated in beating and shouting obscenities at a Palestinian man lying face down were reprimanded and handed suspended sentences of a month each. The family of the man by the IDF is yet to hear anything about his health or wellbeing.

The confrontation took place in the Jalazoun refugee camp near Ramallah, in the West Bank. The camps are a site of regular visits by Israeli Defense Forces (IDF) soldiers, camp officials say.

The IDF soldiers allege they were being attacked and had stones thrown at them by the camp’s inhabitants, who numbered about 70 and staged a violent demonstration lasting “several hours,” as cited by AFP. The man who was beaten was said to have grabbed at one of the soldiers’ rifles, leading to the beating.
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Prime minister instructs Communications Ministry to use all means available in order to shut down PA-funded TV station; Nazareth-based station aims to give voice to Israeli Arabs. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who also holds the position of communications minister, instructed the director-general of the Communications Ministry to work to shut down a new TV station called “Palestine ’48,” only hours before the Palestinian Authority-funded station is to go online on Thursday.
 

Palestinian Communications Minister Riad Hassan said in response: “Neither Netanyahu or his radical right-wing government can shut down the station.”
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Hamas official Moussa Abu Marzouk says so far there’s ‘no written plans to discuss with other Palestinian factions’ while Salah Bardawil says ‘no vision or timetable for the implementation of the truce has crystallized’. Hamas denied on Wednesday that it reached a long-term ceasefire agreement with Israel, with a senior Hamas official saying that “so far, we have no written plans to discuss with the Palestinian factions.”
Hamas sources said Tuesday that Israel and the Gaza rulers have been holding an indirect “exchange about ideas” for cementing a long-term ceasefire in the Gaza Strip.
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FIve months after Paris terror attack targeting Jews, 25% more French Jews moved to Israel in early 2015 than in the same period in 2014

The number of French Jews who have made, or are making aliyah to Israel between January and August 2015, is 25% higher than that same period.
The number of immigrants from France rose from 4,000 in 2014 to 5,100 in same period in 2015. The numbers where submitted to Immigrant Absorption minister Ze’ev Elkin by the Heads of French Jewish organizations.
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With progress in discussions slowing down, deadline could be extended to July 8, diplomats say

June 17, 2015, 1:42 pm

Delegates sit around a table prior to a bilateral meeting as part of the closed-door nuclear talks with Iran at a hotel in Vienna, Austria. (AP Photo/Ronald Zak, File)

VIENNA (AP) — Iran and six powers are still apart on all main elements of a nuclear deal with less than two weeks to go to their June 30 target date and will likely have to extend their negotiations, two diplomats tell The Associated Press.

Their comments support concerns that obstacles to a pact remain beyond the public debate on how far Iran must open its nuclear program to outside review under any deal.

Iran’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, has for weeks rebuffed US demands that UN nuclear monitors have access to military sites and nuclear scientists as they monitor Tehran’s commitments under a deal and probe allegations of past work on atomic arms.

Negotiators are concerned about a lack of headway on all issues. Russian chief delegate Sergey Ryabkov said Friday the “the rate of progress … is progressively slowing down.”

Negotiators have been meeting five days a week in Vienna over the past few weeks. The two diplomats are familiar with the progress of the talks and spoke shortly before a planned five-day round reconvened Wednesday. They demanded anonymity because they are not authorized to discuss the confidential negotiations.
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Defense secretary and chairman of Joint Chiefs of Staff to address administration’s regional strategy before a House committee

June 17, 2015, 11:35 am

Joint Chiefs Chairman Gen. Martin Dempsey, left, accompanied by Defense Secretary Ash Carter, speaks during a news conference at the Pentagon, April 16, 2015 (AP Photo/Andrew Harnik, File)

WASHINGTON (AP) — Two of America’s top military leaders will be asked to defend President Barack Obama’s handling of the tinderbox of violence and struggle in the Middle East.

Defense Secretary Ash Carter and Gen. Martin Dempsey, who is finishing a four-year stint as chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, are to appear Wednesday before the House Armed Services Committee.

“There is a sense that we are at a particularly perilous time and that U.S. policy and strategy are inadequate,” said Rep. Mac Thornberry, the committee chairman.

“When one factors in the turmoil in Yemen and Syria, the uncertainty about the future direction of Turkey, the doubts about us from traditional allies such as Egypt and the Gulf nations, as well as the continuing threats to our ally Israel, the plain hard facts show that the situation in the Middle East has deteriorated substantially in the last six years,” said Thornberry, R-Texas. “What’s worse, there seems to be nothing coming from the White House to change the trajectory.”

Thornberry said he planned to ask Carter and Dempsey questions about the military component of U.S. strategy to reverse the downward spiral in the Middle East and protect American interests.
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(JTA) — A fake bomb was discovered near the Israeli Embassy in Montevideo, Uruguay.

The device was found Wednesday housed in a sardine can at the World Trade Center, the site of the embassy in the Uruguayan capital, The Associated Press reported. It had wires, a battery and a detonator but no explosives.

Israeli Foreign Ministry spokesman Emmanuel Nahshon confirmed the report of the false explosive device to the Israeli daily Haaretz.

It was the second time in the past six months that the Israeli Embassy in Montevideo was targeted with a false bomb. In January, a device with explosives but no starter was discovered in the same area.

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WASHINGTON (JTA) – The U.S. House of Representatives introduced a resolution condemning academic boycotts against Israeli scholars and institutions on American campuses.

The resolution, introduced Tuesday by Rep. Carlos Curbelo (R-Fla.), condemns any restrictions on interaction between American and Israeli academic institutions as part of the Boycotts, Divestment and Sanctions movement.

“Efforts to uniquely isolate Israeli institutions and scholars undermine academic freedom and, moreover, does not advance the cause of peace,” Richard Foltin, the American Jewish Committee’s director of national and legislative affairs, said in a statement praising the resolution.

The resolution also praises Israel’s role in many fields, urging American universities to “enhance and accelerate their engagement in academic exchanges with counterpart Israeli institutions.”

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Screenshot from Ruptly video

(Screenshot from Ruptly video)

Some 50 people have been either killed or injured in Yemen’s capital Sanaa after five car bombs went off near Shia mosques and the headquarters of the Houthi rebels. Islamic State has claimed responsibility, calling the attack a “revenge.”

The explosions targeted three Sanaa mosques, the Hashush mosque, the Kibsi mosque, and the al-Qubah al-Khadra mosque, as well as the headquarters of the Ansarullah movement of the Houthis, Reuters reported.

The fifth explosion took place at the Al-Tayssir mosque, AFP added, saying that the blasts went off simultaneously. The agency said that the bomb which struck the Hashush mosque also hit the house of a Houthi leader Taha al-Mutawakel.
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WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange (Reutets / John Stillwell)

(WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange (Reutets / John Stillwell))

Questioning of Julian Assange by Swedish prosecutors over rape allegations has again been delayed, after investigators failed to submit a timely request for an interview at the Ecuadorian embassy in London, where the whistleblower has been since 2012.

“This afternoon, the Swedish prosecutor Marianne Ny cancelled a prospective appointment to take my statement today. We proposed the dates and Ny accepted them,” said a statement issued by Assange, an Australian citizen, late on Wednesday.

“Prosecutor Ny led my lawyers to believe that the appointment was proceeding. My lawyers had booked tickets and I have been put to considerable expense. Today, I learned that the Swedish legal application to Ecuador, which is likely to take weeks, was only sent to Ecuador two days ago,” he added.
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Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko (L) welcomes former British Prime Minister Tony Blair as they meet in Kiev, Ukraine, June 17, 2015 (Reuters / Mykhailo Markiv)

(Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko (L) welcomes former British Prime Minister Tony Blair as they meet in Kiev, Ukraine, June 17, 2015 (Reuters / Mykhailo Markiv))

Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko has invited former British PM Tony Blair to “share his experience of public administration” on an international council of European public figures advising Kiev on government reforms.

After meeting with Poroshenko in Kiev, the former UK leader told reporters that Ukraine faced “great challenges” from “Russian aggression” and “corruption.” Blair, who was prime minister from 1997 to 2007, also called on Ukrainian leaders to follow “not self-interest but values” such as “freedom, democracy and a desire to serve the people.”

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Opposition MK said to schedule meetings with UK politicians as a loophole to gain immunity from prosecution

June 17, 2015, 2:53 pm

Zionist Union MK Tzipi Livni in a Knesset committee meeting, June 3, 2015. (Hadas Parush/Flash90)

Zionist Union MK Tzipi Livni was forced to use a legal loophole in order to avoid possible arrest over alleged Israeli war crimes when she attended the Fortune Most Powerful Women International Summit this week in London.

Anti-Israeli activists applied to have an arrest warrant issued for Livni, who was foreign minister during the 2008-2009 war in the Gaza Strip.

In 2009, ahead of a planned visit by Livni, a British court issued a warrant for Livni over alleged war crimes committed by the IDF during the three-week conflict. In the end Livni did not go through with the trip, and the threat of an arrest kept her out of the UK until authorities in 2011 granted automatic immunity to all Israelis on official visits to Britain.

However, Livni’s attendance at the recent women’s summit could have been considered a personal visit, leaving her vulnerable to arrest. To preempt the problem Livni, whose party leads Israel’s opposition, arranged to meet with senior UK government officials, enabling the Knesset speaker to approve her travel as an official visit, the Hebrew-language daily newspaper Yedioth Ahronoth reported on Wednesday.

As a result the UK courts rejected a request for a new arrest warrant, citing Livni’s immunity.
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