Jewish Man Receives 11 Years Behind Bars for Attempted Murder of an Arab

An extremist Jew distributes flags of the “Third Temple” movement in Jerusalem on September 7. (AFP) 
An extremist Jew distributes flags of the “Third Temple” movement in Jerusalem on September 7. (AFP) 
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Jewish Man Receives 11 Years Behind Bars for Attempted Murder of an Arab

An extremist Jew distributes flags of the “Third Temple” movement in Jerusalem on September 7. (AFP) 
An extremist Jew distributes flags of the “Third Temple” movement in Jerusalem on September 7. (AFP) 

The Jerusalem Magistrate’s Court has handed out prison sentences to a pair of Jewish residents who brutally attacked and critically injured a Palestinian from Eastern Jerusalem.

Noam Elimelech received 11 years behind bars for his involvement in the assault and was ordered to pay NIS 100,000 ($30,000) in compensation, according to the court’s ruling.

The second convict, Naftali Elmakayes, received 4.5 years behind bars.

During his verdict, Judge Eli Abarbanel said that this attack exhibits the gravest of intentions and terrorist crimes.

On May 12, 2021, Elimelech and Elmakayes compounded by two others made their way toward Mahane Yehuda Market in Western Jerusalem, deciding en route that they would beat an Arab passerby, the court ruling said.

Upon arriving, they spotted the victim taking out trash from the restaurant where he worked. The assailants approached him, confirmed that he was indeed an Arab, and began to assault him.

Elimelech repeatedly stabbed him in his body.

The Arab man, 24, is from Sheikh Jarrah and works at an Israeli restaurant to pay for his studies. He lost a lot of blood because of the stabbing and has now become handicapped and was forced to withdraw from his studies.

The prosecutors had accused the four Jews of terrorism.

Before heading to the market, they were participating in a protest against Sheikh Jarrah and chanting "May your village burn.”

The prosecutors said that the suspects talked with the victim to make sure he was an Arab. Upon confirming that, one of them pepper sprayed him before they started beating him.

They added that while one of the suspects stabbed the man, the others were beating him. After spotting the blood, the fourth suspect escaped.



French Court Upholds Warrant for Syria’s Assad over Chemical Weapons

Syrian activist and member of the Syrian Center for Media and Freedom Expression (SCM) Mazen Darwish (C) flanked by his lawyers speaks to members of the media after the Paris Court of Appeal's decision to confirm that a head of state, and in this case, Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, can be prosecuted for crimes, in Paris, France, 26 June 2024. (EPA)
Syrian activist and member of the Syrian Center for Media and Freedom Expression (SCM) Mazen Darwish (C) flanked by his lawyers speaks to members of the media after the Paris Court of Appeal's decision to confirm that a head of state, and in this case, Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, can be prosecuted for crimes, in Paris, France, 26 June 2024. (EPA)
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French Court Upholds Warrant for Syria’s Assad over Chemical Weapons

Syrian activist and member of the Syrian Center for Media and Freedom Expression (SCM) Mazen Darwish (C) flanked by his lawyers speaks to members of the media after the Paris Court of Appeal's decision to confirm that a head of state, and in this case, Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, can be prosecuted for crimes, in Paris, France, 26 June 2024. (EPA)
Syrian activist and member of the Syrian Center for Media and Freedom Expression (SCM) Mazen Darwish (C) flanked by his lawyers speaks to members of the media after the Paris Court of Appeal's decision to confirm that a head of state, and in this case, Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, can be prosecuted for crimes, in Paris, France, 26 June 2024. (EPA)

An arrest warrant issued for Syrian President Bashar al-Assad over the use of banned chemical weapons against civilians was upheld by a Paris court on Wednesday, one of the lawyers who lodged the initial case said.

The warrant issued by French judges in November 2023 refers to charges of complicity in crimes against humanity and complicity in war crimes, followed a French investigation into chemical attacks in Douma and the district of Eastern Ghouta in August 2013, attacks which killed more than 1,000 people.

Prosecutors, who would be responsible for asking the police to enact the warrant, had challenged its validity, arguing that, as a sitting head of state, Assad was immune from trial and prosecution in France.

"Today is a very special day and this is a historic victory, not only for the Syrian victims, but for all the victims around the world," said Mazen Darwish, head of the Syrian Center for Media & Freedom of the Press.

"The court’s decision confirms what we have always said – that when the issue concerns crimes against humanity, war crimes, and the use of chemical weapons, immunity should never be relied upon."

Assad's government has denied using chemical weapons against its opponents in the civil war, which broke out in March 2011. Syrian authorities did not immediately reply to a request for comment on Wednesday's Court of Appeal ruling.

Arrest warrants for sitting heads of state are rare because they generally have immunity from prosecution.

However, international law has exceptions to that immunity when a head of state is accused of war crimes and crimes against humanity or genocide. France is among the countries that allows the filing of crimes against humanity cases in its courts.

"This decision makes clear that international rules on immunity cannot be synonymous with impunity, particularly for the most serious international crimes," Steve Kostas, senior legal officer at Open Society Justice initiative, said in reaction to the verdict.