Legal Affairs
The 18th-century manuscript by the Or HaChaim offers a rare glimpse into Moroccan Jewish history.
The infection began after the Israeli prime minister’s prostate operation.
Israel’s minister for foreign affairs spoke during a visit to Budapest.
“The concern is the sanctions will be used to shut the court down, to destroy it rather than just tie its hands,” an ICC official said.
Rejecting compensation allows the National Railway Company of Belgium to “dilute and evade the necessity of taking any current action,” said the World Jewish Restitution Organization.
“Birds of a feather flock together,” Gideon Sa’ar write about Karim Khan and Syrian jihadist leader Ahmed al-Sharaa.
A co-sponsor of the legislation told JNS that it pro-Israel posters “should be protected as our freedom of speech.”
Karim Khan advised judges to dismiss Israel’s appeal against his war crimes probe, whose authority Jerusalem has never recognized.
Julia Sebutinde is a “brave and honest woman,” who “is a beacon for us all,” wrote May Golan, an Israeli minister.
“The good news: Hezbollah wanted the other guy,” wrote Hillel Neuer, of UN Watch. “The bad news: Salam is a longtime supporter of Ayatollah Khamenei, Fidel Castro and Bashar Assad.”
The U.S. government charged Mohammad Abedini with supporting terror, among other things.
Judge Julia Sebutinde made headlines for her rejection of South Africa’s genocide claims against Israel.