Israel wants to scrap requested ICC order against Netanyahu

Israel wants to scrap requested ICC order against Netanyahu

NEWS YOU CAN’T MISS

  • Israel wants to scrap requested ICC order against Netanyahu

    In May, the ICC’s chief prosecutor requested an arrest warrant against, among others, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. Archive image. Photo: Peter Dejong/AP/TT

    Israel is appealing the request by the ICC’s chief prosecutor for an arrest warrant against the country’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Defense Minister Yoav Gallant.

    The announcement by ICC prosecutor Karim Khan that he wants Netanyahu, Israel’s defense minister and three high-ranking leaders within terrorist-branded Hamas to be arrested came in May, among other things, on charges of war crimes and crimes against humanity in Gaza.

    In August, Khan’s office urged the court to take action “with the utmost urgency.” The court is still considering Khan’s application for an arrest warrant for Netanyahu and Gallant.

    Khan’s accusations against Netanyahu and Gallant include, among other things, having deliberately “directed attacks against a civilian population”.

  • THREE NEWS YOU CAN’T MISS

  • After the acts of violence – ministers meeting with tech giants

    The Nordic ministers of justice met several representatives of Google, Meta, Tiktok and Snapchat during Friday.

    The background is the recent events that have attracted attention where young children are recruited to carry out various acts of violence for criminal networks.

    The ministers demand that the tech companies be more cooperative.

    At a press conference, Gunnar Strömmer said, among other things, that the Nordic ministers want the social media platforms to come up with an action plan to stop gang recruitment.

    – To establish a structure for efficient information sharing between our Nordic actors. But also between our police authorities and digital platforms to ensure that what the police have and as digital platforms should come to them, says Minister of Justice Gunnar Strömmer.

    Danish Justice Minister Peter Hummelgaard said political patience was running out.

    – We have been very clear to the various tech platforms that political patience, not only in the Nordic countries but throughout the world, is about to run out.

  • Israel: Major rocket attack from Lebanon

    Israel is attacked with rockets from Lebanon again. This photo was taken during an attack on Tuesday, where air defenses shot down projectiles over the Galilee. Photo: Leo Correa/AP/TT

    Sirens sound in Israel’s northern border areas on Friday afternoon. About a hundred rockets have been fired from Lebanon in rounds, according to the Israeli military.

    The alarm went off at noon and in a first attack wave 60 rockets came, according to an Israeli statement. Within an hour, two more waves of rockets arrived, first with 70 and then with 20.

    Many of the projectiles appear to have been shot down by Israel’s advanced air defenses, but it is not clear at first how many have hit and whether any people have been injured. In the Golan Heights, rocket strikes are reported to have caused fires in nature.

    The Israeli Air Force attacked hundreds of targets on the other side of the border in Lebanon on Thursday. It happened at the same time as the supreme leader of the Islamist movement Hezbollah, Hassan Nasrallah, gave a speech in which he vowed to avenge the explosions that occurred in thousands of pagers and other devices across Lebanon.

  • Alarm received about young people being beaten in Hudiksvall

    A woman is suspected of abusing two teenage girls in Hudiksvall.

    There is currently no information that the girls have had to seek care.

    Several police patrols have been sent to the scene.

  • After the lottery scandal: The company begins an investigation

    Criticized Effective Communication is now acting after the information about how the telecommunications company conducted the sale of the Social Democrats’ lotteries.

    In order to get to the bottom of the information that is circulating, the company has hired an independent security company as an external auditor, Effective Communication writes in a press release.

  • Person hit in Danderyd

    It was around lunchtime that the police were called to Danderyd in Stockholm, where a person had been hit.

    – Patrols are on site and working right now, says Susanna Rinaldo at the police in the Stockholm region.

    The accident must have happened in the area around Klingsta.

    It is too early to say anything about the damage situation and how many people are involved, says Rinaldo.

  • Tram has stopped – people stuck in tunnel

    A tram has stopped in the Hammarkulle tunnel, reports P4 Gothenburg.

    Passengers are evacuated and traffic is diverted.

  • Åkesson: Baudin must resign

    The Sweden Democrats’ party leader Jimmie Åkesson demands that the Social Democrats’ party secretary Tobias Baudin resign after the lottery scandal within the party.

    “There is only one way around this. Put the dirty laundry on the table, make sure that everyone who participated in this shady activity can leave the party and pay back the money as soon as possible to everyone who has bought your lottery tickets,” writes Jimmie Åkesson in a post on the platform X.

  • Now home sitters receive distance learning

    Home sitters in Stockholm, i.e. students with a high absence from school, are to be offered distance learning, reports P4 Stockholm.

    The School Inspectorate has previously said no to this, but now the proposal gets the green light.

  • Several collisions at the southern link

    Several cars and a truck are involved in a collision at Södra länken in southern Stockholm.

    The road has been closed, but according to the emergency services, there should be no information about personal injuries.

    – The car is being recovered there right now, says Kurt Jonsson, command operator at the rescue service.

    Another traffic accident has occurred nearby, also at Södra länken. A car and a truck have collided.

    – One person has had to be cut out of the car and has been taken to hospital.

    Jonsson continues:

    – The road is completely closed in the direction of Södertälje.

  • Mess with logging into bank

    There are disturbances in logging into Nordea’s internet bank.

    – We don’t know what causes it, but we are fully focused on solving it, says Hugo Laigar, press communicator at Nordea.

  • Moose walked around in Årsta

    Two moose wandered around Årsta during the morning, the police confirmed.

    There must have been a small disturbance in the traffic on Åbyvägen.

    Now the moose are euthanized.

  • Hit the partner with a hammer – 18 years in prison

    A 64-year-old man is sentenced to 18 years in prison for attempted murder after hitting his partner in the head with a hammer.

    – Considering that it was a matter of repeated blows with a hammer to the plaintiff’s head with extremely serious injuries to the plaintiff, the action on the part of the man is as close to a completed crime as possible. Therefore, the district court considers that the penalty should aim at what the penalty value for a completed murder would have given, says Agneta Karlsson, lawyer in a statement.

    When the alarm came in to the police, the informant told them that he had learned that he had killed his wife and that there was no point in calling an ambulance as the woman was dead.

    The woman survived the assault but suffered severe head injuries.

  • Workplace accident at a wind turbine

    There has been a workplace accident at a wind turbine in Piteå, according to SOS Alarm.

    – An ambulance is on site, but no one has been evacuated at the moment, says Agnes Brandt at SOS Alarm.

    The emergency services must also be on site to assist.

    The police are also there.

    – We got the alarm at half past eleven, says Marie Andersson, press spokesperson at the police.

  • Alarm about suspected dangerous object

    The police were alerted about a suspected dangerous object in Malmö.

    It was a thermos-like object that stood next to a road in a parking lot, the police said.

    The site was cordoned off and the national bomb shelter was in place.

    The object proved to be harmless and the cordons have now been lifted.

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