Lebanon says Israeli strike killed 3 media workers

Lebanon says Israeli strike killed 3 media workers
A car marked “Press” at the site of an Israeli airstrike that targeted an area where a number of journalists were located in the southern Lebanese village of Hasbaya. (AFP/File)
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Updated 25 October 2024

Lebanon says Israeli strike killed 3 media workers

Lebanon says Israeli strike killed 3 media workers
  • A cameraman and broadcast engineer from Al Mayadeen, along with video journalists from Al-Manar, were struck in an overnight attack
  • Lebanon’s Information Minister Ziad Makary accused Israel of intentionally targeting journalists, called them “war crime”

BEIRUT: Lebanon said an Israeli strike on a residence housing media workers killed two journalists and a broadcast engineer on Friday, in an attack the minister of information branded a “war crime.”
Pro-Iran Lebanese television channel Al Mayadeen said a cameraman and broadcast engineer were killed in the strike on a journalists’ residence in Hasbaya, south Lebanon.
Another TV outlet, Al-Manar, run by Hezbollah, said one of its video journalists was also killed in the strike on a bungalow located in a resort that several media organizations covering the Israel-Hezbollah war had rented out.
“The Israeli enemy waited for the journalists’ nighttime break to betray them in their sleep,” Information Minister Ziad Makary said in a post on X.
“This is an assassination, after monitoring and tracking, with prior planning and design, as there were 18 journalists there representing seven media institutions. This is a war crime.”
Journalists from other media organizations, including Lebanese broadcaster Al-Jadeed, Sky News Arabic and Al Jazeera English, were also resting nearby when the strike hit overnight.
Israel has not commented on the strike, which, according to Lebanon’s health ministry, also wounded three other people.
The area where the journalists were located is outside Hezbollah’s traditional strongholds.
Israel has been at war with Hezbollah in Lebanon since late last month, in a bid to secure its northern border after nearly a year of cross-border fire from the Iran-backed armed group.
Hezbollah began low-intensity strikes on Israel in support of its Palestinian ally Hamas following the October 7, 2023 attack on Israel, the deadliest in its history.
After nearly a year of war in Gaza sparked by the attack, Israel expanded its focus to Lebanon and last month launched a massive bombing campaign targeting mainly Hezbollah strongholds across the country, sending in ground troops on September 30.
The war in Lebanon has killed at least 1,580 people, according to an AFP tally of Lebanese health ministry figures.
Israel’s military on Friday said it had struck more than 200 militant targets in Lebanon over the past day.
It also announced the deaths of five soldiers in fighting in south Lebanon.

In Gaza, the civil defense agency said Israeli air strikes hit two homes at dawn on Friday in Khan Yunis, the Palestinian territory’s main southern city.
According to agency spokesman Mahmud Bassal, 14 were killed in a strike that hit the home of the Al-Fara family, and another six were killed in a separate raid.
In north Gaza, the Israeli military on Friday said dozens of militants were killed around Jabalia, in north Gaza, over the previous day.
Israel launched a major assault on north Gaza earlier this month, saying it aims to prevent Hamas from regrouping there.
The civil defense’s Bassal said “more than 770 people have been killed” in northern Gaza in the 19 days since the Israeli operation began there.
The war in Gaza began with Hamas’s October 7 attack on Israel, which resulted in the deaths of 1,206 people, mostly civilians, according to an AFP tally of official Israeli figures.
The militants also took 251 people hostage, 97 of whom are still in Gaza, including 34 the Israeli military says are dead.
Israel’s retaliatory campaign in Gaza has killed 42,847 people, the majority civilians, according to data from the health ministry in the Hamas-run territory, data which the UN considers reliable.
Multiple bids to stop the war have failed, though Israel’s key backer the United States has voiced hope that the killing of Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar last week could serve as an opening for a deal.
A senior Hamas official told AFP that a delegation from the group’s Doha-based leadership discussed “ideas and proposals” related to a Gaza truce with Egyptian officials in Cairo on Thursday.
“Hamas has expressed readiness to stop the fighting, but Israel must commit to a ceasefire, withdraw from the Gaza Strip, allow the return of displaced people, agree to a serious prisoner exchange deal and allow the entry of humanitarian aid into Gaza,” the official said.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said he welcomed mediator Egypt’s readiness to reach a deal “for the release of the hostages” held by militants in Gaza.
Netanyahu directed the head of Israel’s Mossad spy agency to leave for Qatar on Sunday to “advance a series of initiatives that are on the agenda,” his office said.
Qatar, Egypt and the United States have long tried to mediate a ceasefire in the Gaza war.

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken met with Qatar’s leaders in Doha on Thursday on his 11th trip to the region since the start of the Gaza war.
During the trip, which comes less than two weeks before US elections, Blinken said mediators would explore new options.
Israeli and US officials as well as some analysts said Sinwar had been a key obstacle to a deal which would release the hostages still held in Gaza.
Critics of Netanyahu, too, have regularly accused him of obstructing truce and hostage release negotiations.
An Israeli group representing families of hostages called on Netanyahu and Hamas to secure an agreement to free the remaining captives.
“Time is running out,” the Hostages and Missing Families Forum said.
On Thursday, hostage supporters marched outside Netanyahu’s Jerusalem residence demanding action for their release.
Blinken landed late Thursday in London, where a US official said he would meet on Friday with the foreign ministers of Jordan and the United Arab Emirates.


Trump’s Arab American backers hail Gaza deal but worry it won’t hold

Trump’s Arab American backers hail Gaza deal but worry it won’t hold
Updated 4 sec ago

Trump’s Arab American backers hail Gaza deal but worry it won’t hold

Trump’s Arab American backers hail Gaza deal but worry it won’t hold
Luqman and other Arab American Trump supporters who spoke to Reuters expressed guarded optimism about the recently announced agreement
They are worried that Israel could violate the ceasefire, as it has done in the past in Gaza and Lebanon

DEARBORN, USA: Lifelong Democrat Samra’a Luqman became a vocal backer of Donald Trump in 2024, helping to rally support for him among the pivotal Arab American community in Dearborn, Michigan, in the hope that he could end the Gaza war.
Now, after Trump helped to broker a ceasefire deal, Luqman feels thrilled and a bit vindicated after months of backlash from neighbors angry over Trump’s support for Israel.
“It’s almost an ‘I told you so moment,’” said Luqman, who is Yemeni American. “No other president would have been able to force Bibi to approve the ceasefire,” she said, referring to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.
Luqman and other Arab American Trump supporters who spoke to Reuters expressed guarded optimism about the recently announced agreement, but said they worried that Israel could violate the ceasefire, as it has done in the past in Gaza and Lebanon.
“We’re all holding our breath,” said Mike Hacham, a Lebanese American political consultant and Dearborn resident who campaigned hard for Trump in 2024. “I gotta give credit where credit is due ... but this isn’t a peace deal. It’s just the end of a bloody war and those lives that were lost on the Israeli side and the Palestinian side aren’t going to be brought back.”

GUARDED OPTIMISM OVER GAZA BUT MISTRUST OF ISRAEL
Israeli airstrikes in Qatar and other Arab nations in recent months fueled deep mistrust of Israel among Michigan’s more than 300,000 people of Arab heritage. But the agreement is the biggest step yet to end two years of war that Palestinian health authorities have said killed more than 67,000 people in Gaza.
In addition to a ceasefire, the deal calls for releasing the last 20 of 250 hostages seized by Hamas when it started the war with the October 7, 2023, attacks that killed more than 1,200 people, according to the Israeli government. It comes after months of deepening frustration among Arab Americans over what they see as Trump’s failure to rein in Netanyahu and end the war. Trump’s renewed ban on travel from several majority-Muslim countries and crackdowns on freedom of speech targeting pro-Palestinian protesters have also unnerved many, according to more than a dozen Arab American voters who backed Trump in Michigan last year and spoke to Reuters in recent weeks. Many of those interviewed also felt disappointed that their community’s support — thousands of votes that helped to push Trump to victory in Michigan — did not translate into more senior high-profile posts for Arab Americans and Muslims in his administration. It remains unclear whether the ceasefire deal will sway skeptical voters as Trump’s Republicans face competitive congressional and gubernatorial elections in Michigan next year, as well as the 2028 presidential election.
Hacham said Trump would be hailed as a “champion of peace” after brokering the Gaza ceasefire, but added that Arab American voters could turn against him and other Republicans if it fails.
“We are willing to abandon the Republicans and move back to the Democrats,” Hacham said. “We’ve shown Donald Trump that we have the power to swing whichever way we want.”

ANGER OVER GAZA FUELED SWITCH TO TRUMP
Trump won Michigan by more than 80,000 votes in 2024, reversing his 154,000-count loss to Democrat Joe Biden in 2020. An October 2024 Arab American Institute poll had shown Trump favored by 42 percent of Arab Americans nationwide versus 41 percent for Kamala Harris — down 18 percentage points from Biden’s share in 2020. In addition to anger over the Gaza war, Trump’s 2024 campaign tapped into concerns raised by some conservative community members about Democrats’ defense of transgender rights, Luqman said. She expected those voters probably would stick with Republicans. But a larger group of Arab Americans voted for Trump in 2024 “out of spite” at Democrats, and their continued support for the Republican Party likely depends on what happens with Gaza, Luqman said.
“I don’t think they’ve found their political home with the Republicans just yet,” she said, adding that Trump’s pressure on Netanyahu could “solidify support for JD Vance in the next election and for the midterms for any Republicans that run.”
Imam Belal Alzuhairi joined Trump on stage in Michigan just days before the 2024 election, alongside 22 other clerics, convinced that he offered the best chance for peace, but he said many Yemeni Americans later grew disenchanted after Trump reimposed a travel ban on many Muslim countries. “Now, a lot of people are very upset. They are fearing for themselves and their families. There’s a mistrust after the travel ban,” he said.
After facing personal backlash for his endorsement, the Yemeni American cleric says he is pulling out of “soul-consuming” politics to focus on religion and his family.

TRUMP ADMINISTRATION MOVES TO TAMP DOWN FRUSTRATION Special envoy Richard Grenell, a Michigan native tapped by Trump to lead his outreach to Arab American and Muslim voters, returned to the Detroit area last month for his first in-person meetings with community leaders since November. His mission? To tamp down the mounting frustration and prevent Arab Americans from swinging to the Democratic Party, as they did after Republican President George W. Bush’s invasion of Iraq in 2003.
Alzuhairi, Luqman and a dozen others grilled Grenell at a coffeehouse in Dearborn over the travel ban and US arms sales to Israel. At a separate session, he was asked why the administration is not doing more to help Christians in Iraq.
Grenell, former acting director of intelligence during Trump’s first term, told Reuters the dialogue was important.
“I continue to believe that the Arab and Muslim communities in Michigan are the key to winning the state,” Grenell said. “I know these leaders well and they want and deserve access to political decision makers.” Although Grenell faced tough questions from Arab American leaders during four events in the Detroit area, he said he would remain closely engaged, and emphasized Trump’s commitment to peace around the world.
“You can’t show up right before an election and expect to be a credible voice for any community,” he told Reuters.
Ali Aljahmi, a 20-year-old Yemeni American who helped to galvanize young Arab Americans for Trump with a video viewed nearly 1 million times on X, credited him for coming to Dearborn twice during the 2024 campaign. But it’s too soon to predict the next election, said Aljahmi, whose family operates four restaurants in the Detroit area.
“Trump promised a lot,” he said. “Okay, you came and showed your face, but I still think it’s a mixture. Three years from now, we’ll see what they’re doing.”

Egypt, US discuss Sharm El-Sheikh summit on Gaza

Egypt, US discuss Sharm El-Sheikh summit on Gaza
Updated 26 min 52 sec ago

Egypt, US discuss Sharm El-Sheikh summit on Gaza

Egypt, US discuss Sharm El-Sheikh summit on Gaza
  • US secretary of state praises Egypt’s role in securing ceasefire agreement

CAIRO: Egyptian Foreign Minister Badr Abdelatty and US Secretary of State Marco Rubio on Saturday discussed preparations for the upcoming Sharm El-Sheikh summit on Gaza’s reconstruction, which will be co-chaired by the Egyptian and US presidents.

Egypt’s Foreign Ministry said the talks covered regional developments, progress in the Palestinian issue, and ongoing efforts to end the war in Gaza.

The two ministers looked at arrangements for the summit, international participation, and the implementation of the first phase of the Gaza ceasefire agreement.

Rubio described the Sharm El-Sheikh gathering as a “unique historical event,” praising Egypt’s leading role in helping secure what he called a “historic agreement.”

Abdelatty underlined the importance of monitoring the ceasefire’s implementation throughout its stages, noting that the agreement offered renewed hope for the region, particularly the Palestinian people.

He said: “These constructive and positive developments embody the shared values and goals that unite Egypt and the US, based on the need to pursue peaceful rather than military solutions to conflicts.”

The Egyptian foreign minister reaffirmed that a comprehensive settlement of the Palestinian issue, through a two-state solution, remained essential for lasting stability, peace, and security in the region.


Turkiye and Iraq reach draft agreement on sharing water as drought worsens

Turkiye and Iraq reach draft agreement on sharing water as drought worsens
Updated 24 min 8 sec ago

Turkiye and Iraq reach draft agreement on sharing water as drought worsens

Turkiye and Iraq reach draft agreement on sharing water as drought worsens
  • Iraqi officials have long complained that dams built by Turkiye are reducing Iraq’s water supply
  • The Tigris and Euphrates Rivers, which provide most of Iraq’s fresh water, originate in Turkiye

ANKARA: Top diplomats from Turkiye and Iraq reached a tentative agreement Friday on sharing water and managing dwindling flows through the Tigris and Euphrates rivers as the region faces worsening drought conditions.
Iraqi Foreign Minister Fuad Hussein told a joint news conference that the draft “framework” agreement on water management between the two neighbors would soon be signed in Iraq.
Iraqi officials have long complained that dams built by Turkiye are reducing Iraq’s water supply. The Tigris and Euphrates Rivers, which provide most of Iraq’s fresh water, originate in Turkiye. Experts fear that climate change could exacerbate water shortages in Iraq.
“We know and understand the difficulties you are experiencing. We are brothers and sisters in this region,” Turkish Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan said, insisting that Turkiye was actively engaged in helping Iraq address the water situation. “The waters of the Euphrates and Tigris (rivers) belong to all of us.”
Fidan said he hoped water rehabilitation projects would be swiftly implemented. “This water shortage will continue to be a problem not only today but also for years to come,” he said.
The two countries recently have improved relations that were often strained over Turkish military incursions into northern Iraq for operations against the Kurdistan Workers’ Party, or PKK, which Turkiye considers a terrorist group. Baghdad frequently condemned the incursions as a violation of its sovereignty, while Ankara accused Iraq of not doing enough to fight the PKK.
On Thursday, Turkiye lifted its flight ban on an airport in Iraq’s semiautonomous Kurdish region, a restriction originally imposed in 2023 due to concerns over alleged PKK activity in the area.
Last month, Iraq resumed exporting oil from the semiautonomous Kurdish region through Turkiye’s Ceyhan port after exports had been halted for more than two years.
The decision to resume flights to Sulaymaniyah International Airport was announced by the office of Nechirvan Barzani, president of the Kurdish Region, late Thursday following a meeting in Ankara with Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan.
Erdogan and Barzani discussed Turkiye’s relations with Iraq and the Kurdish region, as well as opportunities for cooperation and regional developments, according to a statement from Erdogan’s office.
The PKK, designated a terrorist organization by Turkiye, the United States, and the European Union, has led a decades-long insurgency in Turkiye that has extended into Iraq and Syria, resulting in tens of thousands of deaths.
Earlier this year, the PKK agreed to disband and renounce armed conflict as part of a new peace initiative with Turkiye. A symbolic disarmament ceremony was held near Sulaymaniyah in July.
In a statement, the Kurdistan Region Presidency welcomed Turkiye’s decision to resume flights, calling it a reflection of the strong ties between the two sides and a move that would deepen mutual cooperation.
Turkish Airlines also confirmed the resumption of flights.
“As the flag carrier, we continue to proudly represent Turkiye in the skies across the globe. In line with this vision, we are delighted to soon reconnect our Sulaymaniyah route with the skies once again,” the company’s spokesperson, Yahya Ustun, said on social media.


Stranded truckers count losses as Tehreek-e-Labbaik march blocks key routes to Islamabad

Stranded truckers count losses as Tehreek-e-Labbaik march blocks key routes to Islamabad
Updated 25 min 5 sec ago

Stranded truckers count losses as Tehreek-e-Labbaik march blocks key routes to Islamabad

Stranded truckers count losses as Tehreek-e-Labbaik march blocks key routes to Islamabad
  • Drivers stranded for days say perishable goods rotting as they run out of food and water
  • The government has said it will not allow chaos or mob politics amid security crackdown

ISLAMABAD: Transporters in Pakistan are counting mounting losses after law enforcement authorities blocked major roads and highways on the outskirts of the twin cities of Islamabad and Rawalpindi to stop a religio-political party’s march toward the capital, leaving dozens of trucks stranded for days with perishable goods on board.

The Tehreek-e-Labbaik Pakistan (TLP), known for its street mobilization and frequent clashes with police, announced plans to march on Islamabad this week to stage a protest outside the United States embassy to express solidarity with Palestinians.

The call prompted police to raid the party’s headquarters in Lahore, triggering clashes that killed at least two people.

“I loaded potatoes from Skardu and was on my way to Lahore,” said Akhter Ali, a truck driver stranded on a highway near Islamabad, speaking to Arab News on Saturday. “Today is the fourth day I am standing here. Traders are putting pressure on us because goods worth millions are getting spoiled.”

Police have blocked several main arteries with shipping containers to prevent protesters from entering the capital.

Similar TLP marches in the past have turned violent, forcing successive governments to negotiate with the group rather than confront it outright.

Another driver, Mubashir Khan, said his truck carrying liquefied petroleum gas from Kohat to Rawat had been parked on the roadside for two days.

“There is no safety here,” he said. “People are smoking cigarettes nearby. Anything can happen.”

Many transporters have been left without basic facilities, relying on nearby shopkeepers and locals for food and water.

“After two days, the vegetables get spoiled,” said Naveed Khan, another driver hauling produce from Gilgit to Lahore.

“This is my third day here. Everything has perished. We don’t get paid in such situations.”

Police have said the road closures are temporary and necessary to maintain order. However, most drivers remain in a state of uncertainty.

The government said a day earlier it would not allow chaos or mob politics, though TLP supporters have continued their march toward the capital in defiance of a crackdown that has led to the arrest of many of its supporters.


‘Filling a moral vacuum’: Ashish Prashar leads global campaign to eject Israel from football

‘Filling a moral vacuum’: Ashish Prashar leads global campaign to eject Israel from football
Updated 11 min 30 sec ago

‘Filling a moral vacuum’: Ashish Prashar leads global campaign to eject Israel from football

‘Filling a moral vacuum’: Ashish Prashar leads global campaign to eject Israel from football
  • Figure behind #GameOverIsrael tells Arab News about billboards popping up worldwide
  • Ban would send clear message: ‘No to their crimes, no to apartheid, no to genocide, no to occupation’

DUBAI: On Sept. 17, New Yorkers and tourists in Times Square were greeted by a billboard that said: “Israel is committing genocide. No genocide on the pitch.”

It was the opening gambit of #GameOverIsrael, a campaign launched by human rights activist Ashish Prashar aimed at getting FIFA and UEFA to ban Israel from football, both at club and international level.

The campaign went viral, and has continued to do so in the ensuing weeks. It was certainly noticed by those at the receiving end.

The billboard “was pulled down after three days” due to pressure from the Israeli prime minister’s office, Prashar told Arab News. “That’s how important it is to them. If we knock them out of football, they’re done culturally.”

Since then, billboards have appeared in major cities worldwide. On Oct. 11, a billboard targeting UEFA President Aleksander Ceferin was unveiled in Milan, saying: “President Ceferin, Israel is committing genocide. Suspend Israel now. It’s your moral obligation.”

To explain the campaign’s impact, Prashar looks back to the days preceding its launch. “I always go back to what was going on in the world on Sept. 15. At scale, nobody in the mainstream media globally, especially in the West, was really talking about Israel, genocide and football, not together.”

The campaign aimed to “fill that moral vacuum,” he said, adding that it has changed the conversation primarily by focusing on individual football federations rather than politicians.

“We all knew it was a genocide before we needed the UN to officially say it was one,” Prashar said, adding that instead of wasting time on political leaders whose policies will not change, “we were reflecting where the public were already. You only have to see the stands of Europe, where there were Palestinian flags, banners, protests, people singing ‘we’re the children of Gaza’ across the streets of Europe.”

He said the feedback has been “phenomenal,” and people needed an attainable target to focus on. Football provided that target.

“Politicians feel sometimes too out of reach for people, but … UEFA doesn’t feel too distant,” he added. “Getting them to do something doesn’t feel too unachievable. Why would they not do anything about this injustice?

“On the other side of this, UEFA, interestingly enough, and the federations have reacted with me in a positive way. There’s no one who doesn’t want (Israel) kicked out of Europe in the federations.

“The only two countries that really have drawn a line are England and Germany, but pretty much everyone on the UEFA executive committee — which is 19 members of the UEFA federation — want (Israel) gone.

“We’ve talked to federation heads from the likes of Norway to Greece to everywhere. They want them gone.”

Prashar confirmed that the launch of the campaign has triggered federations to write to UEFA and FIFA demanding Israel’s exit. 

“They were probably already there. They needed a campaign, they needed organization, they needed a political moment for everybody to actively do something,” he said.

“I believe Ceferin was already there. I believe that for slightly different reasons, as a father. I believe he, from what I understand, only put the ‘stop killing children’ (banner) at the UEFA Super Cup because his family wanted that.”

Prashar believes that unlike FIFA, there was a desire in UEFA to address the issue and that beyond going viral, the campaign has already provided concrete successes.

“Step one is most of the federations in the executive committee have written to the president to ask him to suspend (Israel). None of them were doing that before this campaign,” he said.

“From Turkey to Ireland and Belgium and everywhere in between, they’ve written to the president.

“Second step, UEFA really wanted to do this. There was supposed to be a vote before (US President Donald) Trump’s peace plan.

“UEFA even took concrete steps to make this happen. This is how I know it’s real. It’s not just words.”

Billboards have appeared in major cities worldwide, including this one in Milan which directly appeals to UEFA President Aleksander Ceferin. (X/@gameover_israel)

Under normal circumstances, if a club was kicked out of European competition, opponents would be given an automatic 3-0 win and awarded three points.

Here, UEFA intended to change the rules so that a banned team would be replaced, meaning that smaller clubs would not suffer financially by losing gate money from an abandoned home match.

Prashar said taking such a step shows the seriousness with which UEFA is taking the matter, though political developments over the last week have held up progress on the vote.

“They changed their rules and regulations to actually make that happen. The only reason … it still hasn’t happened is Trump’s peace plan. We’re reigniting that conversation right now,” he added.

Even if there is a ceasefire, “Palestinians are occupied and basically under the rule of the Israeli regime,” he said.

“We didn’t let the Nazis go and play a football game the day that the bombs stopped after the Second World War. We actually suspended them for eight years.”

FIFA’s stance is significantly different to UEFA’s, with the sport’s governing body having consistently shied away from taking major decisions due to political pressure.

FIFA President Gianni Infantino is “morally consistent,” Prashar said. “He didn’t want to throw Russia out (in 2022). It was 12 European federations that made that happen … They forced the initiative.

“This is kind of what we want federations to do now — step into that moral void and force the initiative. FIFA on their own won’t suspend Israel.”

When Infantino says politics should not be in football, “genocide isn’t politics, it’s a crime against humanity,” said Prashar.

“When you decide that you’re not going to take a stand against something morally reprehensible that we as a society have said is the ultimate crime, you’ve taken the side of the genociders. You’re not being neutral.”

At club and international level, there have been demands to boycott teams representing Israel. Fan groups have urged Aston Villa’s Europa League match against Maccabi Tel Aviv in November to be called off.

Meanwhile, the football federations of Italy and Norway have expressed a clear desire not to face Israel in the 2026 World Cup qualifiers, said Prashar.

The football federations of Spain, France, Belgium, Portugal and others must “show solidarity” with Italy and Norway, he added.

 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

 

“People need to understand … why UEFA is super pivotal to this,” he said. “It doesn’t just mean the suspension of Israeli clubs. It means they’re suspended from the Nations League, the European Championship, and under 21s, 19s and 17s football, which make a lot of revenue as well.

“But also they’re suspended from the UEFA subsidy. If they lost that, the (Israeli) league will be bankrupt.”

Prashar added: “Israeli football has no way of coming back, even if they’re not banned by FIFA. They’re finished as an entity. That’s why the UEFA push is really important.”

He believes that by banning Israel from football, the world would send a clear message: “No to their crimes, no to apartheid, no to genocide, no to occupation.” 

He added: “The reason football is so important is it’s the only true global cultural item If the domino goes, every other domino goes. Every other cultural item goes.

“We only have to look at apartheid South Africa to look at the domino effect. That’s exactly how it played out, and that’s exactly how it will play out again.”

Prashar insists that speculative stories in the media reassuring Israel of its place in UEFA are mere propaganda. 

“The reason they’re doing that is they know UEFA’s policy is not to respond to rumors,” he said. “I believe they’d rather be in football than have a seat at the UN.”

Prashar said whatever happens with Trump’s plan, the campaign is “not over,” adding: “I think the thing that the Israelis would like is the momentum of this to go out. And with the pause because of the ceasefire, they think it’s gone.

“We have a whole second-wave plan that includes actual footballers who are current and retired.

“We have more iconic billboards going up across Europe this time, from Madrid to London, which will make it very clear that people have now decided to pick the side of occupation and genocide if they don’t make this decision.”

Prashar’s campaign is also launching a legal case against the European federation. “I think UEFA is morally obliged to remove Israel, but they’re also legally obliged,” he said.

“A lot of people don’t know that last year, the ICJ (International Court of Justice) ruled that Israel should leave the Occupied Territories, which includes the West Bank, and that every state, entity, organization, business should guarantee that there’s no normalization with occupation … There are two Israeli football teams in the West Bank illegally,” he added.

“Right now, unless UEFA suspend Israel’s league, they’re literally breaking international law. And Ceferin, an international lawyer, should be fully aware of that.”

It will become increasingly difficult, if not impossible, to justify Israel’s participation in club football at the very least, according to Prashar.

UEFA will “really struggle,” he said. “Also, one of our legal partners has found a soldier who actually did go to Gaza at Maccabi Haifa.

“So if they can prove his war crimes, we’re just going to throw that everywhere. They're literally letting a guy who killed children play football.”