Jerusalem court clears way for S. Sudanese migrants’ deportation
A Jerusalem court ruled that Israel could deport South Sudanese migrants who entered the country illegally.\n
A Jerusalem court ruled that Israel could deport South Sudanese migrants who entered the country illegally.\n
A computer virus attacking computers in Iran and the West Bank may have been created with Israeli involvement, a government minister hinted.
One person was killed when a car exploded in the eastern Sudanese city of Port Sudan on Tuesday in what the government said resembled a blast last year that it blamed on an Israeli missile strike.
This city in the world’s newest country is not your typical Arabic-speaking capital. For one thing, most of the city’s inhabitants are Christian. For another, the Israeli flag is ubiquitous here.
South Sudanese migrants will not be forced to leave Israel by the end of the month as planned.
Jewish leaders delivered a letter to the White House urging action to allow food to reach hundreds of thousands of people facing starvation in Sudan\’s border regions.
Israel\’s Air Force allegedly attacked weapons convoys traveling from Sudan to the Gaza Strip, Sudanese media reported.
The president of the new country of South Sudan arrived in Israel for a short working visit during which the possibility of repatriating Sudanese infiltrators to the country set to be discussed.
The American Jewish World Service joined an appeal to President Obama to add sanctions to the incentives he has offered Sudan\’s government to comply with peace deals.
The target of an airstrike on a car in Sudan blamed on Israel was a high-ranking Hamas official, Palestinian intelligence officials said. One of the men killed in Tuesday\’s attack was Abdul-Latif Ashkar, who coordinated weapons smuggling for Hamas and was the successor of Mahmoud Al-Mabhouh, the Hamas official assassinated in a Dubai hotel room in January 2010, the Palestinian news agency Ma\’an reported Thursday