Netanyahu Can no Longer Travel to 124 Countries
CROSSFIREARABIA – Due to the recent arrest warrant, issued Thursday, by the International Criminal Court, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu can no longer travel to 124 countries or he will be arrested on point of entry and put in jail for Israel’s genocide on Gaza that he refuses to stop.
Already many countries, including his allies (Germany, Canada, UK and Australia are mulling about the fact of what today about Netanyahu if they find him on their doorstep and/or flying over their airspace.
What utter humiliation for Israel and its prime minister who insists on continuing his genocide on Gaza and now Lebanon.
Crosetto: ‘…if Netanyahu, Gallant Come to Italy, we Will Have to Arrest Them’
Italian Defense Minister Guido Crosetto on Thursday expressed reservations about the International Criminal Court’s (ICC) arrest warrants for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and former Defense Minister Yoav Gallant but confirmed that Italy would be obligated to enforce the warrants if they entered the country.
Speaking during a televised interview, Crosetto remarked that while he believes the ICC’s decision is “wrong,” as a signatory to the Rome Statute, Italy must comply with international law.
“Since we are a party to the ICC, if Netanyahu and Gallant come to Italy, we will have to arrest them. This is not a political decision but the enforcement of international legislation,” he stated according to Anadolu.
In a landmark move, the International Criminal Court on Thursday announced it had issued arrest warrants for Netanyahu and Gallant over war crimes in Palestinian territories, including Gaza.
The warrants come as Israel’s genocidal offensive in Gaza recently entered its second year, having already killed some 44,000 Palestinians, most of them women and children, and injured over 103,000 others.
Italian Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Minister Antonio Tajani echoed a more cautious tone.
“We will review the content of the decision and the reasons behind it,” Tajani said, emphasizing that the ICC should maintain a strictly legal role, free from political influences.
“Together with our allies, we will assess what will happen and determine what actions to take and how to proceed.”
Tajani’s remarks provoked backlash from the opposition Five Star Movement (M5S), whose parliamentarians called his comments “shocking and shameful.”
In a joint statement, M5S members noted that the EU’s foreign policy chief Josep Borrell affirmed the binding nature of ICC decisions on EU member states.
Netanyahu’s House Bombed 2nd Time in a Month
CROSSFIREARABIA – It’s a second attack on the private residence of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in less than a month.
The Saturday night attack through two flash bombs landed in the courtyard of Netanyahu house in Caesarea is being described as a serious incident by Shabak and the Israeli police who quickly opened up an investigation.
The attack is widely trending on the social media with the official line being that Netanyahu and his wife were not in the house at the time and there was little damage.
The incident is being treated as “domestic” with three people arrested and under investigation with reactions from the leader of the opposition Yair Lapid and Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich and National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir. They all described the attack on Netanyahu’s residence as “redline” but it is difficult to see what they would do about it.
Israeli daily Yedioth Ahronoth said one of the arrested suspects is a senior reserve officer, a brigadier general, who has been active in protests against Netanyahu’s government over the past two years according to Anadolu.
The first attack on Netanyahu’s house in Caesarea was made on 19 October through a drone attack launched from Lebanon targeted Netanyahu’s home in Caesarea claimed by Hezbollah. The attack was described as so precise that it landed in Netanyahu’s bedroom.
This time news reports suggest that the flash bombs either landed in the garden and/or the courtyard of the house.











