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Showing posts with label synagogue. Show all posts
Showing posts with label synagogue. Show all posts

Friday, August 29, 2025

Islam Down Under > Melbourne synagogue attack linked to Iran

 

Suspect named in Australian synagogue arson attack linked to Iran

   
A second suspect appeared in court Wednesday in connection with a Dec. 6, 2024, arson attack on the Adass Israel Synagogue in a suburb of Melbourne. File photo by Con Chronis/EPA-EFE
A second suspect appeared in court Wednesday in connection with a Dec. 6, 2024, arson attack on the Adass Israel Synagogue in a suburb of Melbourne. File photo by Con Chronis/EPA-EFE

Aug. 27 (UPI) -- A 20-year-old man made his first court appearance in Melbourne, Australia, on Wednesday, charged in connection with the torching of a synagogue in the city, a day after Australian intelligence and Prime Minister Anthony Albanese alleged the attack was directed by Iran.

Melbourne Magistrates Court remanded Younes Ali Younes, 20, in custody to reappear Dec. 4 to answer charges of arson, endangering life and car theft in relation to a December 2024 blaze that gutted the Adass Israel Synagogue in the Ripponlea section of the city and slightly injured a worshipper.

Younes, who has been in detention since his arrest on Aug. 21, did not enter a plea.

The Melbourne resident was the second person to be charged in connection with the attack, which was designated as terrorism in the initial stage of the investigation, along with Giovanni Laulu, 21, also from Melbourne.

Authorities were continuing to hunt a third suspect.

No evidence was presented in court but prosecutors said a brief from police, who allege the three men broke into the synagogue in the early hours of Dec. 6 and set the building alight, containing CCTV footage and digital and DNA evidence would be shared with Younes' counsel before Oct. 23.

Damage to the Adass Israel was estimated at $13 million, according to court records, but synagogue members have pledged they will rebuild it.

Albanese and Australian Security Intelligence Organization chief Mike Burgess said Tuesday that Tehran tasked unnamed third parties to order the attack and an earlier second arson attack that destroyed Lewis' Continental Kitchen, a kosher restaurant in Sydney, in October 2024.

Iran's Ambassador to Australia, Ahmad Sadeghi and three other officials were expelled with seven days' notice to leave Australia, which in turn pulled out all its diplomatic staff from Tehran.

Iran said it "absolutely rejected" the allegations.

Authorities at the time of the Melbourne attack said a male witness reported seeing two men allegedly dousing the floor of the synagogue with a liquid. The pair fled after being disturbed by the witness, who sustained minor injuries to his hand.



Monday, January 17, 2022

Islam - Current Day > Terrorist at Texas synagogue; 11 hour standoff ends in death; Houthis attack Abu Dhabi; Saudis attack Houthis in Sanaa

..

'If anyone tries to enter this building ... everyone will die':

Terrorist holding hostages at Texas synagogue


By ALYSSA GUZMAN FOR DAILYMAIL.COM
PUBLISHED:15:47 EST, 15 January 2022

A man claiming to be the brother of the convicted terrorist known as Lady Al Qaeda stormed a Texas synagogue on the Sabbath and is holding hostages, telling a SWAT team, 'If anyone tries to enter this building, I’m telling you… everyone will die.' 

The unknown assailant took the hostages at Congregation Beth Israel in Colleyville during religious services around 11.30am, which were being live-streamed. 

The live-stream cut off shortly before 2pm local time.

Before the livestream cut off, the unknown assailant can be heard saying, 'I'm going to die. Don't cry about me'

'Are you listening? I am going to die,' he repeated over and over.

The suspect claims his sister ''Lady Al Qaeda' Aafia Siddiqui, who was convicted in New York for trying to kill US military personnel and is serving an 86-year sentence, according to Aaron Katersky of ABC News. 

She has been reportedly serving time in a nearby prison since her conviction in 2010.

The man is holding the rabbi and three other people hostage, Katersky said. 

The man is claiming to have bombs in unknown locations, but what extent the assailant is armed, is unknown. 

A SWAT team has been sent to Congregation Beth Israel in Colleyville, Texas,
where a man is reportedly holding hostages


Colleyville, Texas, police are conducting SWAT operations and locals are being told to evacuate the area. State police are also assisting the scene as authorities set up by a nearby middle school, according to WFAA. The school is around the corner from the synagogue. 

The FBI is now negotiating with the man and can be seen on scene. 

'The FBI negotiators are the ones who have contact with the person in the building,' a Colleyville spokesperson told CNN. Police have noted that there is no current threat to the general public. 

The live-stream cut off shortly before 2pm local time, where the man can be heard saying: 'I'm going to die.' 

The man is demanding the release of his sister 'Lady Al Qaeda' Aafia Siddiqui (pictured), who is serving an 86-year sentence for trying to kill US military personnel

According to Star-Telegram reporter Jessika Harkay, he was overheard saying: 'I'm going to die, are you listening? I'm going to die doing this alright? Are you listening? I'm going to die. Don't cry about me.' It is unclear who he was saying this too. 

He reportedly also ranted about religion in between saying that he's 'going to die,' as well as made vague references to weapons and ammunition. 

It is unknown if there are any injuries or fatalities at this moment.  

Social media users have been offering prayers for Rabbi Charlie Cytron-Walker, but his condition and location is unknown. 

Congregation Beth Israel is a Reform Jewish synagogue in the Dallas-Fort Worth metro area, which has about 70,000 Jewish people, one of the largest communities in the state. 




What it was like inside the Colleyville, Texas, synagogue

during the 11-hour hostage standoff

By Eric Levenson, CNN
Updated 2:39 PM ET, Mon January 17, 2022

SWAT team members deploy near the Congregation Beth Israel Synagogue in Colleyville, Texas, some 25 miles (40 kilometers) west of Dallas, on January 15, 2022. - The SWAT police operation was underway at the synagogue where a man claiming to be the brother of a convicted terrorist has reportedly taken several people hostage, police and media said. 


(CNN) It started like most any Saturday for members of Congregation Beth Israel.

Families of the Reform Jewish synagogue just outside Dallas-Fort Worth had gathered -- in person and online -- to participate in the Sabbath service, even amid the twin perils of a fresh pandemic wave and a swelling tide of attacks on Jewish people in the United States.

By day's end, the community of faith in Colleyville, Texas, would be at the center of a global drama involving a livestreamed hostage-taking, an imprisoned terrorist icon, an elite FBI rescue team and a final, frantic sprint to freedom.

More details may yet offer a deeper understanding of why it happened. But already, the tale is one of searing trauma, with the broader American Jewish community now again forced to be resilient as it's reminded of the ever-present potential for disaster.

There is much more, including videos at CNN...

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‘Drone attack’ kills three at Abu Dhabi airport


Yemen’s Houthi rebels have claimed responsibility for the strike


© Twitter / @AuroraIntel

Three people were killed and six wounded in an apparent drone attack on Abu Dhabi on Monday, UAE police have said. Yemen’s Houthi rebels have announced a strike “deep” in Emirati territory.

Three fuel trucks exploded in the industrial Mussafah area near storage facilities used by oil firm ADNOC, after which a “minor fire” broke out at a construction site at Abu Dhabi International Airport, the Emirati WAM news agency reported, citing police.

Preliminary investigation suggests that the blast and the fire were caused by a drone attack.

Police said that “no significant” damage was done to the area, later adding that two Indian nationals and a Pakistani national were killed, while six people were wounded.

Yemeni media reported that the Houthis had announced a military operation “deep in the UAE” and promised to reveal more details later on Monday.

Houthi military spokesperson Yahya Saree previously said that the rebels were confronting “a wide advance of the UAE mercenaries” and Islamic State fighters.

The Saudi-led coalition intervened in the Yemeni civil war in 2015 on behalf of ousted President Abdrabbuh Mansur Hadi. The collation carried out bombing raids into the Houthi-controlled areas, while the rebels responded by firing rockets and sending armed drones into Saudi territory.

In 2019, a drone attack claimed by Houthis caused massive fires at several Saudi oil refineries operated by state-owned company Saudi Aramco. 




Saudi jets bomb Yemen after Abu Dhabi drone attack


Bombing of Yemeni capital is reprisal for drone attack on UAE, Riyadh said


FILE PHOTO: People inspect the site of airstrikes by a Saudi-led coalition on a workshop,
in Sanaa, Yemen, Dec. 5, 2021 ©  AP / Hani Mohammed


The Saudi-led coalition has launched an air raid on the Yemeni capital Sanaa, saying it was a response to the earlier attack by “Iran-backed” Houthi “terrorist” on Abu Dhabi in the United Arab Emirates.

Saudi state media announced the raid on Monday evening, saying that the coalition’s F-15 fighters targeted and destroyed two ballistic missile launchers, allegedly used in the strike against the UAE.

Houthi military spokesperson Yahya Saree said on Monday that the militia, which controls the Yemeni capital, used five “ballistic and winged missiles” and “a large number of drones” to target “a number of important and sensitive Emirati sites and facilities,” including the airports in Dubai and Abu Dhabi. 

Saree added that the “successful” operation was “in retaliation to the escalation of the US-Saudi-Emirati aggression” and that UAE will remain an “unsafe state  as long as its aggressive escalation against Yemen continues.”

Emirati authorities said two Indian nationals and a Pakistani were killed, and six more people were injured in the attacks. They said several fuel trucks exploded in the industrial area of Mussafah near the Abu Dhabi International Airport, starting a “minor fire.”

Saudi Arabia called the strike a “terrorist attack” by the “terrorist, Iran-backed Houthi militia” that amounted to a war crime against civilians, according to Brigadier General Turki Al-Maliki, the spokesman of the Saudi-led ‘Coalition to Restore Legitimacy in Yemen.’ 

Al-Maliki called the Houthis a terrorist threat undermining regional and international security, whose “piracy” also threatens trade and freedom of navigation in the Red Sea. The coalition will respond “in a manner that achieves collective security for the interests of the international community,” he added.

US National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan echoed the Saudis, condemning the attack on UAE and saying Washington will “work to ensure that the Iranian-backed Yemen rebels are held accountable for their actions.”

Why is Washington involved in this at all? It's a proxy war between Saudi Arabia and Iran.

The US has provided logistical and intelligence support to the Saudi-led coalition since it invaded Yemen in 2015, seeking to reinstate President Abdrabbuh Mansur Hadi, ousted by the Houthis the year prior. 



Wednesday, October 9, 2019

This Week's 3rd Terrorist Attack in Europe - 2 Killed in German Synagogue on Jewish Holy Day

2 people killed in shooting outside German synagogue
on holiest day in Judaism

By JON HAWORTH, MORGAN WINSOR and GUY DAVIES, ABC News


Two people were killed in a shooting in the east German city of Halle on Yom Kippur, the holiest day of the Jewish year.

Multiple gunshots were fired by the attacker near a synagogue and then in a kebab shop in the areas of Ludwig-Wucherer-Strasse and Humboldstrasse, which are about a 5-minute walk away.

The shooting began around noon local time, an eyewitness told ABC News. The suspected attacker fled the scene in a car towards south of Halle and was arrested outside the town at around 3:30 pm local time. A video of the shooting was reportedly posted online.

The unnamed victims were one male and one female, and police said the male is thought to be a "visitor" to the local area.

Police gave no further details about the target of the attack, although they did not rule that more people could have been involved. Federal prosecutors, who usually handle cases involving suspected terrorism or cases dealing with national security, have now taken over the investigation.

It is unknown how many people were inside the synagogue at the time of the incident, but the head of Halle's Jewish community, Max Privorotzki, told Der Spiegel that he estimated there were about 70 to 80 people inside.

"We have at least two crime scenes," local policeman Ralf Karlstedt told national broadcaster RTL. "One person died as the result of a shooting in the area Ludwig-Wucherer-Strasse, another one in the area of the Humboldstrasse. We first received information that there is one suspect, who was armed. There have since also been suggestions that there potentially there have been more people involved, but that at this point is not confirmed. We currently know of at least one suspect."

"The suspect then fled in a car. The police were able to trace a vehicle, which has been secured outside of Halle. The police arrested one suspect," he added.

"I heard a blast around noon. My wife came running to me screaming, 'Someone is shooting outside!'" Splett told ABC News. "I ran to the window looked outside and saw a man wearing a steel helmet. His face was all red, either painted or maybe he has a skin disease. He was very calmly shooting with a double-barreled gun arbitrarily at a group of people. Those people at first weren't realizing what was going on at first. They then all ran away."

"The shooter then went back to his car, opened the trunk and got out a handgun. He had a whole arsenal of guns in his trunk. A woman in the kebab place under my flat screamed. After about half an hour lots of police came in terrifying gear. They said we can't leave our house and if we do, we can't come back inside," he said.

The German government's secretary of state, Heiko Maas, drew a link between the shooting and anti-Semitism in the country.

"The fact that on the reconciliation festival #YomKippur shots were being fired at a synagogue hits us right in the heart," he posted on Twitter in German. "We all have to fight against anti-Semitism in our country. My thoughts are with the dead and injured, their relatives, and the police in these difficult hours. #Halle."

The European Parliament held a moment of silence to commence its session on Wednesday to mark the ongoing situation in Halle.

At this point, the killer(s) could be either Muslim radicals or far-right skin-heads as antisemitism is growing considerably in Europe, thanks, in part, to the growing population of Muslims.



Wednesday, August 7, 2019

Last Functioning Synagogue in Vilnius, Lithuania Closes in Face of Right-Wing Threats

Anti-Semitism still growing in Europe
Nazi sympathizers force closure of synagogue

The Prime Minister of Israel Benjamin Netanyahu (C) speaks as he visits the the Choral Synagogue in Vilnius
on August 26, 2018. © AFP / Petras Malukas


Lithuania’s Jewish community has decided to indefinitely shutter the only functioning synagogue in Vilnius, after receiving multiple threats. This comes amid fierce public debate over the country’s adulation of Nazi collaborators.

A Jewish center and the historic Choral Synagogue in Vilnius will close for “an indeterminate period,” the Lithuanian Jewish Community (LJC) said in a statement on their website. The decision was made after the LJC received “threatening telephone calls and letters in recent days.”

Nationalists and right-wing elements in Lithuania’s capital are incensed over the removal of a plaque commemorating a Nazi collaborator at the entrance to the Lithuanian Academy of Sciences. In a similar move, the Vilnius municipality last week renamed a street that had been named after one wartime diplomat and Hitler ally.

Lithuanian Jews hailed the decisions as long-overdue – while nationalists threatened with nationwide protests in response.



Sunday, November 4, 2018

‘Die Jew Rats’ Synagogue Vandal was Anti-Hate-Crime Intern & Democratic Activist

Two of my previous three posts have been about antisemitism in Britain's left-wing Labour Party. Many stories have covered the growing antisemitism in the western world but this one is a bit shocking as it rears its ugly head in America's Democratic Party.

Antisemitism is Growing Everywhere

Synagogue vandal James Polite seen alongside his former mentor, New York Democrat Christine Quinn © Facebook / Abraham Aali and Reuters / Andrew Kelly

In a bizarre twist, the man who spray painted anti-Semitic graffiti on a Brooklyn synagogue turned out to be “queer,” black, former anti-hate-crime intern, James Polite: a 26-year-old with loving Jewish foster parents.

Less than a week after a gunman murdered 11 worshippers at a Pittsburgh synagogue, anti-Semitic graffiti was found scrawled inside Union Temple in Brooklyn’s predominantly Jewish Prospect Heights neighborhood. The graffiti read “Die Jew Rats” and “Hitler.”

Suspected of setting fires - CBS

Jessica Layton✔
@JLaytonTV
 NYPD arrests James Polite — the man they say is in this surveillance picture - in connection with anti Semitic graffiti found inside Union Temple in Prospect Heights. He’s believed to have also set fires outside schuls & yeshivas in Williamsburg @CBSNewYork


A Democratic political event scheduled at the synagogue on Thursday night was canceled, and police investigated the incident as a hate crime. After being caught on the synagogue’s CCTV cameras, James Polite was arrested on Friday.

Far from being an archetypal tattooed skinhead, Polite is a black former Democratic intern who had his college education bankrolled by the New York Times’ ‘Neediest Cases Fund.’

Polite had a rough upbringing, according to a 2017 New York Times profile. He told the Times he identifies as “queer” and felt misunderstood at home. As a young teenager, he requested that he be placed in foster care, and spent the following years shunted from home to home.


Robby Starbuck✔
@robbystarbuck
In summary that old @nytimes puff piece Ryan dug up on James Polite does appear to be the same person. Instead of the success story from those pages his life has turned a dark direction. Photos of him with his adoptive mother show up on both his Facebook and NYTimes article.


Polite met then-New York City Council speaker Christine Quinn at a gay pride rally in 2008, and landed himself an internship with the Democratic councilwoman. Under Quinn’s tutelage, Polite worked on anti-hate-crime initiatives and lent a hand to her unsuccessful bid for mayor in 2013. In return, Quinn, who referred to Polite as “the adopted child of the Quinn administration” wrote him a glowing recommendation to Brandeis University.

At the same time, an array of do-gooders chipped in and gave Polite a helping hand. Josh Waletzky and Jenny Levison, a Brooklyn Jewish couple on a mission to foster an “LGBTQ youth” took Polite into their home, and charity group Children’s Aid facilitated the placement. When Polite began his studies at Brandeis, the Neediest Cases Fund helped him financially.

Polite struggled in college, and smoked marijuana to cope with stress. After a leave of absence in 2015, he was diagnosed with bipolar disorder, but managed to resume his studies after some time away.

‘Civil war is here’

Before last week’s vandalism, the man appears to have been unstable. He railed against Jews in a series of Facebook posts, tagging his adopted parents. Polite posted a grainy cell-phone picture of himself burning an American flag, and wrote that a new “civil war is here.”

“Nobody gotta die. Mexico, latin America, carribean (sic) vs. Jew n*gger pigs. One person touch me this whole shit a smoking,” he wrote.

In the comments, friends urged Polite to seek professional help, and his one-time mentor Quinn wrote after his arrest that she was “simply and utterly devastated.”

“I knew this young man,” she wrote. “And while he has experienced hardship that most people can’t ever imagine, his actions are inexcusable.”


Christine Quinn
@chriscquinn


While Polite’s life seems to have gone down a dark path, from New York Times poster boy to synagogue vandal, he is not the first unlikely suspect to be busted for hate crimes in recent years. Last year, Israeli police arrested a 19-year-old Israeli Jew in connection with hundreds of bomb threats made to Jewish community centers across America.


Friday, September 14, 2018

Sweden's Court of Appeals Declares 'Open Season' on Jews in Sweden

Swedish court outrages pro-Jewish groups by nixing
deportation of Palestinian arsonist

FILE PHOTO. © Ronen Zvulun / Reuters

Sweden’s court decision to overturn the expulsion of a Palestinian convicted of firebombing a local Synagogue has provoked a fierce reaction from Israel and pro-Jewish groups that called it a legitimization of anti-Semitism.

The Court of Appeals for Western Sweden has overruled another court’s decision concerning a deportation of a Palestinian man, who was earlier convicted of staging an arson attack on a synagogue in the city of Gothenburg. The man was sentenced to two years and prison and expulsion over what was classified as a hate crime, the Swedish media reported.

While upholding the prison sentence, the court of appeals still said that, since the perpetrator could be “perceived as a threat to other Jews” and Israel “might have an interest in the matter,” Sweden “cannot secure the man’s fundamental human rights” in case of his deportation to Palestine.

Is there a precedent you can point to for this absurdity?

The convicted Palestinian has been previously granted asylum in the Nordic country.

The decision immediately provoked angry response from some Israeli officials.

The court “has shown blatant ignorance regarding Israel’s independent Judiciary that has gained international reputation,” Ilan Ben-Dov, Israel’s ambassador to Sweden said in a Facebook post as he maintained that “Israel is a democratic country, based on Rule of Law.”

The envoy slammed the court ruling by calling it a “highly prejudicial and politicized verdict,” which “excuses, and therefore legitimizes, the actions of a violent Anti-Semite as acceptable political criticism.” Israel's Foreign Ministry spokesman Emmanuel Nahshon also lambasted the court’s decision by saying that this “shameful” verdict “gives legitimacy to violent anti-Semitism and defames the State of Israel.”

Some Swedish and international pro-Jewish organizations also joined the wave of outrage sparked by the court’s decision. Maria Halkiewicz, chairman of the Sweden-Israel Friendship Association office in Stockholm told the Swedish Nyheter Idag newspaper that the Jews in Sweden are already concerned about the anti-Semitism in the Swedish society and the latest development only further contributes to this fear. 

"The fact that such a man gets to stay in Sweden on the grounds that he is guilty of crimes against Jews is really hard to grasp. It is bizarre that anti-Semitism can save a criminal from expulsion," Halkiewicz said.

"We are afraid that the anti-Semitism from the Arab world will become a mortal threat to us. In Sweden, there is no longer any religious freedom for us Jews," a Swedish writer of Jewish descent, Salomon Schulman, wrote in an opinion piece for the Swedish Expressen newspaper titled “How could you not expulse the synagogue arsonist.”

The nationalist Sweden Democrats Party also contributed to the outpouring of criticism as it apparently pursued its own goals. “A great political signal: ‘Are you a Palestinian worried about being expelled [from Sweden]? Attack some Jews and stay…” an MP and the Sweden Democrats’ spokesperson on migration, Paula Bieler, said in a Twitter post.

Some international Jewish organizations also weighed in on the issue. The World Jewish Congress (WJC) called the court’s decision a “dangerous precedent rewarding terrorist violence.”

"This is an offensive moral outrage rewarding … anti-Semitism and criminal behavior," the WJC CEO, Robert Singer, said, commenting on the matter.

The US-based pro-Jewish Anti-Defamation League (ADL) also slammed the verdict as an openly anti-Semitic and discriminative act. “Swedish community tells us: Had the Palestinian thrown a firebomb in the street, he would have been deported. Because he targeted a synagogue, he won’t be. The court cares more about attacking Israel than protecting Jewish community of Sweden,” Jonathan Greenblatt, the former Special Assistant to the former US President Barack Obama and the ADL CEO, said in a tweet.

In other words, Swedish courts are very protective of Palestinian terrorists who are not even citizens, but not the least bit protective of Jewish citizens of Sweden. 

Antisemitism is growing rapidly in Europe and this is just another example of that horrific evil raising its ugly head again. It's unfortunate and alarming that it appears in the upper levels of the Swedish 'Justice' system.

The convicted Palestinian, whose name was not revealed by the Swedish authorities, was one of a dozen of people, who threw Molotov cocktails and firebombs at a synagogue in Gothenburg back on December 9, 2017. The incident resulted in no casualties, although a group of Jewish teenagers, who were attending a celebration in the building, had to briefly take shelter in the synagogue cellar.

The man was later arrested and convicted of a hate crime alongside with two other assailants, who were identified as a Syrian and a stateless man of Palestinian descent. The Palestinian, however, was the only one, who was due to be deported as the other two had Swedish residence permits.

The attack on the synagogue took place just three days after the US President Donald Trump officially recognized Jerusalem as the capital of Israel, sparking massive anti-Israeli and anti-American protests that erupted across the Muslim world. 

Sweden has been the first EU member in the western Europe to officially recognize the State of Palestine back in 2014.

Sweden's extreme left wing ideology will be the death of it! 



Tuesday, June 26, 2018

Three Migrants Sentenced for Molotov Attack on Swedish Synagogue

The New Normal - Growing Antisemitism in Sweden
By Daniel Uria  

Three men were sentenced for hate crimes for hurling Molotov cocktails at a synagogue in Sweden where 30 people were attending a youth event in December 2017, a week after .S. President Donald Trump publicly recognized Jerusalem as the capital of Israel. File Photo by Adam Ihse/EPA

UPI -- A district court in Sweden sentenced three men for hate crimes for carrying out a Molotov cocktail attack on a synagogue in Gothenburg in December 2017.

Two of the men, aged 24 years old and 22 years old, were sentenced to two years in prison, while third 18-year-old was sentenced to 15 months in prison after the court determined the attack was a hate crime.

"The crime had the clear goal of threatening, harming, and violating members of the synagogue and the Jewish community more generally," the court wrote in its judgement. "The crime therefore had a hate motive."

The attack took place during a period of increased violence against Jews in Sweden after U.S. President Donald Trump publicly recognized Jerusalem as the capital of Israel.

Also, the growing numbers of Muslim migrants mean an automatic growth in antisemitism in Sweden and most of the rest of the EU.

One of the men, a stateless Palestinian citizen, was ordered to be deported from Sweden after serving his sentence and won't be permitted to return until 2028.

The other two, a Palestinian and a Syrian citizen, had refugee status and permanent residence, so they couldn't be deported.

The three men were convicted for acting as part of a group of masked individuals who hurled Molotov cocktails at a community center attached to a synagogue in Gothenburg, as it hosted a youth event with as many as 30 attendees.

The building didn't catch fire and no one was injured in the attack, as police said people fled to safety in the basement.