Child snatchers caught on camera as 8-year-old taken from mother’s side in Egypt

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Updated 31 August 2021
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Child snatchers caught on camera as 8-year-old taken from mother’s side in Egypt

CAIRO: Video footage captured the terrifying moment two men snatched an eight-year-old boy from his mother’s side on an Egyptian street and bundled into a car, his desperate mother falling to the floor as she tried to stop her son’s captors from escaping.

The child, who has been named as Ziyad Ahmed Al-Behairi, was walking into a grocery shop with his mother, when the two masked men took him and forced him into the vehicle.

As the boy’s mother realizes what has happened, she runs towards the car attempting to grab ahold of the vehicle but slips and falls close to the wheel as it begins to move.

The abduction happened on Sunday outside a grocery shop in the Gharbia governorate of Mahalla al-Kubra city, in Egypt and was captured on the shop’s security cameras.

The boy was eventually found the next day on Monday and reunited with his distraught parents.

The vehicle used in the incident was discovered with fake registration plates, burnt out, a source told Masrawy news portal. 




A picture of Ziyad Ahmed Al-Behairi shared on local media​​​​​​

The interior ministry released a video on Tuesday of what it said were "real images of releasing the abducted child and the arrest of the perpetrator."

The police are investigating the motive behind the abduction.

 

 


Israeli approval of West Bank land registration draws outrage

Updated 33 min 53 sec ago
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Israeli approval of West Bank land registration draws outrage

  • Israel’s government has approved a process to register land in the West Bank, drawing condemnation

JERUSALEM: Israel’s government has approved a process to register land in the West Bank, drawing condemnation from Arab nations and critics who labelled it a “mega land grab” that would accelerate annexation of the Palestinian territory.
Israel’s foreign ministry said the measure would enable “transparent and thorough clarification of rights to resolve legal disputes” and was needed after unlawful land registration in areas controlled by the Palestinian Authority.
But Egypt, Qatar and Jordan criticized the move as illegal under international law.
In a statement, the Egyptian government called it a “dangerous escalation aimed at consolidating Israeli control over the occupied Palestinian territories.”
Qatar’s foreign ministry condemned the “decision to convert West Bank lands into so-called ‘state property’,” saying it would “deprive the Palestinian people of their rights.”
The Palestinian Authority called for international intervention to prevent the “de facto beginning of the annexation process and the undermining of the foundations of the Palestinian state.”
Israeli anti-settlement watchdog Peace Now called Sunday’s measure a “mega land grab.”
According to public broadcaster Kan, land registration will be reopened in the West Bank for the first time since 1967 — when Israel captured the territory in the Middle East war.
The Israeli media reported that the process will take place only in Area C, which constitutes some 60 percent of West Bank territory and is under Israeli security and administrative control.
Palestinians see the West Bank as foundational to any future Palestinian state, but many on Israel’s religious right want to take over the land.
Last week, Israel’s security cabinet approved a series of measures backed by far-right ministers to tighten control over areas of the West Bank administered by the Palestinian Authority under the Oslo accords in place since the 1990s.
Those measures, which also sparked international backlash, include allowing Jewish Israelis to buy West Bank land directly and allowing Israeli authorities to administer certain religious sites in areas under the Palestinian Authority’s control.
Excluding Israeli-annexed east Jerusalem, more than 500,000 Israelis live in West Bank settlements and outposts, which are illegal under international law.
Around three million Palestinians live in the territory.