Israeli death penalty law targeting Palestinians sparks global outcry as far right celebrates

TEL AVIV — Far-right supporters of a controversial Israeli death penalty law were popping champagne corks as itcleared the Knesseton Monday night, but its passage has sparked a global chorus of condemnation from allies and international human rights groups.

NBC Universal Israel Palestinians (Itay Cohen / AP)

The new law effectively makes death by hanging the default punishment for murderers who kill "with the intent to deny the existence of the State of Israel" — language that targets Palestinian militants but amounts to a de facto exclusion ofIsraelis who kill Palestinians.

Because the law would accelerate lethal punishments for Palestinians and is almost impossible to apply to Israeli murderers, human rights groups say it's likely to inspire far more outrage and violence than it prevents.

U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights Volker Türksaid in a statementTuesday that the measure is a "particularly egregious violation of international law" and warned its application to residents of the occupied West Bank and theGaza Strip"would constitute a war crime."

Australia, Germany, France, Italy and the United Kingdom voiced concerns over its "de facto discriminatory character" in ajoint statement, while Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez said in aposton X that it was "another step toward apartheid."

The Trump administration has so far avoided joining critics, with a State Department spokesperson saying it "respects Israel's sovereign right to determine its own laws," adding: "We trust that any such measures will be carried out with a fair trial and respect for all applicable fair trial guarantees and protections."

Advocates of the law within Israel have pointed toviolent attacksperpetrated by Palestinian militants over the years.

For Micah Avni, his support for the law is deeply personal, having watched the Palestinian militant who murdered his father, Richard Avni, a decade agowalk free from an Israeli prisonas part of an exchange for Israelis taken hostage by Hamas during the Oct. 7, 2023, attacks.

"I wish it had been in place earlier and I'm glad it's in place now," Avni, 56, said in a phone call Tuesday. "That terrorist who murdered my father showed absolutely no remorse. I'm quite certain, based on the statistics, that he's out there planning his next terror attack."

Micah Avni, right, and his father, Richard Lakin, left. (Family handout)

The law's critics say the new legislation is unlikely to dissuade Ghanem or anyone else from killing Israelis.

"This sends another message to Palestinians that there is no place for compromise," said Mustafa Barghouti, a Palestinian politician and leader of the Palestinian National Initiative party. "This will not deter Palestinians but it will enhance their struggle for freedom from this oppressive system."

Under the new law, the death penalty will be administered by military courts that almost exclusively try Palestinians and have a 96% conviction rate, according to B'Tselem, an Israeli human rights group.

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Capital sentences will now require only a simple majority of sitting judges rather than unanimous agreement, the group said. And the punishment must be carried out within 90 days of sentencing without any possibility for pardons or commutations.

"It's just going to be another tool in the Israeli toolkit to kill Palestinians," said Shai Parnes, B'Tselem's public outreach director.

Funeral of Last Israeli Gaza Hostage in Boost for Peace Plan (Kobi Wolf / Bloomberg via Getty Images)

The law would not apply to Palestinians already convicted of participating in theOct. 7 attacks. But those who haven't been convicted, including the estimated half of imprisoned Palestinians who have been jailed but not formally charged under Israel's so-called "administrative detention" for Palestinian offenders, could still be put to death.

Capital punishment is technically legal in Israel but only for crimes against humanity and treason.

The death penalty for murder was outlawed in 1954 and Israel has only executed two people in its 78-year history. Meir Tobianski was executed for treason in 1948 but was completely exonerated a year later. In 1962, Israel hanged Adolf Eichmann, the Nazi architect of the holocaust, after a widely watched trial in Jerusalem.

The punishment stipulated under the new law is death by hanging, after the Israeli Medical Association's ethics board said last year that its members would be prohibited from administering lethal injections, according toIsraeli media.

Supporters of the death penalty, particularly among the far-right politicians who championed it, describe the law as a much-needed correction to decades of lax punishments by progressive judges that only incentivized terror.

"The idea is to not allow them to continue to think that by taking hostages they're going to get a get-out-of-jail-free card because there's no death penalty," said Caroline Glick, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's international affairs adviser.

Among the more than 2,000 Palestinian prisoners released as part of exchanges for Israeli hostages in Gaza, hundreds of them were serving life sentences for lethal crimes against Israelis.

International Quds Day in Gaza (Mohammed Talatene / DPA via Getty Images file)

Yahya Sinwar, the former head of Hamas and one of the primary architects of the Oct. 7 attacks, was released from Israeli prison in a similar deal in 2011.

"It's important from a deterrent perspective because one of the things that we find is that we give people multiple life sentences and they don't take it seriously," Glick said.

But some of the law's backers in parliament betrayed a certain macabre zeal for its intent. Some right-wing lawmakers wore gold nooses to Monday's session. After the bill passed, Israeli National Security Minister Itamar Ben Gvir popped a bottle of champagne as television cameras rolled.

"Soon we will count them one by one," he said of the executions to come as he poured champagne into his colleagues' glasses. "From today, every terrorist will know, and the whole world will know, that whoever takes a life, the state of Israel will take their life."

Israeli death penalty law targeting Palestinians sparks global outcry as far right celebrates

TEL AVIV — Far-right supporters of a controversial Israeli death penalty law were popping champagne corks as itcleared th...
Ilona Maher headlines ESPN's Final Four women's basketball alt-cast

U.S. Olympic rugby starIlona Maherwill be the featured guest on ESPN's newly announced alt-cast for the NCAA Women's Final Four.

USA TODAY Sports

The network − which is broadcasting the NCAA Tournament semifinals on Friday, April 3 and the women's national championship game on Sunday, April 5 − will have Jess Sims hosting "Courtside at the Women's Final Four," airing on ESPN 2 for the semis and ESPN for the final.

Maher, a member of theUSA's bronze medal-winning teamat the 2024 Summer Olympics in Paris, will be among a rotating cast of guests, along with ESPN reporter and content creator Katie Feeney.

"I'm incredibly excited to be joining ESPN's 'Courtside'in its first year,"Maher in an ESPN news release. "As a champion of women's sports, I cannot wait to be part of ESPN's presentation of women's basketball on the biggest stage. We are going to see some fantastic games and we're ready to have some fun right next to the action."

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<p style=The Alabama bench celebrate after a big three-point shot by Alabama Crimson Tide guard Karly Weathers (22) in the fourth quarter against Louisville during the 2026 NCAA Women's March Madness Second Round basketball at the KFC Yum Center In Louisville, Ky. Weathers finished with 13 points. March 23, 2026.

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> Laura Ziegler of the Louisville Cardinals kisses the court after her team's 69-68 victory over the Alabama Crimson Tide in the second round of the 2026 NCAA Women's Basketball Tournament at KFC YUM! Center on March 23, 2026 in Louisville, Ky. Ohio State mascot Brutus Buckeye and the Notre Dame Fighting Irish leprechaun mascot cheer prior to the NCAA women's basketball tournament second round game at the Jerome Schottenstein Center in Columbus on March 23, 2026. Louisville fans cheer during a first-round game between the Louisville Cardinals and Vermont Catamounts in the 2026 NCAA WomenâÕs Basketball Tournament at the KFC Yum Center, March 21, 2026, in Louisville, Ky. The Notre Dame Fighting Irish huddle up prior to the start of the NCAA Women's Basketball Tournament Second Round game against the Ohio State Buckeyes at Jerome Schottenstein Center on March 23, 2026 in Columbus, Ohio. Notre Dame defeated Ohio Sate 83-73. A Louisville fan held a sign in the final seconds as the Cards defeated Alabama 69-68 to move on to the Sweet 16 during the 2026 NCAA Women's March Madness Second Round basketball at the KFC Yum Center In Louisville, Ky. March 23, 2026. Alabama mascot Big Al works the crowd during a first-round game between the Rhode Island Rams and Alabama Crimson Tide in the 2026 NCAA WomenÕs Basketball Tournament at the KFC Yum Center, March 21, 2026, in Louisville, Ky. The Ohio State Buckeyes sit for the starting lineup prior to the NCAA women's basketball tournament second round game against the Notre Dame Fighting Irish at the Jerome Schottenstein Center in Columbus on March 23, 2026. Ohio State Buckeyes fans react to a foul call during the NCAA women's basketball tournament second round game against the Notre Dame Fighting Irish at the Jerome Schottenstein Center in Columbus on March 23, 2026. A member of the Louisville Cardinals band performs during the third quarter against the Alabama Crimson Tide in the second round of the 2026 NCAA Women's Basketball Tournament at KFC YUM! Center on March 23, 2026 in Louisville, Ky. A player spins a basketball branded with the NCAA logo before a game between the Alabama Crimson Tide and the Louisville Cardinals in the second round of the 2026 NCAA Women's Basketball Tournament at KFC YUM! Center on March 23, 2026 in Louisville, Ky. The Iowa State Cyclones mascot on the court during a break against the Syracuse Orange in the first half at Harry A. Gampel Pavilion in Storrs, Ct. on Mar 21, 2026. Guard Kylie Feuerbach #4 of the Iowa Hawkeyes interacts with fans after a match-up against the FDU Knights on March 21, 2026 at Carver-Hawkeye Arena during the first round of the NCAA Women's Basketball Tournament in Iowa City, Iowa.

See women's March Madness 2026, from mascots and fans to celebrities

The Alabama bench celebrate after a big three-point shot by Alabama Crimson Tide guard Karly Weathers (22) in the fourth quarter against Louisville during the2026 NCAA Women's March MadnessSecond Round basketball at the KFC Yum Center In Louisville, Ky. Weathers finished with 13 points. March 23, 2026.

The alt-cast will run concurrently with the network's main broadcast of the Final Four (on ESPN) on Friday evening and national championship (on ABC) Sunday afternoon.

Also joining the alt-cast are Minnesota Lynx players Natisha Hiedemanand Courtney Williams − known as the StudBudz to fans of their popular Twitch channel.

In addition, six-time WNBA All-Star Chelsea Gray will join Sims and Maher as a guest analyst for the title game. The Las Vegas Aces guard is a four-time WNBA champion and two-time Olympic gold medalist.

"'Courtside' will deliver a fresh, authentic perspective on the game," said Meg Aronowitz, ESPN senior vice president of production. "By placing this group right at courtside, we're creating an immersive experience that brings fans closer than ever – capturing the energy of the arena while also delivering insight, personality and fun."

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Ilona Maher joins ESPN alt-cast for Women's Final 4 March Madnss

Ilona Maher headlines ESPN's Final Four women's basketball alt-cast

U.S. Olympic rugby starIlona Maherwill be the featured guest on ESPN's newly announced alt-cast for the NCAA Women...
Jaguars to play 2027 home slate in Orlando while stadium under construction

The Jacksonville Jaguars will play their home games in Orlando in 2027.

Field Level Media

NFL owners gave unanimous approval on Tuesday to the plan to relocate to Camping World Stadium for that one season. Orlando is about 140 miles south of Jacksonville.

The Jaguars' current home, EverBank Stadium, will be unavailable because of a $1.4 billion project to transform it into what the team has named the Stadium of the Future. Work already has started.

Improvements include upgrades to technology as well as a transparent canopy designed to reduce the heat retention at the venue by 70% or more. A remake of the concourses also is scheduled, and shared spaces such as bars and food areas, will be reimagined. New lookout spaces will allow fans a view of Jacksonville.

The construction will limit capacity at EverBank Stadium in the 2026 season, but the Jaguars will play there. Some stadium areas will be closed to seating.

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The project is scheduled to be completed before the 2028 season.

"Following the comprehensive evaluation of our 2027 season playing options, we are pleased that the NFL and NFL owners unanimously agree that Orlando is the location that best meets the needs of the Jaguars, our 2027 opponents, and the National Football League," said Mark Lamping, the team president. "This temporary relocation is a necessary and important step to facilitate the 2028 completion of Jacksonville's Stadium of the Future. We are deeply grateful to our fanbase for their continued support, patience, and enthusiasm during this interim period."

The team has said the renovations will put Jacksonville in line to host events such as the Super Bowl, the Final Four and the college football playoffs. Jacksonville hosted Super Bowl XXXIX on Feb. 6, 2005, when the New England Patriots defeated the Philadelphia Eagles 24-21.

The stadium opened in 1995 when the Jaguars joined the NFL. It occupies the site of the old Gator Bowl, built in 1927.

--Field Level Media

Jaguars to play 2027 home slate in Orlando while stadium under construction

The Jacksonville Jaguars will play their home games in Orlando in 2027. NFL owners gave unanimous ap...
Once World Cup outsiders, these national teams are crashing the party

One hundred minutes into a scoreless match Tuesday, Jamaican defenders watched the flight of a corner kick as it curled toward their goal. And for a brief, costly, moment everyone forgot about Axel Tuanzebe.

NBC Universal Congo DR v Jamaica - FIFA World Cup 2026 Play-Off Tournament (Manuel Velasquez / FIFA via Getty Images)

Tuanzebe, of the Democratic Republic of Congo,had called this matchthe biggest of his career. Only the winner of the FIFA World Cup qualifier in Guadalajara, Mexico, would advance to play this summer in the 48-team field comprising the most popular sporting tournament on the planet.

Charging forward, Tuanzebe met the ball as its arc fell just in front of the goal, smashing it for a 1-0 lead.

His goal didn't end the game immediately. Congo had to endure 20 more minutes of extra time before it won, 1-0. But that wait paled to the country's 52-year absence from the world's biggest sporting event — a drought that ended Tuesday, when it became the 47th out of 48 teams to qualify for the World Cup.

"Right now, I don't think we fully realize it yet, but when we get back ​to Kinshasa, it's going to be crazy," Congo strikerCédric Bakambu said, according to Reuters.

Celebrations weren't limited to Kinshasa on a day when the final six countries qualified to round out the World Cup field. The expansion from 32 to 48 countries for this World Cup created opportunities for nations that had spent years on the outside looking in, such as Iraq (which last appeared in 1986), Turkey (2002) and Czechia (2006).

Kosovo v Turkiye - 2026 FIFA World Cup European Qualifiers (Serhat Cagdas / Anadolu via Getty Images)

But the longest wait of all had taken place in Congo. The country was still named Zaire in 1974, when the nation was outscored, 14-0, in three group stage games. It was the nation's first World Cup appearance and its last for the next five decades.

The 1974 team had won the Africa Cup of Nations and was encouraged by a figure no less powerful than the president, Mobutu Sese Seko, who had "used football as much as possible for hegemonic regime control,"researchers wrote in 2022.

After a particularly poor performance in 1966, not long after Mobutu began his three-decade run atop the government, the president brought national players playing abroad back to Zaire and outlawed their transfers to other nation's leagues to build up Zaire's domestic competition.

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By 1968, Zaire had won the Africa Cup of Nations. When it repeated in 1974, it became the first nation from sub-Saharan Africa to qualify for the World Cup, and each player was provided housing and a Volkswagen Passat as a show of appreciation, Mohamed Kalambay, a goalkeeper on the team,recalled to the BBC.

But such lavish funding didn't last. The national team, called the Leopards, struggled as the country's domestic league operated without support from sponsors or government funding.

Ahead of the 2026 World Cup, soccer leaders within Congo enlisted a strategy widely used in international soccer — calling in the help of dual-national players with lineage to the country but who developed as players outside its borders. The job of persuading players with Congolese ties to represent the country's national team on its long-shot run to the World Cup fell to Gabriel Zakuani, a Congolese player whose career had been spent mostly in England.

Convincing Aaron Wan-Bissaka, a defender for English Premier League club West Ham, and Tuanzebe were priorities,he told the BBC last year; both had come up within the English national team system. Getting parents on board was helpful, Zakuani said. So was being able to make his case no matter where a player grew up.

"I speak eight (languages), so that helps," Zakuani said.

The country remains marred by fighting in its east. In December, on the same day that U.S. President Donald Trump attended the draw for the World Cup, hehosted leaders from Rwanda and Congoas they affirmed their commitments to a peace deal. But fighting has continued. By then, though, the country was entering the final stages of its qualification.

"It's my country; it's where my parents are from," Wan-Bissakatold the BBC. "I grew up in a Congolese household. I was just proud to represent them. As soon as I joined, they welcomed me, accepted me."

Tuanzebe was born in Congo, but was in Manchester United's academy by grade school. He made his Premier League debut at 17. He now plays for Burnley.

A decade later, this summer, he'll make his World Cup debut thanks to his 100th-minute goal Tuesday.

"To get the winning goal for the country, I mean, this is what as a young boy you dream about," Tuanzebe saidafter the match. "It's happened for me and I'm so very happy."

Once World Cup outsiders, these national teams are crashing the party

One hundred minutes into a scoreless match Tuesday, Jamaican defenders watched the flight of a corner kick as it curled t...
Patriots coach Mike Vrabel responds after running back seemingly defends Jaden Ivey's anti-LGBTQ remarks

New England Patriotshead coach Mike Vrabel tried to walk the "fine line" he said is in place after his running back, TreVeyon Henderson, seemingly defended the anti-LGBTQ comments made by ex-Chicago Bulls guard Jaden Ivey on Monday.

Fox News

The Bullswaived Ivey on Monday due to conduct detrimental to the team following a video he posted, where he claimed the NBA was celebrating "unrighteousness" by acknowledging and embracing Pride Month.

Henderson tweeted the video of Ivey, which has now gone viral, and responded with a Bible verse.

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Mike Vrabel on the sideline

"Blessed are those who are persecuted for righteousness' sake, For theirs is the kingdom of heaven," Henderson quoted from Matthew 5:10.

Vrabel was asked about Henderson's post on Tuesday by reporters.

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"I think there is a fine line. I want to tell you, I love TreVeyon," he said. "I love the person. He cares deeply about our team. He cares deeply about his faith. He cares deeply about his family, his wife, the people in our building. And so I want them to be able to express what they believe in their heart and in their mind, but also want to make sure that they're educated. And we want to be inclusive.

Patriots Star Appears To Show Support For Ex-bulls Player After Rant Against Nba's Pride Month Celebration

"Everything we want to do [is] to provide an environment for people to want to feel comfortable, but also to share their personal beliefs. And then also, we represent the team. And we represent the organization."

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Vrabel received a follow-up question, asking if he would talk to Henderson or the team about what transpired on social media. He responded by saying, "I usually try to," though he noted, "(We're) never going to tell them how to feel."

"(We) certainly want to make sure that they understand that their actions represent something more than just themselves," Vrabel added. "And so I do think there's a line. We're always talking about those kinds of things. We're trying to educate them, no different than myself or you guys or my kids."

Henderson is coming off his rookie season with the Patriots, racking up 911 yards on the ground with nine touchdowns, helping New England get to the Super Bowl. Henderson had just four starts under his belt in Vrabel's first year leading the team, as Rhamondre Stevenson was also a key figure in the Patriots' backfield.

Ivey has been posting similar videos with rants in recent weeks, as the 24-year-old has noted in the past hedeals with depression.

"The world can proclaim LGBTQ, right?" Ivey said inhis latest video. "They proclaim Pride Month and the NBA. They proclaim it. They show it to the world. They say, 'Come join us for Pride Month to celebrate unrighteousness.' They proclaim it. They proclaim it on the billboards. They proclaim in the streets. Unrighteousness. So, how is it that one can't speak righteousness? Who are they to say that this man is crazy?"

Mike Vrabel looks on during a preseason game

Ivey also claimed in a separate video thatCatholicism was a false religion.

Fox News' Ryan Gaydos and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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Original article source:Patriots coach Mike Vrabel responds after running back seemingly defends Jaden Ivey's anti-LGBTQ remarks

Patriots coach Mike Vrabel responds after running back seemingly defends Jaden Ivey's anti-LGBTQ remarks

New England Patriotshead coach Mike Vrabel tried to walk the "fine line" he said is in place after his running ...

 

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