sting – www.israelhayom.com https://www.israelhayom.com israelhayom english website Wed, 20 Oct 2021 12:52:48 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.4.2 https://www.israelhayom.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/11/cropped-G_rTskDu_400x400-32x32.jpg sting – www.israelhayom.com https://www.israelhayom.com 32 32 4 Israelis arrested in multi-million euro fraud targeting Germans https://www.israelhayom.com/2021/10/20/4-israelis-arrested-in-multi-million-euro-fraud-targeting-germans/ https://www.israelhayom.com/2021/10/20/4-israelis-arrested-in-multi-million-euro-fraud-targeting-germans/#respond Wed, 20 Oct 2021 12:50:12 +0000 https://www.israelhayom.com/?p=704943   The German police forces has reached out to the Israel Police's Central Fraud Unit to help investigate a multi-media fraud scheme targeting German citizens that they believe is being operated by Israel. Follow Israel Hayom on Facebook and Twitter The suspects are believed to have set up call centers in Israel, Germany, and other […]

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The German police forces has reached out to the Israel Police's Central Fraud Unit to help investigate a multi-media fraud scheme targeting German citizens that they believe is being operated by Israel.

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The suspects are believed to have set up call centers in Israel, Germany, and other countries, including Georgia, through which German citizens were contacted and persuaded to invest hefty sums in stocks, foreign currencies, and goods. Eventually, the investors discovered that their money had vanished without any deals being concluded.

The fraud made use of fake investment websites and is assessed at tens of millions of euros, with investigators suspecting that it remained in operation for several years.

A raid of the company's offices in Petah Tikva, where the scheme was active and targeted Israelis, resulted in police seizing computers, cellphones, documents, and cash. Prior to the raid, 4 million shekels ($1.24 million) in various bank accounts linked to the case had been frozen.

On Wednesday morning, the investigation was made public. Detectives from the unit arrests 15 Israeli suspects and brought them in for questioning. Of the 15, 11 were released after questioning, while the remaining four were detained and due to appear at the Jerusalem Magistrates Court for a remand hearing.

The current expectation is that Germany will ask Israel to extradite the four suspects to stand trial there. The police plan to ask for a 20-day remand, in part to allow time to arrange the extradition process.

The four suspects are residents of Hoon, Tel Aviv, Tzur Yigal and Givatayim. According to the authorities in Germany, they are members of a criminal organization headed by Israelis, although the organization's two heads – an Israeli father and son – are abroad and have yet to be arrested.

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Marine biology experts unpack Israel's jellyfish problem https://www.israelhayom.com/2019/07/15/marine-biology-experts-unpack-israels-jellyfish-problem/ https://www.israelhayom.com/2019/07/15/marine-biology-experts-unpack-israels-jellyfish-problem/#respond Mon, 15 Jul 2019 03:00:15 +0000 https://www.israelhayom.com/?p=393469 Israel's yearly jellyfish season is well and truly here, inconveniencing local beach-goers and tourists alike. Amid a swarm, consisting of tens of millions of jellyfish, reaching Israel's coast over the past week and invading a power station in southern Israel, concerns also exist over the sea creatures' effect on local fish life. Dr. Tamar Lotan […]

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Israel's yearly jellyfish season is well and truly here, inconveniencing local beach-goers and tourists alike. Amid a swarm, consisting of tens of millions of jellyfish, reaching Israel's coast over the past week and invading a power station in southern Israel, concerns also exist over the sea creatures' effect on local fish life.

Dr. Tamar Lotan and Professor Dror Angel, experts at University of Haifa's Leon H. Charney School of Marine Sciences, explain what's behind this year's increased jellyfish swarms and what must be done moving forward.

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Q: Are we seeing increasing rates of jellyfish coming to Israel's coast?

These swarms have been happening in our region since the 1980s and in varying abundances, so until we carry out large-scale quantitative assessments (rather than impressions), the jury is out on whether there is an increase.

This year specifically is anomalous because the recent winter had exceptionally high rainfall that washed out large quantities of nutrients to our normally nutrient-poor sea, driving production rates up and providing lots of food to all members of the marine food web, including the jellyfish. The swarms recur in this region year after year because the jellyfish have become established here.

Q: What threat do they pose?

The impacts of jellyfish to the ecosystem are numerous and not necessarily all negative:

Consider that:

The jellyfish compete directly and quite efficiently with larval and young finfish over planktonic food, and in some cases, the jellies have caused these fish populations to "starve."

Jellyfish are predators, and massive swarms/blooms with large predation pressure can cause ecosystems to become unbalanced.

Jellyfish blooms mean considerable biomass in the water column, and when that material sinks and decomposes on the seafloor, it can either cause the formation of hypoxic and anoxic sediments (dead zones) or a feast to bottom dwellers (benthos) that enjoy the food (like manna in the sea).

Jellyfish blooms can cause mechanical clogging of coastal power plants that use seawater to cool their turbines, problems to desalination plants that use seawater to generate freshwater, problems to fisherfolk that want to target finfish or other marine species, all marine recreation and aquaculture farms that grow fish in cages.

Q: Can we avoid jellyfish swarms in the future?

We cannot avoid swarms, as these are natural phenomena, but we must do more research to understand the dynamics of the swarms better in order to eventually be able to predict these.

Common knowledge assumes there is ongoing competition between larval (and young) finfish and jellyfish because they all rely on the same planktonic organisms for food. Overfishing or heavy fishing pressure often results in reduced finfish populations, which may give the upper hand to their competitors, the jellyfish. So if we maintain healthier populations of finfish, this may reduce jellyfish swarms.

The same argument is applied to coastal development. Many finfish have natural nurseries near the shore, and if coastal development encroaches on these, this adds pressure to natural fish populations and threatens their survival. A solution to this is to establish marine-protected areas where coastal development does not happen to protect natural biota; this may also ultimately reduce jellyfish swarms.

Jellyfish also seem to be less affected by pollution than other marine groups. So if the sea is polluted by chemicals or other agents, the jellyfish may fare better than other groups – once again boosting their populations and success in comparison to their competition.

The solution here, of course, is to reduce marine pollution.

Reprinted with permission from JNS.org.

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