| |||
DAILY ALERT | Friday, January 18, 2019 | ||
In-Depth Issues: New "Divided" Road near Jerusalem Will Considerably Shorten Travel Time for Palestinians - Shaul Arieli (Ha'aretz) The opening of the new road northeast of Jerusalem, which features separate lanes for Israelis and Palestinians, will considerably shorten the travel time for Palestinians between Bethlehem and Ramallah - and between the northern and southern parts of the West Bank - and will even improve the safety of their journey. Hamas Unveils Iran-Funded Homes for Former Prisoners (AFP-Arab News-Saudi Arabia) Hamas said Thursday it had allocated 26 new apartments in southern Gaza funded by Iran to former Palestinian prisoners who had been held in Israeli jails. A second building for freed prisoners will be constructed in northern Gaza, "We Came to Take You to Riyadh": Khashoggi Killing Detailed in New Book - Carlotta Gall (New York Times) A new book written by three Turkish reporters offers the most comprehensive description to date of what is on audio recordings of the killing of Saudi expatriate Jamal Khashoggi. Journalists Abdurrahman Simsek, Nazif Karaman and Ferhat Unlu work for the pro-government newspaper Sabah, and are known for their close ties to Turkish intelligence. The book, Diplomatic Atrocity: The Dark Secrets of the Jamal Khashoggi Murder, is written in Turkish and went on sale in December. Social Media Leaders in the Middle East - Ray Hanania (Middle East Monitor-UK) Nine Arab leaders are among the top 50 most popular accounts on Twitter. They include Sheikh Mohammed of the UAE, Queen Rania of Jordan, King Salman of Saudi Arabia, Abdullah Bin Zayed Al-Nahyan of the UAE, Abdel Fattah Al-Sisi of Egypt and Saad Hariri of Lebanon. Queen Rania has 10.4 million followers. Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas has 270 followers in Arabic and no English account. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's Arabic Twitter account has 114,000 followers. Netanyahu's Facebook page has 2.3 million followers. Working to Integrate Israeli Arabs into High-Tech Jobs - Ira Stoll (Algemeiner) Tsofen, an organization working to better integrate Israeli Arabs into Israel's high-tech sector, was founded by Paz Hirschmann and Sami Saadi. A decade ago, there were 300 Arab engineers or software engineers in Israel's high-tech workforce. Today there are 6,000. More than 100 Israeli startups are either co-founded or co-owned by both Arabs and Jews, Hirschmann says. See also Meet the Israeli Arab Women in Israeli Hi-Tech - Eytan Halon (Jerusalem Post) Video: See IDF Tank Cross Water Obstacle - Anna Ahronheim (Jerusalem Post) Israel's Defense Ministry released video footage of an IDF Merkava tank successfully crossing a water obstacle during a recent exercise. IAF Tests Precise Airdrop System - Carmel Stern and Eitam Almadon (Israel Air Force) The Israel Air Force is integrating an advanced system allowing for precise airdrop of equipment to ground forces. If IDF troops cannot be resupplied from the ground, the air force is capable of performing airdrops of essential equipment. The new autonomic airdrop system means that the airdropped cargo is able to direct itself towards the ground forces. Over the past two months, the IAF has concluded 18 tests of the airdrop system, dropping the cargo from high altitude. "It was amazing to see the system hit the mark on the ground," said Maj. "A." Israel's Watergen Develops Disaster Response Vehicle - Eytan Halon (Jerusalem Post) Watergen, the Israeli firm with unique technology to extract fresh water from the air, has partnered with the American Red Cross to develop a new Emergency Response Vehicle (ERV) for providing fresh water to disaster zones. The ERV is equipped with Watergen's patented atmospheric water generator capable of producing 900 liters per day. It includes satellite communication capabilities, power sockets for charging communication devices, emergency accumulators for power supply and storage for medical equipment. The ERV has already been deployed, providing clean water for emergency services fighting the November 2018 wildfires in California. Israel Develops Non-GPS-Dependent "Watch" to Locate Lost People in Remote Areas (Xinhua-China) Israeli technology company Mobit Telecom, in cooperation with the German Aerospace Center, has developed a tiny, watch-shaped satellite transmitter to locate people lost in areas uncovered by cellular networks, the Israel Space Agency said Wednesday. The transmitter is light, compact, easy-to-wear and expected to cost $450. The new "watch" does not depend on the GPS navigation system, which does not get signals in remote areas. The device sends its location to the Argos satellite system once every few hours, and in an emergency it can go to the Cospas-Sarsat satellite system. Israeli Startup SeeTree Aims at Better Fruit Yield - Shoshanna Solomon (Times of Israel) Tel Aviv-based startup SeeTree said Wednesday it was launching a new service that will provide crop growers with "deep insights" into the health and productivity of every single tree. The company combines intelligence from drones with high-resolution sensing technology, ground sensors, and samples collected by teams on the ground to provide customers with data on individual trees and tree clusters. Chairman and co-founder Barak Hachamov said farmers have to oversee thousands and sometimes millions of trees. "They don't have any data about how much fruit is on the trees," for example. "We have fully digitilized this world a nd turned the trees into a digital entity, creating a medical file for trees." Search the Recent History of Israel and the Middle East Send the Daily Alert to a Friend If you are viewing the email version of the Daily Alert and want to share it with friends, please click Forward in your email program and enter their address. | News Resources - North America, Europe, and Asia:
News Resources - Israel and the Mideast:
Global Commentary and Think-Tank Analysis: Observations: Hamas, PA Suspicious of Israel's New Internet Radio Webcast - Adnan Abu Amer (Al-Monitor) Support Daily Alert Daily Alert is the work of a team of expert analysts who find the most important and timely articles from around the world on Israel, the Middle East and U.S. policy. No wonder it is read by heads of government, leading journalists, and thousands of people who want to stay on top of the news. To continue to provide this service, Daily Alert requires your support. Please take a moment to click here and make your contribution through the Jerusalem Center for Public Affairs. |