Featured
Grave desecration: Anti-Semitic attack taken too far
Dozens of graves at a Jewish cemetery were desecrated overnight in France, with swastikas and anti-Semitic slogans spray-painted on them, the BBC reports.
The vandalism was discovered Tuesday in the village of Quatzenheim, near the France-Germany border, hours before rallies and marches were planned in as many as 60 cities across France to protest an “unprecedented” surge in anti-Semitic attacks, the Telegraph reports. French President Emmanuel Macron inspected the damage to 96 graves at the cemetery, telling those gathered there, “We shall act, we shall pass laws, we shall punish.”
Nearly all of France’s political leaders were expected to attend the Paris march against anti-Semitism Tuesday.
Anti-Semitic attacks were up 74% in France last year, increasing from 311 in 2017 to 541 in 2018; France has Europe’s largest Jewish community. Other recent attacks have also made headlines, including swastikas painted on mailboxes, a Jewish bakery, another cemetery, and a monument to Holocaust victims, and a philosopher being subjected to anti-Jewish taunts by protesters. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu condemned the cemetery attack, calling it “shocking.” (A pro-Nazi, anti-Semitic general was recently hailed in the streets.
-
News5 days agoFRSC opens 2026 nationwide recruitment, online applications begin July 3
-
Entertainment6 days agoActress Cossy Ojiakor shares flooded home as heavy rainfall wreaks havoc in Lagos
-
Business5 days agoMRS slashes petrol price by N50/Litre as Dangote Refinery cuts fuel costs
-
Business3 days agoPressure mounts on marketers as Nigerians demand lower fuel prices amid falling global oil costs
-
Business1 week agoLogistics bottlenecks threaten Nigeria’s economic growth, industry leaders warn
-
Business1 week agoInflation, high interest rates loom as FG credit hits N40.38tn
-
Football6 days agoCAF rejects proposal to expand AFCON to 28 teams
-
Business5 days agoBREAKING: CBN revokes licences of 46 Microfinance Banks in major regulatory crackdown

