Anti-Israel Group’s Website Puts Bounties on Heads of Israel Studies: Reports

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An anti-Israel group website is offering bounties of up to $100,000 to kill Israeli academics, according to reports.
Punishment by the justice system can not only cost the target and certain prices on their heads, but also publish personal information such as home addresses, e-mails and phone numbers, said the Jerusalem report.
Scholars who were assigned work at universities such as Ben-Gurion University of the Nevev University in Jerusalem, Thebu Aviv University, even the universities of Harvard and Oxford and the European Organization for nuclear research.
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An Anti-Israel website is said to be offering bounties of up to $100,000 for the killing of Israeli Atadics. (AP photo, file)
As well as donating $100,000 for the killing of “special purposes,” $50,000 was for the killing of other Hurses, and $5,000 for information about the target and $1,000 for putting up protests outside their homes.
The website, created last summer and apparently from the Netherlands, went down briefly on Friday night but was restored on Saturday, it said.
The website is written in English, according to Israeli times, and accuses them of being “criminals and collaborators with the local army,” referring to the war in Gaza.
It also accuses the principles of being “distributors of weapons of mass destruction to the Israeli army” who are involved in the killing of Palestinian children, “says the Jerusalem Post.

The punishment of the judicial body is said to have named certain values and values. (James Sheppard / Future via Getty Images)
The organization said it had warned the police to “reject the work of criminals” and stop working with the security forces, but it said it ignored the warnings. Therefore, now “now” is the official purpose of the movement, “in terms of times.
The two academics targeted told the post they did not receive the warning, and several of those referred to the European Organization for nuclear research, but the creators of the website seemed to be united by the word “nuclear.”
One of the target studies told the post, “competent government agencies should propose more comprehensive solutions” than just taking over the website “because walking around with relative goals in our heads puts at risk not only the risk, but also our families.”

Harvard was one of the universities whose students were referred to the website. (Scott Eisen/Getty Images)
However, Michael Bronstein, who teaches computer science at Oxford, told the post that he had to ‘give money’ about the blurring in his life, calling those who threaten it as “genetics.”
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“I was very disturbed and shocked that my head was so responsible. Considering my position in the academic community, I get anything less than seven figures,” he told the post. “However, I am comforted that I have some good company.”
FOX News Digital has reached out to the Anti-Defamation League for comment.



