Israel says Michigan synagogue attacker was brother of killed Hezbollah commander

[ad_1]

Text to Speech Icon

Listen to this article

Estimated 4 minutes

The audio version of this article is generated by AI-based technology. Mispronunciations can occur. We are working with our partners to continually review and improve the results.

The brother of a man who attacked a Michigan synagogue last week, who was killed earlier this month in an Israeli airstrike, was a Hezbollah commander, Israel’s military said Sunday.

Ibrahim Ghazali was killed in Lebanon along with three other relatives on March 5 — a week before authorities allege Ayman Mohamad Ghazali drove his car into a major synagogue outside Detroit and killed himself after security fired at him.

The FBI’s Detroit office, which is investigating the synagogue attack, declined to comment on the claims by Israel’s military about Ibrahim Ghazali.

“Out of respect for the ongoing investigation, we will continue to refrain from commenting on its substance,” FBI spokesperson Jordan Hall said in an email Sunday.

The Israeli military alleges Ibrahim Ghazali was a Hezbollah commander who managed weapons for a unit that fired rockets at Israel.

People stand next to a large crater and a destroyed home after an airstrike.
People inspect the damage following a strike from a projectile launched from Lebanon in Haniel, central Israel, on Thursday. (Baz Ratner/The Associated Press)

A Lebanese official, who requested anonymity because he could not publicly discuss details of the airstrike, has confirmed Ibrahim Ghazali’s death. The official told The Associated Press that Ghazali’s children, Ali and Fatima, and brother, Kassim, were also killed in the strike that hit their home just after sunset.

In a statement sent to The Associated Press in Beirut, Hezbollah said that the brothers, Ibrahim and Kassim, were involved in a local soccer league, and they were targeted at home along with their children, but didn’t explicitly deny that Ibrahim was in the group.

Authorities have said that Ayman Ghazali, 41, carried out the synagogue attack after learning that four of his family members were killed in the Israeli strike.

Israel has stepped up attacks on the Iranian-backed militant group Hezbollah in Lebanon as the war with Iran has spread violence across the Middle East.

WATCH | Israeli strike kills at least 12 medics, Lebanon officials say:

At least 12 medics killed in Israeli airstrike on health facility: Lebanon officials

At least 12 medical personnel were killed in Israeli airstrikes on a medical complex Friday in southern Lebanon, according to Lebanon’s Health Ministry. The World Health Organization (WHO) has verified 27 Israeli airstrikes targeting Lebanon’s health care system and says over 30 medical workers have been killed and 35 wounded since the war began. Dr. Abdinasir Abubakar, WHO’s representative in Lebanon, says medical personnel must be protected as Israel’s war on Lebanon continues to escalate.

On Thursday, Ayman Ghazali waited in his car outside Temple Israel, near Detroit, for about two hours with a rifle, commercial grade fireworks and jugs of liquid believed to be gasoline, before crashing into the building full of dozens of children, according to authorities.

He started firing his gun through the windshield, exchanging fire with an armed security guard. Ghazali fatally shot himself after he got stuck in his vehicle and the engine caught fire, said Jennifer Runyan, the special agent in charge of the FBI’s Detroit field office. No staffers or children inside the synagogue were hurt, likely due to beefed up security in recent months.

The FBI, which is leading the investigation, described the attack on one of the nation’s largest Reform synagogues as an act of violence targeting the Jewish community. But the agency said it didn’t have enough evidence yet to call it an act of terror.

Ghazali came to the U.S. in 2011 on an immediate relative visa as the spouse of a U.S. citizen and was granted U.S. citizenship in 2016, according to the Department of Homeland Security.

He lived in a single-story brick home in the Detroit suburb of Dearborn Heights about 60 kilometres south of the synagogue.

The attack on the Michigan synagogue took place on the same day as a former Army National Guard member who served years in prison for attempting to aid the Islamic State opened fire on a classroom at Old Dominion University in Virginia, killing one person and wounding two others.

[ad_2]

Source link

Leave a Reply