NYC protesters call for ‘intifada revolution’ hours after New Orleans attack
Hundreds of protesters called for an “intifada revolution” in Times Square on New Year’s Day, hours after terrorists carrying an ISIS flag attacked a crowd at a New Year’s Eve parade in New Orleans.
Attendees of the New York City protest – organized by the Palestinian Youth Movement, the Party for Socialism and Liberation and the People’s Forum, according to the New York Post – chanted “There is only one solution: the Intifada revolution.”
Among other chants were “Resistance is glorious – we will be victorious;” “We will honor all the martyrs of our faith;” and “Gaza, you make us proud.”
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Protesters carried signs reading “Zionism is a cancer,” “No war on Iran” and “End all US aid to Israel,” The Times of Israel reported.
“We’re sending you back to Europe you b——-,” one woman wearing a keffiyeh shouted at the protesters in a video exchange. “Go back to Europe!”
The speaker shouted through a megaphone that “2024 was the year to fight the crime of Zionism.”
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“We will be here every year for generations until we are free and come back,” the speaker said, according to the Times of Israel.
Hours before the protest, 42-year-old Shamsud-Din Jabbar drove a truck into the New Year’s Eve crowd on New Orleans’ Bourbon Street.
Jabbar – who was shot and killed during a shootout with police – was a US-born citizen lived in Texassaid FBI Assistant Special Agent-in-Charge Alethea Duncan at a press conference Wednesday afternoon.
The attack took place around 03:15 on Wednesday morning, leaving 15 people dead, including Jabbar, and 35 injured.
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FBI Deputy Assistant Director Christopher Raja said on Thursday that investigators found several weapons in and around the scene, including two improvised explosive devices (IEDs) in a dumpster at the intersection of Bourbon and Orleans Streets and at the intersection of Second Street a short distance away. He added that the FBI wants to talk to witnesses who may have seen coolers with IEDs.
Jabbar served in the Army as a human resources and information technology (IT) specialist from March 2007 until January 2015. Following his career, he served in the Army Reserve as an IT specialist from January 2015 until July 2020.
During the administration, he served in Afghanistan from February 2009 to January 2010.
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Jabbar said in Facebook videos before the attack that he had joined ISIS earlier this summer and provided a will and agreement, according to the FBI.
Fox News Digital’s Chris Pandolfo contributed to this report.
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