Israel Foils Iranian Plot to Assassinate Scientist and Mayor

Photo Credit: Police SpokespersonA car that was torched in Jerusalem by locals who were recruited by Iranian agents.
Israeli security officials foiled an Iranian plot to assassinate Israeli figures, it was cleared for publication on Tuesday.
“According to the information accumulated in the defense establishment, scientists and mayors, as well as senior officials of the defense establishment and other Israeli officials are targets for attack by Iranian elements,” the Israel Security Agency (Shin Bet) said.
Advertisement

Seven Arab suspects under arrest were recruited by Iranian agents to assassinate a senior Israeli scientist and the mayor of a large city in Israel. The suspects, some of whom are Israeli nationals, are all residents of Beit Safafa, an Arab neighborhood of Jerusalem. The 1949 armistice line drawn at the end of Israel’s War of Independence, often referred to as the Green Line, runs through the neighborhood.
The main suspect is identified as a 23-year-old Israeli national who came into contact with an Iranian agent and asked to carry out various tasks. After beginning his activity, he recruited a team to help him carry out assignments. Tasks included spraying graffiti in various locations, setting fire to vehicles in Jerusalem’s Ein Kerem neighborhood, and gathering intelligence.
During the police investigation, it emerged that the suspects were also asked to carry out an attack against a senior Israeli scientist, and against the mayor of a large city. The identities of the targets were not publicly disclosed. The suspects also planned to blow up a police car and throw a grenade at a house.
According to the Shin Bet, the Iranian agent offered to pay the suspects 200,000 shekels ($53,000). Some of the suspects photographed the targeted scientist’s home, for which they were paid 500 shekels ($132).
During a search of the suspects’ homes, investigators found a fake police identification plate, around 50,000 shekels ($13,000) in cash, and a large number of credit cards.
On Monday, it was cleared for publication that seven Israelis, including two minors, were separately arrested for spying for Iran. The seven are suspected of collecting information and providing photos of four Israeli military bases to a Russian agent in exchange for cash and cryptocurrency.
Advertisement

Israel Foils Iranian Plot to Assassinate Scientist and Mayor

Photo Credit: Police SpokespersonA car that was torched in Jerusalem by locals who were recruited by Iranian agents.
Israeli security officials foiled an Iranian plot to assassinate Israeli figures, it was cleared for publication on Tuesday.
“According to the information accumulated in the defense establishment, scientists and mayors, as well as senior officials of the defense establishment and other Israeli officials are targets for attack by Iranian elements,” the Israel Security Agency (Shin Bet) said.
Advertisement

Seven Arab suspects under arrest were recruited by Iranian agents to assassinate a senior Israeli scientist and the mayor of a large city in Israel. The suspects, some of whom are Israeli nationals, are all residents of Beit Safafa, an Arab neighborhood of Jerusalem. The 1949 armistice line drawn at the end of Israel’s War of Independence, often referred to as the Green Line, runs through the neighborhood.
The main suspect is identified as a 23-year-old Israeli national who came into contact with an Iranian agent and asked to carry out various tasks. After beginning his activity, he recruited a team to help him carry out assignments. Tasks included spraying graffiti in various locations, setting fire to vehicles in Jerusalem’s Ein Kerem neighborhood, and gathering intelligence.
During the police investigation, it emerged that the suspects were also asked to carry out an attack against a senior Israeli scientist, and against the mayor of a large city. The identities of the targets were not publicly disclosed. The suspects also planned to blow up a police car and throw a grenade at a house.
According to the Shin Bet, the Iranian agent offered to pay the suspects 200,000 shekels ($53,000). Some of the suspects photographed the targeted scientist’s home, for which they were paid 500 shekels ($132).
During a search of the suspects’ homes, investigators found a fake police identification plate, around 50,000 shekels ($13,000) in cash, and a large number of credit cards.
On Monday, it was cleared for publication that seven Israelis, including two minors, were separately arrested for spying for Iran. The seven are suspected of collecting information and providing photos of four Israeli military bases to a Russian agent in exchange for cash and cryptocurrency.
Advertisement

British holidaymakers’ terrifying ordeal of being trapped in hotel by fuming anti-tourist

British holidaymakers have been reportedly told of being trapped in a hotel by ­furious anti-tourist protesters.Thousands of protesters descended on resorts across the Canary Islands on Sunday. In Gran Canaria, hundreds assembled in Maspalomas, holding signs that read: “Go Home Tourists.”Lee Pattemore, 44, was trapped inside the Riu hotel with wife Stacey, 39, and their two daughters, aged 11 and six, reports The Sun. He told The Sun: “They were circling the hotel. My daughter was asking me, ‘Daddy, why are they shouting?’”Photos captured the chaos outside the hotel gates as police struggled to restore order.Landscaping boss Lee, of Epsom, Surrey, said: “There was a lot of pushing and shoving. We’re too scared to leave the hotel now.”In Tenerife’s Playa de las Americas, 2,000 activists stormed Troya Beach, surrounding startled British tourists in their swimwear while chanting: “This beach is ours.”Protests also took place in La Palma, Fuerteventura, Lanzarote, and El Hierro, under the slogan “The Canaries Have A Limit,” advocating for more sustainable tourism. Protesters argue that locals are being priced out of the housing market and that tourism is damaging the environment.Activist Daniel Cabrera said: “We want tourism, but we don’t want over-exploitation and low-quality tourism that doesn’t benefit the local economy.”In Gran Canaria, protesters took to the streets of Maspalomas, in the island’s south, where most of the hotels popular with British tourists are located.Thousands of demonstrators gathered to express their frustration with politicians for not addressing issues campaign groups link to excessive tourism, such as the lack of affordable housing and environmental concerns.Some marched behind a large banner reading in Spanish: “We’re foreigners in our own land.”Tourists watched from hotel rooftops as the protesters passed by, with reports that a few locals gave holidaymakers the middle finger, to which some responded by sarcastically blowing kisses.

First Tenerife, now Greece as country plans protests against too many tourists

Mass tourism in Greece is putting workers under extreme conditions driving them to join in the Europe wide protests.Mainland Spain and the Canary Islands have seen an increased number of protests sweeping the country, with a fresh wave of anti-tourism demonstrations now planned in Greece this week.Workers in the industry are claiming they are at breaking point with not enough members of staff available to cover the hours tourists demand from them.Industry staff say their wages are extremely low and not in line with inflation.In April, the Greek government set a universal minimum monthly wage of €830 (£690), with a daily minimum of €37.7 (£31.3) which was a payrise of 6.4 percent for tourism workers, according to Reuters.However, Giorgos Hotzoglou, President of the Hellenic Federation of Tourism Employees is asking for further increases.”We are asking for an increase of 12 percent for the next two years, that is six percent for each year. We are also asking – in 2024 – that the 5-day/40-hour working week also be applied to us,” says Hotzoglou.Greece has seen an increase in visitors over the past years, with more than 36 million people travelling to the country in 2023, Statista reports. This is a six percent increase since 2019.Tourists arriving in Greece will be a target for protestors as they plan to hand out leaflets explaining their distress while working at airports, ports and archaeological sites.Other public services including water and waste management have also seen a strain as a result in the mass visitation.The Greek island of Santorini has seen a particular influx of people as the infamous, picture-perfect island attracts Instagram users all wanting to get the perfect sunset snap.Measures were taken earlier this year to reduce the number of tourists visiting the saturated island. Greece’s Prime Minister Kyriacos Mitsotakis introduced a €20 (£16) levy on cruise ship passengers which were carrying up to 17,000 passengers on a single day.With the number of holidaymakers growing year on year, the locals are at breaking point. Overbuilding to accommodate the major inundation has resulted in concrete covering 15 percent of the tiny island, changing its scenic natural beauty.

The best historical romance books you can download for free on Stuff Your Kindle Day

FREE E-BOOKS: On Oct. 22, hundreds of e-books are completely free on Amazon for Stuff Your Kindle Day. Shop historical romance books for free today.

Stuff Your Kindle Day is back and we couldn’t be happier. There are few things in life better than free books, especially when there’s no catch. For those not in the know, Stuff Your Kindle Day is an author-driven event hosted that started as an initiative to encourage readers to check out novels by indie authors. It only lasts for one day, but when you “purchase” a book, it’s yours forever. The books available span several genres, but romance is very much at the forefront. That doesn’t mean there’s no variety though. There is a wide range of subgenres spanning nearly every topic on offer, with something for every bookworm.

Mashable Deals

Want more hand-picked deals in your inbox?
Sign up for Mashable’s daily Deals newsletter.

By signing up you agree to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy.

Thanks for signing up!

SEE ALSO:

Amazon Kindle vs. Kindle Paperwhite: Which one is for you?

If historical romances are your thing, you’re in luck. Check out some of these incredible options you can download for free.Best historical romance to shop during Stuff Your Kindle Day

Topics
Amazon
Books

Improve Ease of Doing Business for Lasting Customer Loyalty

The GistCustomer frustrations persist. Many B2B customers experience frustration due to complex interactions with providers.Importance of simplicity. Streamlining processes can significantly enhance the ease of doing business and lead to improved customer satisfaction and loyalty.Cross-department collaboration. Internal collaboration across departments is essential for identifying and resolving business challenges that impact customer experiences.Throughout our careers in CX, nearly every B2B customer we’ve spoken to feels frustrated by their interactions with providers. Of course, some situations are worse than others, but this is a general condition, and it often eclipses other causes of dissatisfaction like product quality, pricing or delivery times. We, as providers, put together business processes much like Dr. Frankenstein assembled his monster. A brain from here; a foot from there. It’s all interconnected and basically works as a single system, but it’s clunky, inefficient and scary as hell. Here come the angry mobs and torches.With business transactions and processes, what should be simple becomes complex for many reasons. Modern businesses of all sizes have a variety of workflows that connect sales with marketing, finance, IT, HR, operations, engineering, professional services, customer success and more. Even worse, some organizations lack basic interconnectivity altogether.It’s seldom the case that teams can come together and, with a blank sheet of paper, design a simple set of processes that cover front- and back-office operations completely and efficiently. Like the monster, all this is all-too-often assembled ad hoc (“yup, that ear is perfect for the left side, but what about this one for the right? He needs better hearing on that side”). Unlike the monster, processes are strung together over time (generally years), with varying (and conflicting) objectives in mind. Remarkably, we have even seen this in startups and younger companies. Each department has its own perspective on the transactional triggers or decision-making data they need, and this is further complicated by the varying needs of different roles within a department. The sales rep is tracking the pipeline; the sales manager is tracking quotas; and sales ops is tracking bookings.Customer Pain Points Impacting Ease of Doing BusinessConsidering the full spectrum of customers’ grievances concerning ease of doing business, the most significant issues are as follows:Complex account management: Managing opportunities and accounts can become complicated due to various product categories, sales territories and the many roles involved in completing a sale. Institutional knowledge of the customer is often scattered and disconnected. Objectives and even language can vary greatly between departments. Differences in compensation models can massively compound these breakdowns, and customers suffer mightily.Frustrating contracting processes: Contracting and order-taking should be quick and painless, but many conflicting factors often complicate this process. Legal compliance, compensation structures, insurance claims and capacity constraints can all create headaches.Confusing handoffs: Poor handoffs between roles and departments can lead to confusion, especially when customer operations are affected by issues that arise. Even when it’s not our fault, how we react to these situations can either improve or erode customer satisfaction and loyalty, for better or worse. Challenging frontline interactions: Interactions with frontline support, engineers or deployment experts can inadvertently cause more friction in the spirit of resolution. This experience only increases frustration, which drives dissatisfaction and causes confidence to erode.There are certainly more examples that influence the  ease of doing business, but these are the big offenders.In B2C settings, there’s also no shortage of challenges like these. In that environment, complexity often wreaks havoc for customers in areas like digital engagement, customer support and returns/refunds.What can we do to address these problems? Before we answer that, let’s discuss what priority to give them. It’s important to note that while customer effort and ease of doing business are closely related, they aren’t exactly the same. Customer effort refers to how much energy a customer has to put into getting something done — like finding product information, placing an order or solving an issue. It focuses on the work they have to do during specific interactions.Ease of doing business, on the other hand, looks at the bigger picture. It’s about how smooth the overall relationship is between a business and its customers across all interactions. Ease of doing business spans everything from sales and support to contract negotiation and delivery. When it’s easy to do business with a company, people don’t hit roadblocks at any point in their customer journey.Related Article: What Is Customer Effort Score (CES)? And How to Measure ItThe Importance of Prioritizing Ease of Doing BusinessThough ease of doing business and customer effort are subtly different, we can look at customer effort data to show the importance of minimizing high effort (thus maximizing the ease of doing business):91% of consumers are likely to recommend a company after a positive, low-effort experience. [Source: SurveyMonkey] High-effort experiences increase the likelihood of customer churn. 96% of customers going through a high-effort experience are likely to churn vs. only 9% for low-effort experiences. [Source: Gartner]The cost to serve a customer decreases by 37% when the experience shifts from high effort to low effort. [Source: InMoment]Before we go deeper, let’s pause and contemplate a critically important question: Would you prefer a customer who is willing to recommend your product for specific transactions, or would you prefer one who becomes a brand advocate, actively and enthusiastically promoting your brand on a broader scale?The willingness to recommend — better known as the net promoter score (NPS) — is by its nature a passive assessment typically posed after an interaction. While it’s great to have a strong NPS, does that really help drive new revenue and customer retention? So, what is the alternative, and how do we get there? Creating brand advocates means you’ll have an extended sales team composed of customers who are ready, willing and able to engage with you and for you. You’ll have an on-demand cadre of advocates who are enthusiastic participating in a case study or engaging in an advisory board.This is what can be achieved by creating an enterprise experience focused on ease of doing business. Of course, there are other factors that influence advocacy, but minimizing effort and maximizing ease of doing business carries the day more often than not.Looking back at one of our recent clients, a $15B office equipment manufacturer, we examined the most consequential customer feedback themes and delineated which themes were substantially about ease of doing business. As you can see, the majority of customer concerns related clearly to ease of doing business. In our experience, this is typical.Every one of these themes took years, if not decades, to fully blossom. They are so core to the business but also so complex that you may want to put them on your  “too hard to deal with” list. Doing so, though, would assure a slow, painful demise for the business. The monster can destroy the entire village if you let it.View allSo, what do we do next? There are a number of actions you can take to identify ease of doing business challenges, assess the full impact on the business and correct any problems. These actions will help you address your most significant challenges: Internal Collaboration and GuidanceTalk to your team: Your employees know what’s broken. Sales reps, customer success managers and other frontline workers can quickly point out where things get complicated for customers. The simpler it is for your team to do their job, the simpler it will be for your customers to interact with you. Don’t guess; ask them directly.Assemble a cross-functional team: Don’t tackle these issues alone. Bring together key people from different departments like sales, marketing, customer support and operations. This team will help validate what you’ve learned, set priorities and handle the heavy lifting on solutions. A cross-functional approach ensures everyone’s needs are considered, so you don’t create new problems while solving others.Make sure you have the right tools: Give your team what they need to succeed. From basic communication tools to more advanced analytics, reporting and AI solutions, having the right technology in place is essential. These tools will help track progress, measure impact and even automate some of the more tedious processes that slow things down.Executive and Business AlignmentSecure top-level executive sponsorship: You’re going to need support from leadership. Without executive buy-in, it’s hard to push through changes that cut across departments. Get top-level sponsorship from key functions like sales, operations and finance. This ensures you have the resources and authority to resolve conflicting priorities and make real progress.Connect the dots between customer pain points and business metrics: Tie what your customers are experiencing to what your business cares most about — whether it’s revenue, margins, customer retention, new customers, customer satisfaction or efficiency. The entire leadership team is much more likely to support your efforts if you show how these pain points are hurting the business and its investors in some way. The clearer you make this connection, the easier it will be to gain backing. Tactical Excellence and CommunicatingSnag some early wins: Start small and pick a few quick wins to build momentum. Small improvements can have a big impact. These wins show progress and help build buy-in from both employees and leadership.Work with marketing to communicate successes and challenges: Keep everyone in the loop, including employees, leadership and key stakeholders. Marketing can help you build an internal campaign to highlight both your successes and challenges. Yes, you should talk about the tough spots, too. Being open about where you’re struggling helps people understand the complexity of the task and keeps them engaged. It also builds empathy, and a little empathy can go a long way.Don’t let perfect be the enemy of good: Progress is more important than perfection. Small, steady improvements will add up over time. Don’t wait for the perfect solution to every problem. Focus on making things a little easier day by day, and over time, these gains will compound into big improvements.Start with specific projects: Choose a specific issue to tackle first. Connect the dots between what employees and customers find frustrating and the strategic, operational or financial goals of your business. When you tie improvements to clear business outcomes, it’s easier to justify the work and measure success.”You’d better build ease of doing business into your master plan,” said Ruth Veloria, chief strategy and customer officer for the University of Phoenix. “As crucial as ease of doing business is, it can be tricky to prioritize a new project in the face of all the work you previously prioritized. Those other projects already in motion will have revenue and other benefits attached. And resources are always scarce. You’ll need a strong business case.”Related Article: Mastering Customer Journey Management: From Silos to Seamless CXFostering a Culture of Seamless InteractionsWhile the concept of ease of doing business may seem straightforward, the reality of achieving it is far more complex. It involves a deep understanding of both internal processes and customer pain points. However, the significance of addressing these challenges cannot be overstated. By fostering internal collaboration, securing executive buy-in and focusing on tactical wins, businesses can gradually dismantle the barriers that hinder their operations.This is a journey that requires patience, persistence and a commitment to continual improvement. But the rewards — in terms of customer loyalty, satisfaction and overall business success — are well worth the effort. And you’ll be able to mobilize your village of employees and customers  to slay the monster! Learn how you can join our contributor community.