The father of two British-Israeli sisters shot dead in the occupied West Bank has broken down at their funeral as he paid tribute to his “beautiful angels” while their grief-stricken siblings sobbed as they clutched their wrapped bodies.
Maia and Rina Dee, reportedly aged 20 and 15 respectively, were killed when their car was attacked by Palestinian assailants near an Israeli settlement on Friday.
Their 45-year-old mother, Lucy Dee, was seriously wounded and is in a coma, while their father, Rabbi Leo Dee, witnessed the attack from a separate vehicle following behind and was unharmed.
Image: (L-R) Maia and Rina Dee were killed in a shooting in the West Bank
Image: Their siblings sobbed during the funeral. Pic: AP
Rabbi Dee, who has three other children, spoke of his hopes that his wife would come out of her coma and asked: “How will I explain to Lucy what has happened to our two precious gifts?”
In tribute to “beautiful and perfect” Maia at a cemetery in the Jewish settlement of Kfar Etzion in the West Bank, the rabbi said: “You were always an angel and now you will always be our guardian angel.”
He also said: “You wanted to sign up for another year of national service, where you could really make a difference. But mummy and I wanted you to start your studies and maybe meet a special boy.
“But you insisted that girls like you always do two years of volunteering so we waited to see what and where this would be.”
Then turning to his “beautiful and darling” Rina, he said: “You were such a great student. Such a great friend.”
“You dreamt of travelling the world, now you are travelling to heaven.”
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Image: Maia and Rina Dee’s siblings clutched their bodies at the funeral
At the al Aqsa mosque compound in Jerusalem, hundreds of Palestinians prayed on Sunday.
Hundreds of Jewish people also visited the holy site under heavy police guard as Palestinians protested, directing whistles and religious chants at them. But the episode generally passed off without incident.
The compound – sacred to both Muslims and Jews – has been at the centre of a security crisis which erupted last Wednesday when Israeli police raided the mosque to clear what they said were youths barricaded inside armed with rocks and fireworks.
Ron Dermer, who is Israel’s strategic affairs minister, has defended the police’s actions, telling Sky News: “The people who had barricaded themselves into the al Aqsa mosque were going to attack those people outside and they were violent.
“The police basically were forced to go in to try to remove them to allow the Muslims who were praying in the morning to go into the mosque.”
Meanwhile, a north London rabbi says his community is feeling a “sense of pain and grief” after the West Bank killings.
Rabbi Dee was the senior rabbi at Radlett United Synagogue in Hertfordshire from 2011-2014 and assistant rabbi in Hendon, north London, from 2008-2011.
Mordechai Ginsbury, senior rabbi at Hendon United Synagogue, who has kept in contact with the family since they moved back to Israel in 2014, said he was feeling “absolute devastation, pain, grief and shock” following the tragedy.
He said the Dees are the “nicest, loveliest people” and he was “so, so sorry”.
Image: Mordechai Ginsbury, senior rabbi at Hendon United Synagogue
Rabbi Ginsbury added: “To think that in a few moments, so senselessly and painfully, this has happened, such a tragic loss of life, of goodness, is just devastating.”
Recalling the time they spent in the UK, Rabbi Ginsbury said: “They used to come to us at home. They were just a delightful family, full of commitment, vigour, passion, energy, and they did wonderful things for us in the community.”
He said he spoke to Rabbi Dee last night and “one of the things that is sustaining him is the blanket of warmth and love which is enveloping them within Israel and around the world”.
Rabbi Ginsbury said he was planning to hold a service of psalms and prayers on Sunday evening for people who “want to express their sense of pain, grief and solidarity with the Dees and with all the good and positive values that we, as Jewish people, stand for across the world and in Israel”.
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Israel launches strikes on Syria
The shooting near the Hamra settlement – about 30 miles north of Jerusalem – came after Israel launched retaliatory air strikes at Lebanon and the Gaza Strip.
It is expected that ministers will have to answer questions about the case today, as parliament returns from recess.
In particular, there are questions around the role played by Jonathan Powell, the prime minister’s national security adviser, in the trial not going ahead.
Ministers have repeatedly said Mr Powell played no role in the decisions that led to the collapse of the trial – but Ms Badenoch said she was “worried that there is a cover up taking place”.
Speaking to broadcasters in Grantham today, Ms Badenoch said: “We will be making sure that we ask questions in parliament about exactly who knew what, where and when, but Jonathan Powell certainly has questions to answer.”
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She refuted suggestions from ministers that Mr Powell had had no involvement in the collapse of the trial, saying: “We are seeing information that contradicts that.
“That is why it is very important that the government come clean about who knew what, where, when, and why this has happened.”
Former parliamentary researcher Christopher Cash, 30, of Whitechapel, east London, and teacher Christopher Berry, 33, of Witney, Oxfordshire, were charged with passing politically sensitive information to a Chinese intelligence agent between December 2021 and February 2023. They have both denied the allegations.
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Over the past week, Sir Keir Starmer, his ministers and Mr Powell have faced accusations they were involved in the trial being dropped.
Last week Stephen Parkinson, the director of public prosecutions and the head of the Crown Prosecution Service, took the unusual step of sending MPs a letter to claim that the government repeatedly refused to provide evidence that China represented a national security threat at the time of the allegations.
Mr Parkinson said the CPS had tried “over many months” to get the evidence it needed to carry out the prosecution, but it had not been forthcoming from the government.
Downing Street also said today it was “entirely false” to suggest the government influenced the collapse of the case because of concerns Beijing could withdraw investment in the UK.
Asked about reports in the Sunday Times which suggested a decision was taken high up in government to abandon the case, the prime minister’s official spokesman told reporters: “It is entirely false. The CPS (Crown Prosecution Service) decision to drop the case was entirely a matter for the CPS.
“There was no role for any member of this government, no minister, or special adviser, to take any decision in relation to this case. That is entirely for the CPS.”
The government had argued that China needed to have been branded an “enemy” during the period it was accused of spying for the prosecution to go ahead – effectively blaming the previous Conservative government.
The Conservatives claim the government’s rationale is an excuse because it had said many times Beijing was a national security threat while it was in government.
Bridget Phillipson, the education secretary, yesterday gave the government’s most definitive answer yet about whether Mr Powell was part of the reason the case was dropped weeks before they were set to go on trial.
Asked on Sunday Morning with Trevor Phillips if she could assure him that the national security adviser played no role in the decision, Ms Phillipson said: “Yes, I can give that assurance.
“We’re very disappointed that the CPS were not able to take forward the prosecution.”
The Liberal Democrats have called on the government to hold an inquiry into the collapse of the case.
Calum Miller, the party’s foreign affairs spokesman, said the case had “exposed appalling gaps in our government’s ability and willingness to challenge China’s espionage efforts”.
“We cannot let the government sweep this case under the rug in its efforts to cosy up to President Xi. An inquiry – preceded by rigorous scrutiny through parliament – would provide the answers the public deserves.”
Tommy Robinson refused to hand over his phone pin when police stopped his Bentley on the way to Benidorm, a court has heard.
He allegedly told officers “Not a chance, bruv” and said he was a journalist when they pulled him aside at the Channel Tunnel at Folkestone in July 2024.
Robinson, real name Stephen Yaxley-Lennon, is accused of “frustrating” counter-terrorism powers by refusing to give access to the phone.
He denies the charge.
The right-wing political activist was flanked by security guards as he arrived at Westminster Magistrates Court for the opening of the trial on Monday.
The 42-year-old faces three months in prison and/or a £2,500 fine if found guilty.
Robinson had £13,000 and 1,900 euros on him when he was stopped and told police he was going to Benidorm in Spain for a few days, said prosecutor Jo Morris.
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He allegedly refused to give the pin as he claimed the phone had sensitive “journalist material” on it.
He’s said to have told police: “It’s my work, I’m a journalist,” claiming it contained information about “vulnerable girls”.
The court heard Robinson was stopped in his silver Bentley SUV because he gave “short, vague replies” about what he was doing and “made no eye contact”.
PC Mitchell Thorogood told the court it was also “unusual” he bought tickets on the day rather than in advance and was in an expensive car not registered in his name.
Image: Pic: PA
When police took Robinson into an interview room and demanded his phone, he allegedly told them: “Not a chance bruv… you look like a c*** so you ain’t having it.”
Officers said they recognised Robinson when they stopped him and his lawyer, Alisdair Williamson KC, suggested the stop may have been “discriminatory” against his political beliefs.
Police can stop anyone at a UK port and hold them for six hours if they suspect they may be involved in planning or committing acts of terrorism.
They are legally obliged to answer questions and must give access to their electronic devices or face a criminal charge.
In a video on X before the hearing, Robinson said Elon Musk had “picked up the legal bill” for “this absolute state persecution”.
The case comes a month after Robinson led a huge rally in central London under the banner ‘Unite the Kingdom’.
A man has been arrested on suspicion of the 1994 murder of 13-year-old Lindsay Rimer.
Police said the man was arrested at an undisclosed prison where he is serving a sentence for other offences.
The man, who is being interviewed today and tomorrow, is expected to be bailed and returned to prison while enquires continue.
Officers are also interviewing a number of potential witnesses in the Hebden Bridge and wider Halifax area.
Lindsay left her home to buy a box of corn flakes late during the evening of 7 November, 1994, but didn’t return home.
Her body was then found in a canal close to her home six months later.
Following today’s arrest, senior investigating officer, detective chief inspector James Entwistle, said: “We remain very firmly committed to doing everything we can to get justice for Lindsay, and to give her family the answers they still so desperately need after all these years.
Image: Lindsay Rimer’s body was found in a canal close to her home six months later. Pic: West Yorkshire Police
“The arrest we have made today comes as a result of our continued focus on progressing the investigation.
“We are keeping Lindsay’s family updated and, while we appreciate the understandable public interest that today’s arrest will bring, we do not anticipate any immediate developments at this stage.
“Although it is now more than thirty years since Lindsay was murdered, we remain convinced there is someone out there who has vital information that could finally help to ease her family’s pain, and we urge them do the right thing and tell us what they know.”
Anyone with further information has been urged to contact police by calling 101 quoting Operation Posemill, or sending a text or voicemail to 07707147314.