
By Worthy News’ Johan Th. Bos in Amsterdam and Stefan J. Bos in Budapest
JERUSALEM/BUDAPEST/AMSTERDAM (Worthy News) – Israel’s secret service Mossad reportedly warned of a potential threat to Israelis and Jews in the Netherlands ahead of the soccer game Ajax against Maccabi Tel Aviv in Amsterdam.
Mossad sent a warning to security forces in Israel and the Netherlands, requesting “an immediate and significant increase in security for Israelis near the soccer stadium,” Israeli sources said.
Several security sources reportedly saw an “escalation” on social media in the Netherlands Thursday.
An update was received by the security agency “regarding a threat against a former Border Police officer who attended a game in Amsterdam,” explained The Jerusalem Post newspaper.
The official was attacked, had his passport stolen, and his details were reportedly shared across social media, the paper recalled.
Dozens of Jews were injured in the violent anti-Israel violence. The antisemitic rioters were described as “Pro-Palestine Arab Muslims” by survivors and as “scooter youths” by local authorities.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Friday that he had instructed Mossad to draw up a plan to prevent unrest at events abroad after the violence in Amsterdam.
“I have instructed the head of the Mossad (David Barnea) and other officials to prepare our actions, our warning system, and our organization for a new situation,” Netanyahu added in a video statement.
EMERGENCY MEETING
He attended an emergency meeting on Friday about the evacuation of Israeli soccer fans from Amsterdam.
The government decided against sending military planes, but El Al Israel Airlines said it sent additional aircraft to pick up attacked Jews, mainly Israeli soccer fans.
As evacuations were underway, Israel’s National Security Council on Friday urged Israelis not to attend the Maccabi Tel Aviv basketball team’s match in the Italian city of Bologna on Friday night after the incidents in Amsterdam.
The Council said it fears new attacks on Israeli fans.
They were also advised “to avoid wearing Israeli and Jewish symbols as much as possible at sporting events abroad,” Israeli media reported.
The attacks in Amsterdam came around the 86th anniversary of the “Kristallnacht,” or the “Night of Broken Glass,” when German Nazis and their allies attacked Jews throughout Germany on November 9-10, 1938.
Aafje van Kampen, an art painter born in 1941, wondered why the soccer match was allowed to take place on the eve of Kristallnacht commemorations. “I don’t understand why this could happen while there is so much antisemitism,” she added.
Copyright 1999-2026 Worthy News. This article was originally published on Worthy News and was reproduced with permission.
More Worthy News
A 33-year-old man in eastern Uganda was allegedly killed by his Muslim father after converting to Christianity, local sources said, in what church leaders describe as part of a broader pattern of faith-related violence in the African nation.
Christian advocacy groups have expressed alarm over what they describe as a sharp rise in arrests and mistreatment of Christians in Iran, particularly converts, accusing the Islamic Republic of increasingly using national security laws to suppress religious dissent.
A campaign video distributed by Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán’s ruling Fidesz party, showing a little girl weeping at a window and intercut with scenes of her father being executed in war, has sparked outrage among opposition leaders, including Budapest’s mayor.
Crowds marched to the Russian Embassy in Budapest on Sunday to mark nearly four years since Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine, a war that is believed to have caused nearly 2 million military casualties.
Iran is increasing pressure on Hezbollah to join any future war with Israel, even as Tehran appears reluctant to enter direct conflict for now.
Major Mexican drug lord Nemesio Oseguera, known as “El Mencho,” was killed Sunday during a military operation in Jalisco state, Mexico’s Defense Department announced, delivering one of the most significant blows to organized crime in recent years.
Anti-government protests have erupted at multiple Iranian universities, marking the largest campus demonstrations since January’s deadly nationwide crackdown, as nuclear negotiations with the United States proceed under the shadow of possible military action.