quinta-feira, 9 de outubro de 2025

Violações em Lisboa aumentam 60 %

  


Foi durante uma entrevista à SIC que o autarca de Lisboa, Carlos Moedas, afirmou que se havia registado um aumento "exponencial" de violações na região de Lisboa, mais especificamente na zona do Martim Moniz. Porém, dados oficiais, citados pelo Diário de Notícias, referem que não é bem assim.

O presidente da Câmara de Lisboa era o entrevistado de Júlia Pinheiro, no programa da tarde do canal de Carnaxide, quando afirmou que o "número de violações aumentaram". "Mas aumentaram exponencialmente, 60%! As violações na cidade aumentaram! Eu não quero que as minhas filhas… Não quero que elas sintam isso!”

O autarca, candidato à Câmara de Lisboa nas eleições autárquicas de 12 de outubro, acrescentava ainda que as estatísticas se reportavam à zona da 1.ª Divisão da PSP, "ou seja, ali na zona de Martim Moniz, Arroios..."

A alegação, refere o Diário de Notícias, não está correta, dado que os dados a que se refere Carlos Moedas dizem respeito a toda a zona da 1.º Divisão e que englobam, ainda, o Rossio, a Baixa, Arroios, e Alfama, zonas com um grande fluxo de pessoas. É por isso errado, defende, associar este aumento a uma zona com maior número de imigrantes.

Dados da PSP e PJ

Segundo os dados a que o DN teve acesso, registou-se um aumento de casos de violação entre 2023 e 2024 nesta divisão, passando de nove para 15.

Já em todo o município de Lisboa, o total de participações registadas pela PSP subiu 12%, passando de 49 em 2023 para 55 em 2024. Dados da Polícia Judiciária, autoridade que investiga os crimes de violação, por sua vez, falam em 75 queixas no concelho em 2024, mais 17% do que no ano anterior. 

Segundo a PJ, citada pelo mesmo jornal, não existe qualquer relação entre este aumento e as zonas da cidade com maior presença de imigrantes, o que contrapõe a teoria de Carlos Moedas, escreve o Expresso.

A par disso, note-se que em anos anteriores, entre 2022 e 2023, por exemplo, tinham sido registadas descidas no número de queixas.

Martim Moniz foi só a "título de exemplo"

Posto isto, a Câmara Municipal de Lisboa foi confrontada com as alegações do seu representante, questionando-se o porquê de associarem este aumento especificamente à zona do Martim Moniz.

Em resposta, o gabinete do autarca respondeu que a menção ao Martim Moniz "foi a título de exemplo".

"Faz parte da primeira divisão, certo?", terá ainda questionado, na mesma resposta.

Associação ao Martim Moniz é errada

Entretanto a Polícia Judiciária, ao mesmo jornal, explicou que existe efetivamente um maior registo de queixas deste tipo de crimes na região de Lisboa. No entanto, especifica que as mesmas estão, na sua maioria, relacionadas com situações ocorridas de noite ou madrugada, nomeadamente "em bares ou discotecas, de utilização de químicos nas bebidas das mulheres que as deixam prostradas e indefesas à violação”.

Questionado se existe alguma relação entre o acréscimo de participações registado em 2024 na cidade e o Martim Moniz, esta força policial nega que se possa ser feita essa associação.

Notícias ao minuto
 

Failed policies on housing, wages and employment are driving young voters into the arms of Vox

 

According to recent polls, almost 40% of Spanish men aged between 18 and 34 say that they plan to vote for Vox, the far-right party. Vox won its first seat in the Spanish parliament in 2019 and now it is surging again. Its recent success is no longer a story of just male voters, either: 20% of young women say they would vote for Vox, with the biggest increase among the youngest voters in that group.

It seems that the younger you are in Spain at the moment, the more likely you are to vote for a party that advocates, among other things, the mass expulsion of immigrants in order to preserve “Spanish identity”, the restriction of abortion, end-of-life and trans rights, the dismantling of the European Union’s institutions and the rejection of policies to tackle the climate crisis. Older generations continue to back the two largest parties, the centre-left Socialist party (PSOE) and the centre-right Popular party (PP). Women aged 60 and over make up the largest group rejecting the far right. Catalonia is the exception: support for the nationalist far right is spread across older generations, too.

Because of its 20th-century history, Spain had long appeared resistant to the recent rise of the populist right. That exceptionalism is no longer true, but how do we explain Vox’s growing appeal among a new generation of younger Spanish voters? There are several contributory factors, but two particular crises, badly mishandled by the biggest parties, appear to have drained mainstream support: the deadly floods in Valencia last year and this summer’s wildfires in León, Zamora, Orense and Extremadura. Spain’s quasi-federal system makes it easy to assign blame both to the centre-left governing coalition in Madrid and to the conservative-led regional governments. At the same time, corruption and other scandals have once again tainted both main parties.

The last Spanish general election was in 2023 and the biggest concerns identified by Vox voters at the time were migration and “government and political parties”.

Data on the new young voters is limited, but polling shows that housing is the top concern for the population in general and even more so for anyone under 35. Wages, employment and the cost of living are mentioned too. Migration barely registers as an issue for younger voters. But the perception of politicians themselves as a problem, which was the other big issue for Vox voters in 2023, is widespread across generations. Marta Romero, a political scientist, says Vox has become fashionable among young people drawn to the “anti-establishment” image that the party is managing to project – just as parties on the left and the centre did in the previous decade.

Amid all the hand-wringing in Spain about the latest far-right insurgency, one thing is clear: the solution is not going to be found by moving the political centre of gravity rightward. Mimicking the far right on migration or women’s rights has demonstrably failed for parties across Europe – and it has already proven costly for the conservatives in Spain as well.

The Spanish economy stands out in Europe for its growth rate and is among the best performing in the west. But it’s still not delivering for many, particularly the younger adults who enter the labour market in cities such as Barcelona, Málaga or Madrid.

Focusing on – and delivering – affordable housing is the most important issue for younger people, who are poorer than older Spaniards mainly because of the high cost of renting or buying homes in the cities where jobs are concentrated. Wages are still low compared with other countries. In the past two decades, pensioners have become wealthier than young adults, particularly those with children, as El País’s data journalist Kiko Llaneras explained. Life is better in so many ways – Spain is richer, more modern, more inclusive and safer. But intergenerational tension is rising as the economy is not growing as fast as in the 1980s and 1990s.

What else can the mainstream political class do – particularly on the left, which traditionally counted on the support of progressive young adults? One obvious answer would be to challenge the prevailing political culture and stop bickering. Politicians, particularly from PSOE and PP, devote so much energy, day in day out, to insulting one another it is no wonder they attract widespread public cynicism, if not ridicule.

Most of the time this is just noise in the background as people get on with their lives. But a public backlash is palpable when this, often performative, conflict flares during or in response to a serious crisis. Yet it is now hard to find a politician from either of the two largest parties in national and regional government – those who bear the greatest responsibility – willing to pause before attacking a rival, even when the facts are still unclear.

In Valencia, there is a clearcut case the conservative regional government must answer. It is shocking that it remains in place a full year after mishandling emergency alerts during the floods. Central government is right to highlight the Valencia region’s leaders’ negligence and its neglect of the climate crisis, which is already reshaping Spain while Vox (and increasingly the PP) divert attention elsewhere. But is a public row required on every subject every day?

The Guardian


Taiwan electricity generation by source, July 2025

 


Taiwan’s government is increasing energy storage and rethinking the island’s energy mix. It is looking anew at nuclear power, just months after it shut down its last reactor.

But Taiwan’s drive for energy self-sufficiency has a long way to go, leaving the island more immediately focused on a U.S. assessment that Chinese leader Xi Jinping wants his military to be ready to seize Taiwan by force by 2027.

Two U.S. senators introduced legislation in September that would support Taiwan’s ability to secure a reliable supply of American LNG, including providing U.S. insurance for shippers to keep deliveries flowing if the island is threatened.

Sen. Pete Ricketts (R., Neb.) said he co-sponsored the legislation with Sen. ​Chris Coons (D., Del.) after participating in a wargame that showed Taiwan running out of LNG within 11 days in a blockade.

“It really highlighted how this could be the Achilles’ heel of Taiwan,” Ricketts said of the wargame, which was run by the Washington-based Foundation for Defense of Democracies, or FDD.

While Taiwan could temporarily resist a Chinese blockade and briefly sustain its output of power, the island would require U.S. intervention to restore electricity over a longer period, according to the results of a series of wargames run by the Washington-based 
Any Chinese use of force to subdue Taiwan would quickly test President Trump’s appetite for military intervention against Beijing.

U.S. policy about whether to come to Taiwan’s defense in an invasion is intentionally vague. While an overt Chinese attack would force Washington to act quickly, a more subtle interruption of Taiwan’s seaborne trade, including of fuel, would complicate decision-making in Washington.

For example, Beijing could subject vessels serving Taiwan to inspection by declaring a law-enforcement or health action, allowing Beijing to quietly raise pressure on Taipei. Since a blockade is an act of war against an enemy state, China would call its action something else, such as a quarantine. 

A Chinese quarantine would force Taiwan and the U.S. to decide whether to take military action and potentially be accused of starting a war.

“This is the kind of coercion that flies under the threshold of war, but could still bring Taiwan to its knees,” said Craig Singleton, senior China fellow at the FDD, who testified Tuesday about the topic on Capitol Hill at a hearing chaired by Ricketts.

In a blockade, Taiwan’s LNG supplies would last under two weeks, while coal would last seven, the CSIS wargames concluded.

The Wall Street Journal 

Britain’s once-mighty Conservative Party is battling to avoid extinction

 



MANCHESTER, England (AP) — Britain’s Conservatives used to boast they were the world’s most successful political party. Not anymore.

The center-right party that governed the U.K. for more than 60 of the last 100 years before being ousted in 2024 is embracing Donald Trump -style policies, including mass deportations and government budget-slashing, as it battles to remain a contender for power.

The Tories are fighting not just the Labour government to their left, but Reform UK to the right. Nigel Farage’s hard-right party has topped opinion polls for months, trounced the Conservatives in May’s local elections and has welcomed a stream of defecting Tory members and officials.

Conservative leader Kemi Badenoch acknowledged that the party has “a mountain to climb” to win back voters.

But in a speech closing the party’s annual conference on Wednesday, she insisted the Conservatives are “the only party that can meet the test of our generation, the only party that can deliver a stronger economy and stronger borders.”

Crowds were thin under the vast vaulted roof of the Manchester Central conference venue, a former railway station in the northwest England city, as delegates absorbed the party’s diminished stature.

“It’s not in a great place at the moment, we’re aware of that,” said Neil McCarthy, a member from northern England. “There needs to be passion, and we need to get the message across that we’ve changed.”

Questions of party competence weren’t helped by Conservative-branded chocolate bars distributed at the conference on which Britain was misspelled as “Britian.”

The Conservatives have endured years of turmoil – some of it of their own making, some of it shared by incumbent parties in a world of economic and geopolitical instability.

The economic benefits of Britain’s 2020 exit from the European Union, championed by those now running the party, have been elusive. Prime Minister Boris Johnson won a huge election victory in 2019 but was ousted by the party in 2022 after a string of ethics scandals.

His successor, Liz Truss, sent inflation and interest rates soaring with a disastrous tax-cutting plan that wrecked the Conservatives’ reputation for economic stability.

Under Rishi Sunak, the government staggered on until the July 2024 election that delivered the Conservatives’ worst-ever defeat.

Badenoch, a small-state, low-tax advocate elected leader last year, has shifted the party to the right, announcing policies with a distinct MAGA flavor. She says a Conservative government will scrap carbon emissions reduction targets, sharply cut legal immigration and deport 150,000 unauthorized immigrants a year with a removals force similar to Immigration and Customs Enforcement in the U.S. It would also leave the European Convention on Human Rights and limit the power of judges to block the will of government.

Such policies, which alarm civil liberties groups, are similar to Farage’s plans for power, leading some to ask what sets the Conservatives apart from Reform.

Badenoch says the difference is fiscal prudence. She rejected Farage’s promises to increase welfare spending and nationalize key industries such as steel, and said a Conservative government would slash welfare spending to fund lower taxes on businesses and homebuyers.

Jill Rutter, a senior fellow at the Institute for Government think tank, said Badenoch’s attempt to make the Tories “Reform with better economics” risks “narrowing the appeal” of the party.

“Basically, she’s chucking quite a lot of people out of the Conservatives’ broad church,” Rutter said.

Climate-change targets, human rights rules and support for managed immigration were until recently mainstream Conservative positions, and some party members are uncomfortable with the rightward turn. 

Associated Pres 

Spain's grid operator warns of new voltage swings, urges measures to avoid blackout

 


MADRID, Oct 8 (Reuters) - Spain's grid operator REE has detected steep voltage swings in the system over the past two weeks that are capable of affecting power supply in the country that suffered a massive blackout in April, it warned in a document sent to market regulator CNMC.


It urged swift technical changes to be implemented to avoid any such impact. The CNMC said on Wednesday it was calling a public consultation for the coming days with a view to adopting urgent, provisional measures to stabilise the system before a more permanent solution can be found.
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"According to the information provided to the CNMC by the system operator, the rapid voltage fluctuations recorded in the last two weeks, even though the voltages are always within the established margins, can potentially trigger demand and/or generation disconnections that end up destabilising the electrical system," it said in a statement.

The European network of electricity transmission system operators said in a report last Friday the massive power outage that hit the Iberian Peninsula on April 28 was the first known blackout caused by excessive voltage.
The report, like previous inquiries, pointed to a surge in voltage as the immediate cause of the April 28 outage - Europe's most significant blackout in more than two decades, which paralysed cities and stranded people on trains across Portugal and Spain.

Reuters
 

40 % of young Spanish between 18 and 34 will vote in the extreme-right

 


According to recent polls, almost 40% of Spanish men aged between 18 and 34 say that they plan to vote for Vox, the far-right party. Vox won its first seat in the Spanish parliament in 2019 and now it is surging again. Its recent success is no longer a story of just male voters, either: 20% of young women say they would vote for Vox, with the biggest increase among the youngest voters in that group.

It seems that the younger you are in Spain at the moment, the more likely you are to vote for a party that advocates, among other things, the mass expulsion of immigrants in order to preserve “Spanish identity”, the restriction of abortion, end-of-life and trans rights, the dismantling of the European Union’s institutions and the rejection of policies to tackle the climate crisis. Older generations continue to back the two largest parties, the centre-left Socialist party (PSOE) and the centre-right Popular party (PP). Women aged 60 and over make up the largest group rejecting the far right. Catalonia is the exception: support for the nationalist far right is spread across older generations, too.

Because of its 20th-century history, Spain had long appeared resistant to the recent rise of the populist right. That exceptionalism is no longer true, but how do we explain Vox’s growing appeal among a new generation of younger Spanish voters? There are several contributory factors, but two particular crises, badly mishandled by the biggest parties, appear to have drained mainstream support: the deadly floods in Valencia last year and this summer’s wildfires in León, Zamora, Orense and Extremadura. Spain’s quasi-federal system makes it easy to assign blame both to the centre-left governing coalition in Madrid and to the conservative-led regional governments. At the same time, corruption and other scandals have once again tainted both main parties.

The last Spanish general election was in 2023 and the biggest concerns identified by Vox voters at the time were migration and “government and political parties”.

Data on the new young voters is limited, but polling shows that housing is the top concern for the population in general and even more so for anyone under 35. Wages, employment and the cost of living are mentioned too. Migration barely registers as an issue for younger voters. But the perception of politicians themselves as a problem, which was the other big issue for Vox voters in 2023, is widespread across generations. Marta Romero, a political scientist, says Vox has become fashionable among young people drawn to the “anti-establishment” image that the party is managing to project – just as parties on the left and the centre did in the previous decade.

Amid all the hand-wringing in Spain about the latest far-right insurgency, one thing is clear: the solution is not going to be found by moving the political centre of gravity rightward. Mimicking the far right on migration or women’s rights has demonstrably failed for parties across Europe – and it has already proven costly for the conservatives in Spain as well.

The Spanish economy stands out in Europe for its growth rate and is among the best performing in the west. But it’s still not delivering for many, particularly the younger adults who enter the labour market in cities such as Barcelona, Málaga or Madrid.

Focusing on – and delivering – affordable housing is the most important issue for younger people, who are poorer than older Spaniards mainly because of the high cost of renting or buying homes in the cities where jobs are concentrated. Wages are still low compared with other countries. In the past two decades, pensioners have become wealthier than young adults, particularly those with children, as El País’s data journalist Kiko Llaneras explained. Life is better in so many ways – Spain is richer, more modern, more inclusive and safer. But intergenerational tension is rising as the economy is not growing as fast as in the 1980s and 1990s.

What else can the mainstream political class do – particularly on the left, which traditionally counted on the support of progressive young adults? One obvious answer would be to challenge the prevailing political culture and stop bickering. Politicians, particularly from PSOE and PP, devote so much energy, day in day out, to insulting one another it is no wonder they attract widespread public cynicism, if not ridicule.

Most of the time this is just noise in the background as people get on with their lives. But a public backlash is palpable when this, often performative, conflict flares during or in response to a serious crisis. Yet it is now hard to find a politician from either of the two largest parties in national and regional government – those who bear the greatest responsibility – willing to pause before attacking a rival, even when the facts are still unclear.

In Valencia, there is a clearcut case the conservative regional government must answer. It is shocking that it remains in place a full year after mishandling emergency alerts during the floods. Central government is right to highlight the Valencia region’s leaders’ negligence and its neglect of the climate crisis, which is already reshaping Spain while Vox (and increasingly the PP) divert attention elsewhere. But is a public row required on every subject every day? 

Russia’s warnings grow more stark as Trump considers new missiles for Ukraine


The warning is part of a concerted Russian effort to deter President Donald Trump from giving Ukraine access to the missiles, repeating a tactic Moscow has used throughout the war.

 top Russian Foreign Ministry official cautioned President Donald Trump’s administration Wednesday against giving Ukraine access to long-range Tomahawk missiles that could hit targets deep within Russia in the latest in a series of warnings suggesting a degree of unease in Moscow.
Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Ryabkov also declared that the boost toward resolving the conflict in Ukraine provided by Trump’s August meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin in Alaska had been “largely exhausted.” The last few weeks have seen Trump considering the sale of new weapons to Ukraine and criticizing Russia as a “paper tiger.”


The latest warning was part of a concerted Russian effort to deter Trump against enabling Ukraine access to the missiles, repeating a tactic Moscow has used throughout its war on Ukraine, declaring that providing advanced military technology to Ukraine would provoke a direct conflict between Russia and NATO countries.
Since Trump’s election, however, Moscow has directed most of its ire against European leaders whom it portrays as warmongers to blame for the continued war, while directing consistently positive comments toward the U.S. president.


The U.S. administration has not even said if it would sell the Tomahawks to Ukraine, although Trump said on Monday that he had “sort of” made a decision but wanted to know how Kyiv would use the weapons.
Tomahawks have a range of up to 1,550 miles, depending on the variant, compared to around 190 miles for ATACM missiles, which were provided to Kyiv by the Biden administration.
“I think I want to find out what they’re doing with them,” Trump told reporters in the Oval Office on Monday. “Where are they sending them? I guess I’d have to ask that question.”
The repeated warnings from Putin and other officials indicate Moscow’s anxiety of the possibility Ukraine could get access to weapons, and appear to contradict Putin’s assertion last Thursday at a Russian foreign policy conference that the missiles “won’t change the balance of power on the battlefield.”
Putin warned that the weapons would mark a “qualitatively new stage of escalation” because Ukraine could not fire them without the U.S. personnel. He suggested, however, that Trump would ultimately decide against their provision because he knew how to listen.
Ryabkov also pointed out Wednesday that U.S. personnel would be needed to operate the Tomahawk missiles.


“As you understand, without software and launchers, the missiles themselves are just blanks. Accordingly, as has also been stated at a high level by the Russian side, the hypothetical use of such systems is only possible with the direct involvement of American personnel,” Ryabkov said.
Speaking to journalists on Wednesday, he warned of “the depth and severity of the consequences” that supplying Tomahawks to Ukraine would have.
“Naturally, we urge the U.S. leadership and the U.S. military to take a sober, reasonable, responsible approach to this situation,” he said. “Sadly, I have to say that the powerful impetus of the Anchorage meeting in favor of agreements has turned out to be exhausted to a significant extent by adversaries’ efforts,” blaming the “destructive actions” of European leaders.
Andrei Kartapolov, head of the parliament’s defense committee and a former deputy defense minister, said Russia knew how to shoot these missiles down and would target any launchers it detected on Ukrainian soil.
“Our response will be tough, ambiguous, measured, and asymmetrical. We will find ways to hurt those who cause us trouble,” he told the state RIA news agency on Wednesday. “The only problems will be for those who supply them and those who use them; that’s where the problems will be.”
Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov also warned Monday against the “new escalation” of providing Kyiv access to Tomahawks, even while asserting they would not help Ukraine’s military position.
“But here, of course, it is important to realize that we are talking about missiles that can also be nuclear, so this is indeed a serious escalation,” he warned.
Trump’s envoy to Ukraine, retired Lt. Gen. Keith Kellogg told Fox News late last month that Trump had authorized Ukraine to carry out long-range strikes with U.S.-made weapons, adding that “there are no such things as sanctuaries.”


“This is where I think they have the opportunity to challenge Russia much more aggressively,” he said.
If Trump does green-light Ukraine to get Tomahawks, it would mark a significant shift in his policy on the war, depending on what restrictions Washington placed on their use. He has so far focused on trying to end the war and normalize relations with Russia, first calling on both sides to agree to a ceasefire — a demand accepted by Ukraine but repeatedly deflected by Russia — before meeting Putin in Alaska where he abruptly abandoned his strategy of pressing for a ceasefire.
Trump has expressed increasing frustration with Putin, particularly in relation to Russia’s strikes on civilian targets in Ukraine, and last week said he believed that Ukraine was capable of winning back the land it had lost and that Russia “should have stopped” the war.


According to the Institute for the Study of War, at least 1,945 Russian military objects lie within range of the 1,550-mile variant Tomahawk and at least 1,655 could be reached by the 1,000-mile variant.
“Ukraine likely can significantly degrade Russia’s frontline battlefield performance by targeting a vulnerable subset of rear support areas that sustain and support Russia’s frontline operations,” the group said in a battlefield update on Sunday.
Ukraine has used drones to target Russian military and energy facilities deep within Russia, but they are not as destructive as missiles. It has also developed its own long-range missile, named Flamingo, but the system is in its early stages, with Zelensky announcing in August that the missiles would go into mass production in the coming winter

Amirah Sharhan recalls it being a regular fall afternoon in October 2024

 


The Yemeni American, who had been living in the Dearborn and Detroit area for four years, was preparing dinner while her mother took Amirah’s seven-year-old daughter, Saida, to a nearby playground to play with her friends.

But when the door of their home slammed open a little after 3pm, everything changed.

Saida rushed in, holding a napkin against her neck. When Amirah moved it away, she saw a long, deep cut across her daughter’s neck. A man had approached her on the playground, grabbed her head and slit her throat with a knife.

“My mind flipped. I didn’t know where I was,” Amirah recalls.

“My son was screaming: ‘Don’t die! Don’t die!’ I didn’t even know how to dial 911.”

The accused, 73-year-old Gary Lansky, who lives near the park, was caught shortly afterwards and in January was found competent to stand trial for assault with intent to murder and other charges.

“For a mom to see her daughter’s throat open. It was terrifying,” says Amirah.

“He’s a 73-year-old. How could he do that to a little child?”

Saida received 20 stitches and is scarred mentally and physically. Most of her nights are still filled with nightmares.

Amirah is convinced her daughter and mother were targeted for being Muslims; the attack happened two days after the first anniversary of Hamas’s terrorist attack on Israel and her grandmother was the only visibly Muslim person in the park.

That the accused was not ultimately charged with committing hate crimes has angered the local Muslim and Arab American communities who have been feeling abandoned and afraid since 7 October 2023. Those sentiments increased support for Donald Trump, but some are reassessing that support amid the continued killing in Gaza and ongoing threats against their community.

Islamophobic attacks across the US have risen precipitously in the two years since Hamas’s attack on Israel, which killed about 1,200 people, and the ensuing destruction Israel has unleashed on Gaza that has killed more than 67,000 people and devastated the Strip. Last year, the Council on American-Islamic Relations (Cair) recorded 8,658 complaints, a record.

Reports of antisemitism have also surged in recent years – a report released on Sunday found that more than half of American Jews say they have faced antisemitism in the past year. Data is difficult to come by because some sources tracking antisemitism don’t make clear distinctions between anti-Zionism and anti-Jewish hate. However, synagogues have widely reported increasing their security budgets over violent threats, and Jewish institutions are especially unnerved after two people were killed in an attack on a UK synagogue last week.

“Since the Pittsburgh synagogue bombing of 2018, in which 11 Jews were killed at worship, there have been anti-Jewish attacks in Poway, California (at a synagogue), Jersey City, New Jersey (at a kosher grocery store), at a rabbi’s house in Monsey, New York, and at the Coleyville, Texas, synagogue,” Mark Oppenheimer, of the John C Danforth Center on Religion and Politics at Washington University in St Louis, Missouri, wrote in an email.

While Muslim and Jewish communities face attacks that are often connected to anger over the Israel-Gaza war, a tense political climate in the US appears to be encouraging violence more broadly. After a recent shooting at a Mormon church in Michigan, the Washington Post reported mounting anxiety on the part of groups across religions. “No matter what level of violence you look at, violence against faith-based organizations is increasing,” said Carl Chinn, head of the Faith Based Security Network, a non-profit association of security professionals.

But Dearborn, the US’s first majority-Arab-American city, home to many residents who have lost family members to Israeli bombardments in Gaza and Lebanon, seems to attract particular vitriol.

Last month, a mosque in neighboring Dearborn Heights received a call from a Texas man threatening to burn down Dearborn and its mosques. On 23 September, a Virginia man was arraigned in court on terrorism charges for threatening on YouTube to attack a mosque in Dearborn.

In August, a man in a neighboring city was arrested for writing on social media that he would like to see marchers at a Muslim religious event taking place in Dearborn that month be shot. Dearborn officials have also recently been targeted by pro-Israel groups.
a person holds a sign that reads ‘Gaza is our responsibility’
People protest against Israel’s war in Gaza in Dearborn, Michigan, on 14 August 2025. Photograph: Adam J Dewey/Anadolu via Getty Images

Residents report growing racism platformed on rightwing media outlets. In recent weeks, Fox News has devoted significant attention to Dearborn, highlighting, for example, noise complaints about mosques and an alleged dispute between a local pastor and the city’s Lebanese American mayor.

Arab Americans have come in for criticism in some quarters for voting for Trump in last November’s election. In Dearborn, a city of 106,000 people of whom about 55% have Arab ancestry, Trump won 42.5% of the presidential election vote, more than any other candidate, helping deliver Michigan, a crucial swing state, to the president. Arab American leaders in Michigan were incensed by the Democratic party and former presidential candidate Kamala Harris’s support for Israel’s war on Gaza.

Now, interviews with some of those who backed Trump last year suggest that support may be eroding.

Faye Nemer, the founder of the Dearborn-based Mena American Chamber of Commerce, which works to build economic and cultural exchanges between organizations in the Middle East and US, says that many among the Arab American community who backed Trump in last year’s election did so on the premise that he would be a president of peace. She was among a cohort of Arab Americans who welcomed and organized Trump’s visit to Dearborn just days before the presidential election last November.

“We’re cautiously optimistic about this ceasefire deal [but] it’s become somewhat problematic – what was promised during the campaign cycle versus what we’re seeing occur on the ground,” she says.
a man in a suit holds up his left index finger while holding a pen with his right hand
Donald Trump signs autographs alongside Massad Boulos in Dearborn, Michigan, on 1 November 2024. Photograph: Julia Demaree Nikhinson/AP

Nemer says she believes there’s a shifting of opinion in the Arab American community. “I think they are in for a rude awakening come the midterm elections,” she said of the Republican party. “There should be some introspection there.”

But in addition to fear and disappointment, there is also defiance.

On Saturday, dozens of people marched in Dearborn’s streets in protest of the ongoing bombardment of Gaza and the detention of members of the Global Sumud Flotilla by Israel. At a convention held in Dearborn last month, Michigan’s lieutenant-governor, Garlin Gilchrist, called Israel’s war on Gaza a genocide, becoming one of a tiny but growing number of US politicians to do so. Gilchrist is running for governor of Michigan as a Democrat in next year’s election.

In the meantime, Saida Sharhan has had to move to a new school because of her former school’s proximity to the site of the attack. The park that’s a short distance from her home where she once played with her friends is now off limits.

“Two days ago, she woke up me and her father, screaming. She was shaking,” Amirah, her mother, says.

“She told me it’s the same dream all the time – the park is full of blood and [the attacker] telling her: ‘I’m coming back for you.’”

“I don’t feel safe any more,” says Amirah, “like I used to.”

The Guardian