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Three arrested in Haifa stabbing, two from Basmat Tab'un and one from Jdeideh-Makr, ages 34, 27, 26

The Zioneer Intelligence DeskUpdated 00:00 · 12 Jul
Three arrested in Haifa stabbing, two from Basmat Tab'un and one from Jdeideh-Makr, ages 34, 27, 26

Primary source Internal intake · 3 reviewed intake signals · Desk window 23:42–00:00

TL;DR

N12's Or Ravid reports that police arrested three suspects in the Haifa stabbing that left two people seriously wounded. The suspects are residents of Basmat Tab'un (ages 34 and 27) and Jdeideh-Makr (age 26).

01 · THE DISPATCH

Police have identified the ages of the three suspects arrested in the stabbing near Haifa's Student Beach — 34, 27, and 26 — according to N12's Or Ravid. The suspects are residents of Basmat Tab'un (ages 34 and 27) and Jdeideh-Makr (age 26). This adds specific ages to the earlier identification of the suspects.

At 20:14 Jerusalem, The Zioneer reported that two men in their 30s were seriously wounded in a stabbing near Haifa's Student Beach, with police suspecting a criminal motive. Within the same hour, police announced the arrest of three suspects, and later identified them as residents of Basmat Tab'un and Jdeideh-Makr. The current update confirms the suspects' ages: 34, 27, and 26.

Police have said the incident has a criminal background, as The Zioneer reported earlier tonight. The investigation continues, and the condition of the two wounded men has not been updated since the initial report.

02 · How it developed

3 developments

  1. Latest

    Suspects identified as ages 34, 27, and 26.

  2. Police arrested three suspects in connection with the stabbing incident.

  3. Two men seriously wounded in stabbing near Haifa student beach; police suspect criminal motive

Related dispatches
03 · Source and signal

Source and signal

  • Internal intake
Desk accountability

This dispatch is published under The Zioneer Intelligence Desk. Raw intake channels remain internal provenance; an external outlet or channel is named only when it materially helps readers evaluate a specific claim.