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Israeli prosecutors have filed indictments this week in a high‑profile smuggling case that authorities say funnelled millions of shekels into the Gaza Strip and strengthened Hamas’s wartime economy.
Southern District prosecutors charged 12 people — part of a wider probe involving about 16 suspects — with offences including aiding the enemy during wartime, prohibited dealings in property for terror purposes, aggravated fraud, bribery, money‑laundering and tax violations.
Charges and reporting between Feb. 3–5, 2026 name reservist soldiers, businessmen and a company alleged to have run an organised chain that sourced goods from PA suppliers, concealed them in Israeli warehouses and moved them across crossings while falsely claiming military purposes.
Smuggled items included cartons of cigarettes, hundreds of iPhones, batteries, vehicle parts, medical equipment and communications cables.
Prosecutors say cigarette sales in particular generated very large sums—hundreds of millions of shekels since the war began.
Bezalel Zini, the brother of Shin Bet chief David Zini, was indicted after being accused of using convoy permissions and taking bribes; he was questioned by police because of the family link.
Authorities have sought asset seizure and detention as legal proceedings continue.





















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