Dimona
Explosive device found near Ashkelon playground, suspect arrested
Prosecutors say fingerprints and location data linked suspect Osher Peretz to the sophisticated device though he denies building or hiding it.
The Dimona mayor’s ultimatum to the Ministry of Finance
The new attraction planned on the way to Eilat: “It’s a game changer”
WATCH: Firefighters give lifesaving treatment to kittens rescued from burning building in Negev
The lost and found tribe
Inside the African Hebrew Israelite community of Dimona.
Trends past and future: The Curtain Up Festival presents 11 new works
This year, the Ministry of Culture and Sport put the festival in the hands of two new artistic directors, Mate Moray and Itzik Galili.
The expiration date for bigotry has long passed
Whether a Mizrahi sabra, Afro-Bedouin, Ethiopian or Sudanese asylum seeker, each labors under this oppressive burden and strangling cloud of discrimination.
Israeli nuclear whistle-blower Vanunu offered a move to Oslo
Moredchai Vanunu was jailed and served an 18-year sentence after discussing his work at the Dimona nuclear reactor with a British newspaper in 1986.
Israel nuke agency to pay 170 scientists suffering from cancer
The issue has been in dispute for over 20 years.
From Dimona to DC: Israeli politicians and the media
Prime Minister Netanyahu and Labor leader Avi Gabbay have very different strategies when it comes to international media.
A voice to be echoed for future generations
My father, Shimon Peres, loved the State of Israel with his entire being, dedicating his life to it.
Is it time to regulate Israel’s atomic agency?
Avner Cohen’s decades-long struggle with Israel’s nuke program reaches the High Court.
JPost Exclusive: Israel nuclear program has less oversight than other democracies
That Israel is more secretive is not surprising in light of its unique policy of possessing 80-200 nuclear weapons – according to foreign sources – but without ever formally declaring it.
PM and Bennett set to clash over new bill on running Security Cabinet
The prime minister and education minister are set for a showdown over a controversial new bill that would enable the Security Cabinet to approve overt and secret military operations.