
On the night of Friday to Saturday, an explosion occurred at the Israel Center in the Dutch city of Nijkerk, Reuters reported.
No injuries were reported, while damage to the site run by Christians for an Israeli charity was minimal.
It was not immediately clear whether the incident was related to a series of attacks against Jewish sites across Europe since the start of the Iran war, which was triggered by US and Israeli strikes on February 28.
No arrests have yet been made and police have appealed for witnesses to come forward, the report said.
A spate of attacks on Jewish sites across Europe
The explosion in Nijkerk came against the backdrop of several attacks targeting Jewish sites across Europe – on March 9 an explosion occurred outside a synagogue in Liège, Belgium, and a few days later, on March 13, a synagogue in Rotterdam was torched. A day later, on March 14, an explosive device exploded outside a Jewish school in the Dutch capital, while an attack on a Jewish site was reported in Greece.
Most recently, on March 22, ambulances belonging to the Jewish emergency organization Hatzalah Northwest were set on fire in a synagogue parking lot in London, in what British Prime Minister Keir Starmer described as a “deeply shocking anti-Semitic arson attack.”
Suspects in London attack charged
British prosecutors on Friday charged three men in connection with a past arson attack on ambulances of the Jewish community in London, Reuters reported.
Three men, aged 20, 19 and 17, have been charged with arson with intent to damage property. They were also charged with recklessness as to whether life would be endangered.
Two of those arrested are British nationals, while the third is a dual British-Pakistani citizen, according to the Crown Prosecution Service.
The trio is expected to appear in court on Saturday.





