By Tamar Michaelis, Mohammed Tawfeeq and Sophie Tanno, CNN
An Israeli rabbi missing in the United Arab Emirates has been found dead, Israeli authorities said on Sunday, in what they described as an "antisemitic terrorist act".
Zvi Kogan, who also holds Moldovan citizenship and is a representative of Chabad, a religious movement of Hasidic Jews with communities, synagogues and other institutions in many countries, had been missing since Thursday afternoon (local time). Chabads official website says he was abducted from Dubai.
In a joint statement Sunday, the Israeli Prime Minister's Office and the Ministry of Foreign Affairs said Kogan's body had been located by UAE authorities.
"The murder of Tzvi [Zvi] Kogan, of blessed memory, is a heinous antisemitic terrorist act. The State of Israel will use all means at its disposal to bring the perpetrators of this crime to justice," the statement said.
CNN has contacted the UAE government for comment.
Israel's Defence Minister, Israel Katz, condemned the killing as a "cowardly and despicable act of antisemitic terror".
Israeli authorities have reissued travel advice for nationals, recommending against non-essential travel and say visitors should minimise movement and stay in secure places.
The UAE interior ministry confirmed Saturday it "had received a report from the family of a Moldovan national named Zvi Kogan, stating that he has been missing and out of contact since last Thursday" and that an investigation was underway.
Kogan worked alongside other Chabad emissaries to establish and expand Judaism in the UAE. He founded the first Jewish education center in the region, as well as helped make kosher food widely available, according to the Chabad movement's official website.
Kogan's wife Rivky is a US national, whose uncle Rabbi Gavriel Holtzberg was killed in the 2008 Mumbai terror attacks.
The UAE has a small Jewish community, thought to number thousands. Last year, the Gulf state opened its first-ever purpose built synagogue. Called the "Abrahamic Family House", the interfaith complex also houses a mosque and a church.
Relations between the UAE and Israel thawed in recent years. In 2020, the UAE became the most prominent Arab nation in decades to open relations with Israel, under the US-brokered agreement known as the Abraham Accords.
But Reuters says the public presence of Israelis and Jews has receded since the 7 October attacks. Jewish community members told the agency that informal synagogues in Dubai were closed in the wake of the attacks due to security concerns.
- CNN