Israel charged two Arab cousins from towns near northern city Nazareth for ties to the Islamic State group and planning an attack, the Shin Bet domestic security agency said today.
Mohammad Hassan, 20, from Rina, and Ahmed Saida, 23, from Umm el Ghanam, were arrested in November, the Shin Bet said.
They had left Israel for Turkey in May, where they met up with an IS operative who was to help them steal across the border into Syria, where they were to join fighters, it said.
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Back home, Hassan and Saida allegedly continued to maintain their contacts with IS operatives abroad and supporters in Israel.
Identifying with the jihadist group's ideology, the two resolved to carry out an attack against Israeli Jews, and Saida attempted to purchase a rifle, Shin Bet said.
The two were charged today for links to foreign agents, an attempt to enter an enemy country and conspiring to commit a crime. Saida was also charged with weapons felonies.
Also today, the Jerusalem district court sentenced a Palestinian from east Jerusalem employed by Israel's health ministry to two years in prison for attempting to join IS forces in Syria in January.
Earlier this month, Israel charged five Arabs from the northern city of Nazareth with having ties with the group.
Arab Israelis are those who remained in the Jewish state after its 1948 creation, as well as their descendants. They account for more than 17 percent of the country's population.
Police have said Israeli Arabs travelling to Syria to fight for IS represent "a serious threat to Israel."
According to the Shin Bet, around 35 Israeli Arabs have joined IS.
A number of them have died fighting with Islamist organisations, according to Israeli security and their families. Around 10 have returned to Israel and have been arrested or jailed.