London’s Metropolitan Police have launched a counter-terrorism investigation into a suspected antisemitic arson attack targeting four ambulances owned by Jewish charity Hatzola. The vehicles were set ablaze in the car park of Machzike Hadath Synagogue in Golders Green during early Monday hours, causing gas canisters onboard to explode. No casualties were reported.
Within hours, responsibility was claimed by Harakat Ashab al-Yamin al-Islamiya (Hayi), or The Islamic Movement of the People of the Right Hand, through a newly created Telegram account. The group, which only surfaced publicly on March 9th, has allegedly claimed multiple attacks across Europe this month targeting Jewish sites.
Middle East Eye analysis revealed that Hayi’s multilingual statement—posted in Hebrew, Arabic, and English—was flagged by two separate AI detection systems as likely being AI-generated. The statement contained unusual terminology for an anti-Zionist Shia group, including multiple references to ‘Israel’ and describing the Gaza conflict as ‘the Gaza war’ rather than more militant language.
Israeli officials quickly linked Hayi to Iran, with Israel’s Ministry for Diaspora Affairs publishing a report stating the attack ‘aligns with similar antisemitic arson incidents across Europe’ connected to ‘the same Iran-aligned network.’ However, Met Police chief Mark Rowley cautioned that while Iranian state threats have shown ‘rapid growth’ in recent years, it was ‘too early’ to attribute the attack directly to Iran.
Expert analysis by Aymenn Jawad al-Tamimi, who studies militant groups in Iraq and Syria, suggested the statement appeared to be machine-translated across languages after initial AI generation. The group’s evolving logo—now featuring a hand clasping a sniper rifle—bears resemblance to other Shia militia group flags.
The investigation continues as authorities work to authenticate Hayi’s claims and determine possible state-backed involvement, recalling previous Telegram-coordinated attacks in the UK linked to hostile state actors.
