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Arrests and clashes follow anti-Netanyahu protests in Israel

Protests are emerging as among biggest challenges to prime minister's lengthy rule

Tia Goldenberg
Sunday 26 July 2020 11:39 BST
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Israeli police use a water cannon to disperse people during a protest against Netanyahu in Jerusalem
Israeli police use a water cannon to disperse people during a protest against Netanyahu in Jerusalem (AP)

Police said on Sunday they arrested more than a dozen Israelis in country-wide protests the previous night that drew thousands of people in a growing and persistent show of force against Benjamin Netanyahu and his handling of the coronavirus crisis.

Thousands of people demonstrated outside Mr Netanyahu’s official residence in Jerusalem and hundreds gathered in a seaside park in Tel Aviv, demanding Mr Netanyahu’s resignation and slamming his response to the crisis.

For the first time since the wave of protests began weeks ago, hundreds also assembled outside Mr Netanyahu’s private home in the upscale coastal town of Caesarea, where heavy security greeted them. Demonstrators across bridges and intersections waved black flags, the symbol of one of the movements behind the protests that is demanding Mr Netanyahu’s ouster.

The protests are emerging as among the biggest challenges to Mr Netanyahu’s lengthy rule since demonstrations over the cost of living in 2011 drew hundreds of thousands to the streets. They come following what critics say is Mr Netanyahu’s fumbling of the coronavirus response and in the shadow of Mr Netanyahu’s corruption trial, which resumed earlier this month.

At a press conference last week that coincided with protests, Mr Netanyahu addressed the surging protests, warning demonstrators: “Do not drag the country into anarchy, violence, vandalism.”

Critics say police have been heavy-handed in trying to clear out the protests, using water cannons to drive them out and in some cases causing injury. Police say that protesters who ignore calls to disperse are removed to restore order.

Police fired water cannons on protesters at the Jerusalem protest and said 12 people were arrested there for being involved in disturbances. Two other people were arrested in separate locations for attacking protesters with pepper spray and a knife.

Israel appeared to have contained its first wave of coronavirus infections in the spring, with Mr Netanyahu boasting that Israel was among the most successful countries in the world in its response with the virus. But what critics say was a hasty and ill-thought-out reopening sent new cases soaring, with Israel now claiming one of the world’s highest infection rates, adjusted for population. The government, formed with the intention of focusing on combating the virus, has moved slowly and haltingly to contain the new outburst.

Israel has since reimposed some restrictions after an extended lockdown in the spring paralysed its economy. Unemployment has since jumped to more than 20 per cent, from around 3.9 per cent before the outbreak, and anger has grown over the government’s financial assistance plans, which have been chided for providing those in need with a pittance or nothing at all.

The crisis has brought public confidence in Mr Netanyahu and his government to a nadir, at a time when the Israeli leader could use the support. A court decided earlier this month that Mr Netanyahu’s corruption trial will resume in January with three hearings a week, a pace that will keep his legal woes firmly in the public consciousness and raise questions about his ability to simultaneously govern and fend off the accusations against him.

Mr Netanyahu is charged with fraud, breach of trust and accepting bribes in a series of scandals involving billionaire associates and media moguls. He denies wrongdoing and accuses the media, judiciary and law enforcement agencies of a conspiracy to topple him against the will of the people.

AP

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