Tel Aviv demonstration with 140 coffins

Police accused of ignoring Arab murders

Participants walked behind demonstrators carrying 140 coffins, marking the number of those killed in homicides in the Arab community since the start of 2023...

Activists in Tel Aviv march with symbolic coffins denouncing the violent crimes against Arab communities. 
Photo: Jack Guez / AFP
Activists in Tel Aviv march with symbolic coffins denouncing the violent crimes against Arab communities. Photo: Jack Guez / AFP

(TIMES OF ISRAEL) – Thousands of people gathered in central Tel Aviv on Sunday to call on the government to do more to curb soaring criminal violence in Arab communities, which has claimed 140 lives this year.

Over 30 organisations participated in the march, including a number of groups that have led protests against the government’s plans to overhaul the judiciary.

Participants marched from Habima Square to the Tel Aviv Museum bearing symbolic coffins and holding signs accusing the government of paying lip service rather than tackling crime.

“I blame the government, the police, and all security institutions,” said Badiah Khnifes, whose daughter Johara was killed in a 2022 car bombing in Shrafam.

The murder remains unsolved, she told the crowd. “To Netanyahu I say, look me in the eyes: How can it be that the state, with all its institutions, cannot solve the murder of our children?”

Several MKs joined the demonstration, which numbered some 5000 people according to Ynet, including from Arab-majority Ra’am and Hadash-Tal, as well as Labor and Meretz.

Participants walked behind demonstrators carrying 140 coffins, marking the number of those killed in homicides in the Arab community since the start of 2023, a number that has far outpaced the murder rate in previous years. The coffins were decorated with slogans describing what each victim might have become had they not been killed.

Many protesters also dressed in white to commemorate the victims.

Israeli authorities have largely failed to stem the wave of violent crime engulfing the Arab community in Israel in recent years, with many accusing police of largely ignoring the violence. Experts say the wave has been largely fuelled by organised criminal groups, and sustained by decades of official neglect and discrimination by the state.

The anti-violence Abraham Initiatives watchdog group said that since the beginning of the year, at least 140 members of the Arab community have been killed in violent circumstances – more than during the entirety of 2022.

During the same period last year, there were 66 deaths, the organisation noted.

Protest organiser Saliman Al-Amar, CEO of AJEEC-NISPED, an Arab-Jewish social rights group, told Haaretz the purpose of the demonstration was “to bring the suffering of Arab society to the people sitting in cafes in Tel Aviv” and that “the government is abandoning us”.

“This is the responsibility of the government and also the responsibility of all of us. We wanted the protesters not to sink into despair,” he said.

Ta’al party chairman Ahmad Tibi, speaking at the protest, said police were capable of cracking down on crime, but unwilling to do so for Arabs.

Far-right National Security Minister Itamar Ben Gvir, who campaigned on promises to beef up public safety and whose ministry oversees the police, has largely stayed quiet on the soaring crimewave.

He did not comment on the protest, but earlier in the day crowed on Twitter that his goal was for more people to be able to defend themselves on the street, noting his efforts to put more guns in civilian hands.

Meanwhile, Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich has reportedly frozen grants earmarked for Arab municipalities so he can “reconsider” what to do with the money.

According to the Kan public broadcaster, NIS 200 million ($AU83 million) set aside for economic development has yet to be transferred to Arab local authorities despite a warning from Interior Minister Moshe Arbel of the Shas party.

Smotrich told Kan that he is “reconsidering” the transfer of funds as he weighs his “priorities” for the funding and the “supervision mechanisms” in place. He added that the current government is “not beholden” to a coalition promise made by former interior minister Ayelet Shaked to Ra’am party chief Mansour Abbas.

The funds, aimed at boosting the economy, upgrading infrastructure and fighting crime in Arab communities, were approved by the previous government that included the Islamist Ra’am party alongside left-wing, centrist and right-wing parties that united in opposition to Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

Abbas told Kan on Sunday that the “Netanyahu-Smotrich budget is deepening discrimination and widening the gaps in Israel and abandoning the Arab community to criminal organisations,” and called on the Prime Minister to intervene.

 

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