Tel Aviv has been hit by the most violent protests in its recent history
after more than 1,000 Israelis took to the streets in the city's south
to demand the deportation of African immigrants and asylum seekers.
By Phoebe Greenwood in Tel Aviv
4:08PM BST 24 May 2012
The
predominately black neighbourhood of Hatikva was ransacked by groups of
nationalist protesters who had attended a demonstration on Wednesday
night against illegal African migrants.
The protesters claim the
Africans are responsible for a rise in crime, bearing signs saying
"This is not Africa" and "Stop talking, start expelling".
"Blacks
out!" shouted demonstrators in the crowd, while others yelled "Send the
Sudanese back to Sudan", as other protesters derided the
"bleeding-heart leftists" working to help them.
The
mob set cans of rubbish on fire, smashed the windows of shops owned by
Eritrean migrants and beat up Africans walking through the streets.
TJ, a 29-year-old migrant from Nigeria,watched the violent chaos from his rooftop having been chased and pelted with rocks when he attempted to leave his house.
"There
were protesters everywhere smashing shop and car windows," he said. "A
group of about 10 or 15 boys stopped one black kid cycling on his bike.
They pulled him off and were punching and kicking him in his head. The
police just stood and watched until it got really out of control."
Other
witnesses described a gang assaulting a mother carrying a young baby so
violently that she was forced to drop her child. Others stopped shuttle
buses to search for migrant workers among their passengers.
The
Israeli police confirmed they had arrested 17 suspects involved in "a
protest against illegal African immigrants". Extra police units were
positioned to prevent further violence in the area last night.
Peace
Now, an Israeli human rights organisation, is calling for an
investigation into whether the speakers at Wednesday night's rally,
including Knesset ministers Miri Regev, Danny Danon, Yari Levin and
Michael Ben-Ari, are guilty of incitement.
During her address, Ms Regev described illegal immigrants as a "cancer in our society".
Danny
Danon, a member of Benjamin Netanyahu's Likud party, wrote in a
Facebook status later the same evening: "Israel is at war. An enemy
state of infiltrators was established in Israel, and its capital is
south Tel Aviv."
According to Israeli government figures, there
are currently 60,000 African asylum seekers in Israel. The vast majority
come from Eritrea and Sudan and were smuggled into the country by foot
through Israel's southern border with Egypt, many having been beaten and
tortured by their smugglers in camps in the Sinai en route.
Israel
terms any illegal immigrant through this border an 'infiltrator' and
estimate 90 per cent are economic migrants coming to Israel to look for
work – a stark contrast to the figures in England and Canada, where 66
per cent and 96 per cent of Eritreans who arrive illegally are granted
refugee status.
The Israeli government currently does not deport
Eritreans or Sudanese however Yehuda Weinstein, Israel's attorney
general, will appear before the Jerusalem District Court next week to
argue that there is no longer a legal obstacle to expelling 700 Southern
Sudanese refugees. If approved, Israel will be the first country to
have reached this decision.
Defending her position on Thursday,
Ms Regev insisted that while she does not condone violence, African
immigrants pose a grave demographic threat to Israel. "Israel should
adopt the US protocol of returning infiltrators to the border within 72
hours ... Jews and Israelis are scared of living in their country," she
said.
Mr Danon's proposition to prevent further violence was to
deport the city's African residents " to detention facilities and remove
Africans from population centres".
Bracing themselves for a
second round of nationalist protests on Thursday evening, the residents
of Hatikva are struggling to resume normal life.
'TJ' says he is among the few who has left his home following the violence:
"Black people have been too afraid to leave their homes to go to work
today. Racism in Tel Aviv is not only getting worse it's getting out of
hand and the police are no help. We are terrified."
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/middleeast/israel/9287715/Israeli-anti-immigration-riots-hit-African-neighbourhood-of-Tel-Aviv.html
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