Israeli-Ethiopian protesters return to Tel Aviv to rally against police brutality, racism
рус   |   eng
Search
Sign in   Register
Help |  RSS |  Subscribe
Euroasian Jewish News
    World Jewish News
      Analytics
        Activity Leadership Partners
          Mass Media
            Xenophobia Monitoring
              Reading Room
                Contact Us

                  World Jewish News

                  Israeli-Ethiopian protesters return to Tel Aviv to rally against police brutality, racism

                  Demonstrators in Tel Aviv gather to protest racism and police brutality, May 18, 2015. (photo credit:BEN HARTMAN)

                  Israeli-Ethiopian protesters return to Tel Aviv to rally against police brutality, racism

                  18.05.2015, Israel

                  Saying that their demands have not been met, Ethiopian-Israeli protesters returned to Tel Aviv on Monday, demanding solutions to what they say is systematic discrimination in Israel, and abuse at the hands of police.
                  Activist Inbar Bugale said Monday “we’re here to show that the protests didn’t reach any results and that we’ll continue. It’s been 30 years and our demands haven’t been met”
                  She also said that the fact that the National Police Commissioner Yochanan Danino fired the police officer seen beating Ethiopian-Israeli IDF soldier Damas Pakada in a video that sparked the protests did not sway demonstrators, saying “he needs to be in jail, not fired.”
                  Bugale has been cast as a leader of sorts of the movement. On Monday she was trailed by a film crew throughout the protest and at t a press conference held by activists last week in Tel Aviv she was of only two that spoke, and was the one to issue the group’s list of demands. These included dropping charges against all those indicted during the rioting two weeks ago, the jailing of the cop, and a comprehensive state plan to alleviate the problems facing the Ethiopian-Israeli community. She also called for organizers to cancel demonstrations planned for this week to show solidarity with police, calling them “incitement.”
                  The protests two weeks ago in Tel Aviv deteriorated into a level of mayhem that has not been seen at a protest in the city. Rioters at Rabin Square threw bottles and rocks at police, who fired stun grenades and deployed water cannons, while sending officers charging into the crowd on horseback. By the end of the night dozens had been arrested during the rioting and at least 40 people were lightly wounded, more than half of them police.
                  This Monday’s protest was a far cry from the scene that gripped Tel Aviv and the country weeks earlier. Only a couple hundred protesters took part, and rather than blocking off the Ayalon Freeway for two hours during peak traffic, they blocked Rothschild Boulevard, well after rush hour, and later a portion of Ibn Gvirol Boulevard.
                  Tel Aviv police were out in force nonetheless, and in the afternoon the district sent out a statement saying that they "are well-equipped for any attempt to break the law and disrupt public order” and that they would arrest those breaking the law and seek to expedite the legal process against them.
                  Throughout Central Tel Aviv on Monday the police presence was impossible to miss. Large contingents of YASSAM riot forces were seen deployed across the center of town and plainclothes cops congregated in large groups at cafes up and down Rothschild Boulevard and elsewhere.
                  Speaking to The Jerusalem Post on Rothschild Boulevard, protester Avraham Yayo said that as bad as police brutality is, it’s just a symptom of a wider series of social failings regarding the Ethiopian community in Israel.
                  “The police are only part of a series of problems dealing with racism and all people who suffer from racism in Israel need to be here with us,” Yayo said, adding “no one will silence us, we’re done being nice.”
                  The latter was a common theme, repeated in the chants of “no more, this is a new generation”, the implication apparently that the younger generation born and raised in Israel knows that they have to make noise if they want to be heard.
                  Rahamim Elazar, 57, said he agreed with that assertion. A veteran Ethiopian Israeli who arrived in 1974, he was an activist at protests held by the community decades earlier and is today a broadcaster for Amharic programming on Israel Radio.
                  Elazar said of the current generation “they know their rights and they know that to get something they need to demand it”.
                  Elazar said that also in his day there were clashes between protesters and police, but that the current generation is more out and about in Israeli society and a part of Israeli nightlife, where they encounter police more, creating more chances of friction.
                  Though it was on a far smaller scale, the protest brought to mind somewhat the social justice protests of the summer of 2011, which were also centered on Rothschild Boulevard. The protesters borrowed some of the chants, including “the people demand social justice” and also added their own twist, calling on Israelis comfortable at home to “get down off your balcony, racism is out of control.”

                  By BEN HARTMAN

                  JPost.com