A demonstration to be held on Sunday at israel’s embassy in London and a small demonstration held last week at the embassy in Berlin, Walla reported.
Protesters have held regular demonstrations for weeks outdoors at the prime minister’s apartment on Balfour Street in Jerusalem, as well as in Tel Aviv and other areas, asking the prime minister to resign on his corruption charges. They have been joined in recent weeks through others protesting against the government’s economic policy against the coronavirus pandemic, with crowds in thousands and on the rise.
Recent protests have seen an alarming increase in violence, with attacks through right-wing counter-demonstrators and quarrels between anti-government demonstrators and the police.
On Thursday night, police arrested some 16 suspected far-right activists after a demonstration of extremist gangs in Jerusalem saw the hounds and others attacked, under police control to prevent the organization from coming and, in all likelihood, assaulting anti-government protesters.
The collection of football fan club Beitar Jerusalem, La Familia, at Jerusalem’s First Station entertainment complex, planned as a counter-demonstration to an anti-government rally through Netanyahu. He intervened amid an increase in attacks on anti-Netanyahu protesters through alleged far-right assailants, adding a bloody attack in Tel Aviv on Tuesday.
Far-right counter-lovers chanted Death to the Leftists on Thursday, threw stones and attacked reporters, breaking a camera.
On Tuesday, an outdoor demonstration at Public Security Minister Amir Ohana’s home in Tel Aviv turned violent as alleged far-right assailants beat the protesters with glass bottles, sticks and chairs and mass-sprayed them. Protest organizers said five other people were hospitalized, adding two with gunshot wounds to their backs. Subsequent reports indicated that another 10 people had been hospitalized.
Five suspects were placed under space arrest on Thursday, with a ruling in saying that it accepted the defense’s argument that the altercation had been a fight between the two sides, “that had provoked each other,” not a direct attack on the protesters.
Tuesday’s violence provoked condemnation, and they added opposition figures who accused Netanyahu of inciting her. Netanyahu and some of his supporters have spoken out against anti-government protesters as “anarchists.”
On Saturday night, police arrested far-right activists, allegedly members of the group, who allegedly attacked the protesters. Protesters also reported being attacked through small far-right hooligan demonstrations in the south of the country and near Tel Aviv.
Netanyahu is being tried for a series of cases in which he allegedly won generous gifts from billionaire friends and exchanged regulatory favors with media tycoons for a policy more favorable to him and his family. The prime minister denied wrongdoing, accused the media and law enforcement of a witch hunt to expel him from office, and refused to resign.