‘Lynchings’ on streets of Israel: Mob drag ‘Arab man’ out of his car and beat him

A far-right Israeli mob has attacked a man near Tel Aviv they believed to be an Arab as the Israel-Palestinian conflict raged on.

The shocking images show a man being forcibly removed from his car and beaten by a crowd of dozens until he lost consciousness.

The attack, broadcast by public broadcaster Kan, took place on the seafront promenade of Bat Yam, south of Israel’s commercial capital Tel Aviv.

Police and emergency services did not arrive on the scene until 15 minutes later, while the victim lay motionless on his back in the middle of the street.

Those in the crowd justified the attack by saying the man was an Arab who had tried to ram the nationalists, but footage shows a motorist trying to avoid the protest.

‘The victim of the lynching is seriously injured but stable,’ Tel Aviv’s Ichilov hospital said in a statement, without revealing his identity.

It came as Arabs and Jews fought on the streets and rioters torched vehicles, a restaurant and a synagogue in some of the worst violence Israel has seen in years.

The mayor of the mixed town of Lod, which saw the worst of the violence Tuesday, compared it to a civil war or a Palestinian uprising.

Police said they arrested nearly 400 people allegedly ‘involved in riots and disturbances’ across the country on Wednesday.

This video grab obtained from a footage released by Kan 11 Public broadcaster on May 12, 2021, shows a far-right Israeli mob attacking who they considered an Arab man, on the seafront promenade of Bat Yam

An Israeli police officer inspects the car of an Israeli Arab man who was attacked and injured by an Israeli Jews mob

An Israeli police officer inspects the car of an Israeli Arab man who was attacked and injured by an Israeli Jews mob

Palestinians gather during confrontations with the Israeli security forces in the city centre of the West Bank town of Hebron, on May 12

Palestinians gather during confrontations with the Israeli security forces in the city centre of the West Bank town of Hebron, on May 12

A Palestinian protester throws a Molotov cocktail at Israeli soldiers in the West Bank city of Hebron on May 12

A Palestinian protester throws a Molotov cocktail at Israeli soldiers in the West Bank city of Hebron on May 12

Palestinians clash with Israeli security forces in the city centre of the West Bank town of Hebron on May 12

Palestinians clash with Israeli security forces in the city centre of the West Bank town of Hebron on May 12

Israeli paramilitary border police detain Jewish settlers, during clashes between Arabs, police and Jews, in the mixed town of Lod on Wednesday

Israeli paramilitary border police detain Jewish settlers, during clashes between Arabs, police and Jews, in the mixed town of Lod on Wednesday

Far-right lawmaker Betzalel Smotrich, head of the ‘Religious Zionism’ party, said he was ‘ashamed’ of the ‘atrocious cruelty’ of the attack on the driver in Bat Yam.

He said: ‘Jewish brothers, stop! We cannot under any circumstances allow ourselves to take part in violent acts.’

Israel’s chief rabbi Yitzhak Yossef called for an end to attacks by Jews.

He said: ‘Innocent citizens are being attacked by terrorist organisations, the heart is heavy and the images difficult, but we cannot allow ourselves to be drawn into provocations and aggressions.’

Issawi Fredj, an Arab deputy from the left-wing Meretz party, said the images were a sign that the country was heading towards ‘civil war’.

Demonstrations by far-right activists broke out Wednesday night in several cities, leading to clashes with police and sometimes Arab Israelis.

Police said they were responding to violent incidents in cities including Acre, Haifa and Lod.

In Acre, a mixed Arab-Jewish town in northwest Israel, a Jew was seriously injured by stone throwers, police said.

Opposition leader Yair Lapid said: ‘The rioters in Lod and Acre do not represent Israeli Arabs, the rioters in Bat Yam… do not represent Israeli Jews, violence will not dictate our lives.’

Arab experts and activists say the violence was fuelled by unrest in Jerusalem that has brought Israel to the brink of another Gaza war. But they say it is rooted in deeper grievances that go back to the founding of the state.

Israeli Arabs gather next to a mosque during clashes between Jews, Israeli police and Arabs, in the mixed town of Lod on Wednesday

Israeli Arabs gather next to a mosque during clashes between Jews, Israeli police and Arabs, in the mixed town of Lod on Wednesday

Palestinian protesters clash with Israeli troops at in the city center of the West Bank city of Hebron on Wednesday

Palestinian protesters clash with Israeli troops at in the city center of the West Bank city of Hebron on Wednesday

Palestinian protesters clash with Israeli troops at in the city center of the West Bank city of Hebron on Wednesday

Palestinian protesters clash with Israeli troops at in the city center of the West Bank city of Hebron on Wednesday

Palestinian protesters clash with Israeli troops at in the city centre of the West Bank city of Hebron on Wednesday

Palestinian protesters clash with Israeli troops at in the city centre of the West Bank city of Hebron on Wednesday

Palestinian protesters clash with Israeli troops at in the city centre of the West Bank city of Hebron on Wednesday

Palestinian protesters clash with Israeli troops at in the city centre of the West Bank city of Hebron on Wednesday

Palestinians clash with Israeli security forces in the city centre of the West Bank town of Hebron on Wednesday

Palestinians clash with Israeli security forces in the city centre of the West Bank town of Hebron on Wednesday

Israeli riot police tries to block a Jewish right-wing man as clashes erupted between Arabs, police and Jews, in the mixed town of Lod on Wednesday

Israeli riot police tries to block a Jewish right-wing man as clashes erupted between Arabs, police and Jews, in the mixed town of Lod on Wednesday

Terrifying footage shows Hamas rocket blow up a bus, yards from civilians 

Terrifying video footage has emerged of a rocket launched by Hamas militants blowing up a bus in Israel as civilians watched on in horror.  

Video shows the city bus erupting in flames, with black smoke billowing from the burning vehicle, in the central city of Holon, just south of Tel Aviv, last night. 

In other videos, dozens of Israel’s Iron Dome defence system’s missiles can be seen lighting up the night sky yesterday as they shot down a bombardment of rockets fired by Hamas militants.

Residents of Tel Aviv, Israel’s most populous city, hid in their houses and under shelters as scores of rockets were seen flying overhead before they were struck down by Israeli missiles. 

The bus erupts in flames

Video shows the city bus erupting in flames, with black smoke billowing from the burning vehicle, in the central city of Holon, just south of Tel Aviv, last night

Before the Bat Yam mob attack, a group of black-clad Israelis smashed the windows of an Arab-owned ice cream shop in the city.

Ultranationalists could be seen chanting, ‘Death to Arabs!’ on live TV during a standoff with Border Police.

In the northern city of Tiberias, video uploaded to social media appeared to show flag-waving Israelis attacking a car.

Israel’s Channel 13 quoted a senior policeman saying Arabs are suspected of attacking and seriously wounding a Jewish man in the coastal city of Acre.

Israeli President Reuven Rivlin, whose office is meant to serve as the nation’s moral compass, said the country was gripped by civil war and urged to ‘stop this madness.’

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu called on both Jews and Arabs to cease attacks on each other.

He said: ‘It doesn’t matter to me that your blood is boiling. You can’t take the law in your hands.’

In a statement he added ‘what has been happening in the last few days in the cities of Israel is unacceptable’.

‘Nothing justifies the lynching of Arabs by Jews and nothing justifies the lynching of Jews by Arabs.’

Police said they arrested nearly 400 people allegedly ‘involved in riots and disturbances’ across the country on Wednesday.

The violence comes at a time when Israel’s Arab minority appeared to be gaining new acceptance and influence.

Mansour Abbas, head of an Arab party with Islamist roots, emerged as a kingmaker after the March elections and was poised to be in a coalition that would oust Mr Netanyahu.

But Abbas indicated on Wednesday coalition talks would be put on hold because of the escalating violence.

‘If there is a cease-fire, we will return to the political track to form a government,’ he said.

In recent days, Arab citizens of Israel have held mass protests across the country over Israel’s policing of a flashpoint holy site in Jerusalem and plans to evict dozens of Palestinian families in the city following a legal campaign by Jewish settlers.

Adding to the tensions are increasingly powerful far-right groups in Israel that won seats in March elections and are allied with Mr Netanyahu.

In recent days, far-right politicians have visited the tense east Jerusalem neighborhood where the families are threatened with eviction and staged marches.

After police broke up a protest Monday night in Lod, a young Arab resident was shot and killed.

Police spokesman Micky Rosenfeld said the man was with a group of rioters threatening Jewish homes and Jewish residents opened fire in a ‘life-threatening situation’.

He said three people have been detained for questioning and police are investigating. Arab residents of Lod disputed the account, pointing out that the slain man was unarmed.

His funeral the next day drew thousands of people and a heavy police presence on the scene. Clashes broke out between the two sides, leading to riots in which several vehicles and a synagogue were set ablaze.

Israeli forces intervene in Palestinians who gathered after an Isha (night) prayer at Damascus Gate of Masjid al-Aqsa Compound

Israeli forces intervene in Palestinians who gathered after an Isha (night) prayer at Damascus Gate of Masjid al-Aqsa Compound

Israeli forces intervene in Palestinians who gathered after an Isha (night) prayer at Damascus Gate of Masjid al-Aqsa Compound and Palestinians whom Israel want to forcibly evict from their homes, Sheikh Jarrah neighborhood in East Jerusalem on Wednesday

Israeli forces intervene in Palestinians who gathered after an Isha (night) prayer at Damascus Gate of Masjid al-Aqsa Compound and Palestinians whom Israel want to forcibly evict from their homes, Sheikh Jarrah neighborhood in East Jerusalem on Wednesday

Israeli forces detain a number of people as they intervene in Palestinians who gathered after an Isha (night) prayer at Damascus Gate of Masjid al-Aqsa Compound

Israeli forces detain a number of people as they intervene in Palestinians who gathered after an Isha (night) prayer at Damascus Gate of Masjid al-Aqsa Compound

Israeli forces intervene in Palestinians who gathered after an Isha (night) prayer at Damascus Gate of Masjid al-Aqsa Compound

Israeli forces intervene in Palestinians who gathered after an Isha (night) prayer at Damascus Gate of Masjid al-Aqsa Compound

Israeli forces are seen patrolling a street before they intervened in Palestinians who gathered after an Isha (night) prayer at Damascus Gate of Masjid al-Aqsa Compound

Israeli forces are seen patrolling a street before they intervened in Palestinians who gathered after an Isha (night) prayer at Damascus Gate of Masjid al-Aqsa Compound

Fire can be seen over cars queuing on a busy main road in Jerusalem as Israeli forces intervene with Palestinians who gathered after an Isha (night) prayer

Fire can be seen over cars queuing on a busy main road in Jerusalem as Israeli forces intervene with Palestinians who gathered after an Isha (night) prayer

A fire rages at sunrise in Khan Yunish following an Israeli airstrike on targets in the southern Gaza strip, early on May 12, 2021. - Israeli air raids in the Gaza Strip have hit the homes of high-ranking members of the Hamas militant group, the military said Wednesday, with the territory's police headquarters also targeted

A fire rages at sunrise in Khan Yunish following an Israeli airstrike on targets in the southern Gaza strip, early on May 12, 2021. – Israeli air raids in the Gaza Strip have hit the homes of high-ranking members of the Hamas militant group, the military said Wednesday, with the territory’s police headquarters also targeted

Israelis sing to keep their spirits up in a Tel Aviv bomb shelter 

Footage has emerged of Israelis singing in a bomb shelter as fighting between the Jewish state and Hamas intensified today amid warnings of all-out war.

The video was taken in Tel Aviv overnight as the city was targeted by a barrage of rockets fired from Gaza.

It shows a large group of people standing in what appears to be a basement car park being led in song by Shuli Rand, a well-known Jewish actor and musician.

The song is called Between Holiness and Secularity, and the lyrics that appear in the video translate as: ‘Please save me and please keep me from harm.’

Footage has emerged of Israelis in a bomb shelter in Tel Aviv overnight singing as the city was targeted by 201 Hamas rockets

Footage has emerged of Israelis in a bomb shelter in Tel Aviv overnight singing as the city was targeted by 201 Hamas rockets

Tel Aviv found itself targeted overnight by rockets as Hamas said 210 rockets had been fired at the city, which is Israel’s most-populous. 

The strike was in retaliation for a multi-storey block of apartments that was blown up in Gaza, Hamas said. 

At least 65 people have been killed in Gaza since violence escalated on Monday, according to the enclave’s health ministry. Six people have been killed in Israel, medical officials said. 

A 56-year-old Jewish man was severely wounded after Arabs pelted his car with rocks, according to the Magen David Adom emergency service.

The violence soon spread to other mixed communities across Israel. In neighboring Ramle, ultra-nationalist Jewish demonstrators vandalized Arab cars.

In Acre, protesters torched Uri Buri, a famous Jewish-owned seafood restaurant. Magen David Adom said 46 people were wounded in the riots.

Rosenfeld said there were several different instances of Arabs attacking Jews, and that 12 police officers were wounded.

He said 270 suspects were arrested at 40 locations across the country where vehicles were set on fire and public property was damaged.

‘The Arabs don’t want us here, but we’re going to stay,’ said Avraham Sagron, a Jewish resident of Lod, as he surveyed the charred entrance of the synagogue.

Mr Netanyahu visited Lod and Acre, where he pledged to ‘stop the anarchy’ and restore order ‘with an iron fist if needed.’

He called on Arab and other community leaders to condemn the violence and act to stop it.

Authorities deployed hundreds of police to Lod and other areas, including paramilitary border police who usually operate in the occupied West Bank.

They also ordered a nighttime curfew in Lod.

Arabs say the violence of the past two days was not directed at Jews, but at religious nationalists with close ties to the settlement movement who have moved into mixed areas in recent years, pushing Arab residents out.

Israel’s Arab minority makes up about 20 per cent of the population and are the descendants of Palestinians who stayed in the country after the 1948 war surrounding Israel’s creation.

During this time an estimated 700,000 fled or were driven from their homes in towns like Lod.

They have citizenship, including the right to vote, but face widespread discrimination.

Arab citizens speak Hebrew and are well-represented in Israel’s medical profession and universities.

But they largely identify with the Palestinian cause, leading many Israelis to view them with suspicion.

Lod’s Arabs, who make up about a third of the city’s population, are among the poorest communities in Israel.

‘We’re talking about young people who have no horizon, no dreams, who are unemployed and live in a very difficult reality,’ said Dr Nasreen Haddad Haj-Yahya, the director of the Arab-Jewish relations program at the Israel Democracy Institute, an independent think tank.

She said the anger of the last two days was not directed at Lod’s longtime Jewish community but at more ideological recent arrivals.

‘It’s not because of who they are. It’s because they are trying to Judaize Lod. They are trying to drive out the indigenous Arab residents,’ she said.

She added: ‘The young people see it as a threat to their presence in the land, to their existence.’

Israeli artillery in action as the escalation continues between Israeli army and Hamas at the Gaza Border, Israel, 12 May 2021. At least 70 people have been killed in the conflict, including around 16 children

Israeli artillery in action as the escalation continues between Israeli army and Hamas at the Gaza Border, Israel, 12 May 2021. At least 70 people have been killed in the conflict, including around 16 children

Pictured: Palestinians leave their neighbourhood to head to a safer location as Israeli warplanes continue air strikes on Gaza Strip, in Gaza City, Gaza on May 12

Pictured: Palestinians leave their neighbourhood to head to a safer location as Israeli warplanes continue air strikes on Gaza Strip, in Gaza City, Gaza on May 12

Hamas militants and their allies have fired more than 1,000 missiles at Israel, though many have been shot down by the Iron Dome defence system, while others have landed inside Gaza. The Israeli towns of Ashdod, Ashkelon and Yehud have been struck, as well as the most populous city, Tel Aviv. In the Gaza Strip, the Israeli Air Force has targeted suspected Hamas strongholds in Gaza City as well as the southern settlements Rafah and Khan Yunis

Another multi-storey building was destroyed in Gaza on Wednesday evening by an Israeli air strike, prompting Hamas to retaliate with 130 rockets of its own, as the deadly fighting in the middle east continued on Wednesday. Pictured: Smoke rises from Al-Sharouk tower hit by an Israeli air strikes, in Gaza City on May 12, 2021

Another multi-storey building was destroyed in Gaza on Wednesday evening by an Israeli air strike, prompting Hamas to retaliate with 130 rockets of its own, as the deadly fighting in the middle east continued on Wednesday. Pictured: Smoke rises from Al-Sharouk tower hit by an Israeli air strikes, in Gaza City on May 12, 2021

Heavy smoke and fire rise from Al-Sharouk tower as it collapses after being hit by an Israeli air strike, in Gaza City on May 12, 2021. An Israeli air strike destroyed a multi-storey building in Gaza City today

Heavy smoke and fire rise from Al-Sharouk tower as it collapses after being hit by an Israeli air strike, in Gaza City on May 12, 2021. An Israeli air strike destroyed a multi-storey building in Gaza City today

Thabet Abu Rass, the co-director of the Abraham Initiatives, which promotes Jewish-Arab coexistence, said the six Arab members of Lod’s municipal council have been sidelined and the city’s budget heavily favors Jews. He accused Mayor Yair Revivo of inciting against Arabs.

Revivo, a member of Netanyahu’s right-wing Likud party, has courted controversy by complaining about the volume of the Muslim call to prayer in Lod and for remarks that appeared to cast its Arab residents as a national security threat.

‘He should be a mayor for everybody,’ said Abu Rass, who lives near Lod and has an office there. ‘He’s not giving equal services for all residents.’

The mayor’s spokesman said he was not available for comment. Earlier, Revivo had urged Arab residents to end the violence, saying: ‘The day after, we will still have to live here together.’

Israeli officials often hold up the Arab minority as proof of their commitment to tolerance, frequently pointing out that Arab citizens enjoy civic rights and freedoms that many Arab states deny their own people.

Ghassan Munayyer, a Lod-based activist, says the veneer of coexistence conceals deeper disparities, including in housing and infrastructure, comparing its Arab neighborhoods to ‘refugee camps.’

‘The Jews love saying there’s coexistence. They go out to eat in an Arab restaurant and they call it coexistence,’ he said. ‘But they don’t see Arabs as equal human beings who have rights that they have to respect.’