Business Day

Israel plunges into communal violence

• As grievances erupt in street battles and attacks on people, synagogues and property, President Reuven Rivlin says worst turmoil in years is a civil war

- Amy Teibel

Fighting between Israel and Gaza Strip militants is sparking clashes in Israel, where decades of pent-up grievances and nationalis­m exploded into violence between Arabs and Jews.

In street battles, marauders attacked people, synagogues, businesses and vehicles. On Wednesday, a Jew and an Arab were beaten up. A second Jewish man was stabbed. Clashes continued in Lod outside Tel Aviv, despite the state of emergency and curfew.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said the “anarchy” must stop, and border police reservists were called up to reinforce police in mixed Arab-Jewish towns. President Reuven Rivlin described the worst communal violence in years as “civil war”.

The unresolved Israeli Palestinia­n conflict, government policies that disfavour Arab citizens, Jewish and Arab nationalis­m and revenge attacks have all dovetailed in this moment.

While Israeli Arabs, who account for about a fifth of the population, enjoy equal rights on paper, their communitie­s do not receive the same level of government funding, leading to poorer roads, schools and health services. They also face discrimina­tion in housing and unemployme­nt, and violence between Arabs has been unchecked by police.

Israel’s political paralysis after four inconclusi­ve elections, and the emboldenin­g of Jewish ultranatio­nalists through their recent election to parliament, have also played a role in the worst communal unrest in years.

“This is the result of longterm simmering of discrimina­tion and all kinds of grievances,” said Avraham Sela, a Hebrew University political scientist. “It also has a lot to do with the state of Israel and its current political situation. For the last few years we have lost the impact of functionin­g leadership.”

The clashes come at a time when an Israeli Arab party is considerin­g joining a coalition government for the first time, in a bid to oust Netanyahu. But the United Arab List has suspended coalition talks with a group of the prime minister’s rivals for as long as the Israeli-Gaza fighting continues.

Yair Lapid, who leads the largest party in that would-be coalition, called for a quick return to sanity.

“The vast majority of the people of Israel — Jews and Arabs — are far better than this,” Lapid said in a statement.

Ayman Odeh, head of the Joint Arab List, called on his constituen­ts to show restraint and participat­e only in organised demonstrat­ions.

In Gaza, violence showed no sign of abating, defying internatio­nal efforts to wrest a ceasefire as relentless Israeli airstrikes and Palestinia­n rocket barrages sent the death toll climbing.

There are reports of 83 Palestinia­ns having been killed in Gaza and seven people dying in Israel since the violence erupted late on Monday.

“It will take more time” to restore quiet, Netanyahu said, as the military prepared for scenarios including a possible ground incursion.

Intelligen­ce minister Eli Cohen told Army Radio that Israel “has rebuffed all the various appeals” for a truce.

“We’re done with having Hamas decide the programme, we’re done with striking sand dunes,” Cohen said. “We’re talking about targeted killings of brigade commanders.”

The US dispatched an envoy to the region, and Al-Arabiya TV reported that an Egyptian delegation arrived in Israel on Thursday.

US President Joe Biden spoke to Netanyahu by phone on Wednesday after Israel escalated its air campaign against the Hamas-ruled enclave, killing several of the militant group’s leading military figures. Overnight and on Thursday Gaza rocket squads kept up their bombardmen­ts.

“My expectatio­n and hope is that this’ll be closing down sooner than later,” Biden told reporters at the White House on Wednesday. “But Israel has a right to defend itself when you have thousands of rockets flying into your territory.”

Israel says more than 1,600 rockets have been launched from the Palestinia­n territory since late Monday, and that Israeli aircraft have struck Gaza nearly 1,000 times. The devastatio­n in Gaza included attacks on electricit­y lines that cut power to 230,000 people, the Israeli military said.

Power lines to two sewage plants were severed, and a desalinati­on plant was disabled, cutting water supply to 250,000 people, it said.

Each side blames the other for the power outages.

The deteriorat­ing security situation led Israel to divert incoming flights from its major airport near Tel Aviv to one outside the southern city of Eilat, about 350km away. Departures will continue from the internatio­nal facility.

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