Conflict: | 2023 Israeli Eritrean clashes |
Place: | Tel Aviv, Israel |
Partof: | Eritrea–Israel relations |
Date: | 2 September 2023 |
Combatant1: | Eritrean opposition immigrants |
Combatant2: | Eritrean pro-government immigrants |
Combatant3: | Government of Israel |
Commander1: | Unknown |
Commander2: | Unknown |
Commander3: | Benjamin Netanyahu |
Result: | Suppressed |
Casualties1: | 84 injured |
Casualties3: | 30 injured |
Casualties2: | Unknown |
On 2 September 2023, violent clashes took place in the streets of South Tel Aviv between Eritrean migrants opposing Isaias Afwerki's government, migrant supporters of Isaias Afwerki's government, and later with Israeli police trying to restore order.[1] As a result of the clashes, more than 110 people were injured.
Isaias Afwerki has ruled Eritrea since independence in 1991. The country does not hold elections and lacks a parliament, independent courts, and civil organizations. The country has a one-party system; freedom of expression and press are severely restricted.[2] There is also strict compulsory military service and a system of forced labor from which many Eritreans flee abroad.[3]
According to the Assaf refugee aid organization, there are currently about 25,500 Eritrean asylum seekers living in Israel. Eritreans who fled to Israel across the border with Egypt say they would face persecution if they were repatriated.[4] The refugees have settled in a number of poor neighborhoods in the city of Tel Aviv, Israel's economic capital.
The clashes erupted during an event organized by the Eritrean embassy to mark Revolution Day on September 1, which commemorates the start of Eritrea's war of independence against Ethiopia in 1961. Anti-government protesters had earlier asked police to cancel a pro-government event organized by the Eritrean embassy in Israel. They also accused the Eritrean embassy of trying to spy on them.[5]
The protests came amid the judicial reform protests against Benjamin Netanyahu.[6]
On 2 September, clashes broke out after hundreds of opposition Eritrean immigrant Eritreans, approached the site of a pro-government event. Many of the anti-government demonstrators wore sky blue shirts inspired by the 1952 Eritrean flag, a symbol of opposition to the country's government, while government supporters wore purple shirts with a map of Eritrea.[7]
Protesters broke through police barriers and smashed the windows of police and other vehicles, as well as the windows of nearby shops, Haaretz newspaper reported. They were also able to enter the grounds outside the Eritrean embassy and smashed chairs and tables.
Footage on social media showed Eritrean government supporters beating anti-government demonstrators with batons. Reuters journalists saw men with head wounds and bloody hands, some lying on the ground of a children's playground.
Al Jazeera correspondent Paul Brennan said that police did not expect the intensity of the violence that erupted. "The demonstrators managed to break through the barriers quite quickly. Police had to respond with tear gas and flash-bang grenades. There were running battles between the demonstrators and the police in riot equipment," he said. Residents said the streets of central Tel Aviv sounded like a war zone as police helicopters buzzed overhead and Israeli officers fired live rounds into the air.[8]
Police said they have arrested 39 suspects who attacked police officers and pelted them with rocks. Some of them had guns, tear gas, and stun guns, officers said. Police also said they were reinforcing their personnel in the area as clashes between Eritreans among themselves and with police reportedly continued in south Tel Aviv.
By the evening, the clashes had stopped. The police were still rounding up protesters, putting them on buses.
Israeli medical officials said more than 114 people were injured, including about 30 police officers.
Prime Minister of Israel Benjamin Netanyahu said he would convene a meeting on 3 September to discuss measures against those involved in the clashes, including deportations. A statement from his office called them "illegal infiltrators".
On 3 September, Netanyahu said the Eritreans involved in the Tel Aviv clashes should be deported. "We want harsh measures against the rioters, including the immediate deportation of those who took part," the prime minister said in a special ministerial meeting called to deal with the aftermath of the violence. Netanyahu requested his ministers present him with plans "for the removal of all the other illegal infiltrators", and noted in his remarks that the Supreme Court struck down some measures meant to coerce people to leave.[9]
An Israeli senior police officer said, "We were very surprised by the level of violence, with sights you see only in the West Bank."[10]