Yerushalayim Riots Leave 13 Police Injured After Parking Dispute Spirals Into Violence
Senior police officials and political leaders sharply condemned violent disturbances in Yerushalayim on Thursday after clashes between police and hundreds of chareidi youths left 13 officers wounded and led to multiple arrests.
Police Commissioner Danny Levy described the events as a “very grave incident,” pledging that authorities would “hold everyone involved to account.” His remarks came after officers were pelted with stones and other objects, a police vehicle was overturned, and riot-control measures, including tear gas and stun grenades, were deployed to regain control.
According to police, the unrest erupted following an incident involving a municipal parking inspector who was attacked while carrying out his duties. Two young men allegedly assaulted the inspector, kicking him and threatening to kill him, telling him they would “slaughter” him if he returned to the area. Officers responding to the scene detained one of the suspects, a move that quickly inflamed tensions in the neighborhood.
As word spread of the arrest, hundreds of young men surrounded the police in an attempt to free the detainee, and the situation rapidly escalated into full-scale rioting. Five of the injured officers were taken to hospital for treatment, while police confirmed that four suspects had been arrested by early evening.
Hebrew media reported that officers on the scene identified the initial assailants as draft evaders and attempted to transfer them to Military Police custody. Police statements, however, attributed the outbreak of violence solely to the parking enforcement incident and did not confirm whether draft evasion played a role.
National Security Minister Itamar Ben Gvir, who oversees the police, issued a strong condemnation, saying he “unequivocally condemns the extremist rioting in Yerushalayim,” and warning that attacks on police officers crossed a “red line.”
Opposition Leader Yair Lapid leveled harsh criticism at the government, calling the events an “inconceivable failure of the government” and a sign of the “disintegration of government institutions.” In a statement, he said, “It’s unfathomable that chareidi draft evaders can avoid arrest just because they are engaging in violence. The defense minister and prime minister continue to encourage an enterprise of [draft] evasion and refusal on historic scales.”
Lapid’s comments also referred to separate overnight confrontations in Ramat Hasharon and Herzliya, where dozens of chareidi protesters blocked Military Police from detaining draft evaders.
Channel 12 reported that Wednesday night’s protests marked the third time this month that demonstrators had successfully prevented arrests of yeshiva students.
Additional condemnation came from across the political spectrum. Yisrael Beytenu leader Avigdor Liberman labeled the Yerushalayim riot “an act of terrorism in every sense,” writing on X, “This is what happens when the country’s leadership is in the pocket of chareidi wheeler-dealers,” and adding that “patience has run out and the excuses are over, the nation demands enlistment for everyone!”
Democrats party chairman Yair Golan also blamed the government, saying the violence showed that “the draft dodgers understand that the law in Israel does not apply to them, that everything is permitted to them — and this is how it looks.” He added, “The backing for [draft] evasion, and for violence against security forces, comes from above. The prime minister and defense minister are responsible for these shocking scenes. It is time to draft everyone and restore law and order in Israel, for the sake of Israel’s security.”
{Matzav.com}
