Protestors
have flooded into the center of Tel Aviv to voice their unhappiness with the
current government of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, currently tied with
the center-left Zionist Union ahead of a general vote.
Deutsche Welle, 8 Mar 2015
Around
25,000 Israelis rallied against Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Saturday
in Tel Aviv, 10 days ahead of the country's general election, to call for
"change."
The protest
was orchestrated by the group Million Hands, a grassroots organization
dedicated to a peaceful resolution of the conflict between Israel and Palestine
and the creation of a Palestinian state. The demonstrators gathered in Tel
Aviv's Yitzhak Rabin Square, named after the first native-born premier of
Israel and Nobel Peace laureate, who was assassinated in the square at a peace
rally in 1995.
"This
is a demonstration by Israeli citizens who are demanding a change of politics,
a peace agreement," said one of the organizers, Dror Ben Ami, speaking
with French news agency AFP.
"The
current government has failed on the social and economic fronts and has not
improved the security situation, the country has broken down…We hope that the
left will return," Ben Ami said.
The
demonstration was one of the largest anti-Netanyahu protests to be held in the
run-up to the March 17 election and shows the growing discontent with
right-wing leadership. Netanyahu's Likud party is neck and neck with the
center-left Zionist Union in opinion polls.
The current
government has remained staunchly opposed to the creation of a Palestinian
state.
Meir Dagan,
former head of the Israeli spy agency Mossad, delivered a fiery speech against
the prime minister to the crowd of thousands.
"Israel
has enemies but I do not fear them. What scares me is the current leadership of
the country," Dagan said to wild applause. "Bibi go home!" the
crowd shouted back, calling Netanyahu by his nickname.
es/cmk (AFP, AP)

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