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How Eritrean street fights link to Bibi’s court reforms

Several questions also remain unanswered from the rioting

September 7, 2023 13:01
Eritrea
Eritrean asylum seekers who oppose the regime in Eritrea and pro regime activists clash with Israeli police in south Tel Aviv, September 2, 2023. Photo by Omer Fichman/Flash90 *** Local Caption *** הפגנה תומכי משטר אריתריאה פליטים דרום תל אביב כנס מבקשי מקלט עבודה
4 min read

As if the internal divisions within Israel were not enough, last Shabbat saw unprecedented violence on the streets of southern Tel Aviv. Hundreds of Eritrean migrants fought each other in mass brawls, armed with “cold” weapons (clubs and rocks) and allegedly “hot” ones too (guns and explosives).

By the time police were able to restore order, more than 170 people — including 30 officers — had sustained injuries requiring hospitalisation, while there was also damage to vehicles and property.

The fighting was between rival Eritrean factions; the trigger, an Eritrean embassy event celebrating the Independence Day of the brutal dictatorship back in Asmara. The Eritrean dictatorship, now into its third decade, is ranked the third from bottom in the global press freedom index — only North Korea and the Central African Republic are rated more oppressive.

Israel, meanwhile, is the only country with a land border with the African continent. Between 2008 and 2012 tens of thousands of Africans (mostly from Eritrea and Sudan) entered Israel illegally, crossing from the Sinai Peninsula on foot, the majority claiming persecution and therefore political asylum. Then Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu built a wall. Incidentally, that border runs along the same line first demarcated in an agreement between the British and the Turkish Ottomans in 1906 to protect the British-controlled Suez Canal with “strategic depth”.  The modern fence was built in full coordination with the Egyptians and has dramatically prevented a further influx of migrants.