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Israel sees mass protests 4 September 2011

Watchman

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Israel sees mass protests
Posted: 04 September 2011 0349 hrs

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Israelis march in central Tel Aviv during a protest against the rising cost of living in Israel.

TEL AVIV: An estimated 400,000 Israelis poured into streets across the Jewish state on
Saturday to protest against the high cost of living
, after organisers called for a
"million-man march" to revitalise their movement.
The estimated figures were record-breaking, exceeding even the 300,000 people who
took part in similar demonstration on August 6, and lending new life to the six-week
old movement calling for sweeping economic reforms.
Israeli news channel 10 estimated that 400,000 people were demonstrating in cities
and towns across the Jewish state, taking to the streets shortly after the end of the
Jewish Sabbath. Israeli police declined to give estimates for crowd figures, despite
having given them during previous demonstrations. In Tel Aviv, a vast crowd of mostly
young and secular demonstrators chanted slogans skewering Israeli Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu, who protesters accuse of failing to take seriously their calls
for sweeping economic change. "The land of milk and honey, but not for everybody,"
read one sign carried by a demonstrator in the coastal city. Other protesters waved
Israeli flags and chanted against Israel's main supermarket companies, accusing them
of unfair pricing. Addressing the crowd in Tel Aviv, student union president Itzik Shmuli
said the turnout showed the continued strength of the movement.
"They told us that the movement was slowing down. Tonight we are showing that it's the
opposite," he said.
"We are the new Israelis, determined to continue the fight for a fairer and better society,
knowing that it will be long and difficult," he told the cheering protesters. Organisers said
they hoped to bring record-breaking numbers of people into the streets, exceeding even
the unprecedented August 6 turnout.
Those protests marked something of a high point for the protest movement, which began
in mid-May when frustrated young Israelis pitched tents on of Tel Aviv's trendiest
neighbourhoods to illustrate their inability to find affordable housing.
The movement quickly attracted support from across Israeli society, prompting Netanyahu's
government to pledge action. But in recent weeks, and particularly in the wake of a militant
attack that killed nine Israelis, the movement appeared to have lost some momentum and
commentators questioned whether it had peaked.
Ahead of the demonstrations, organisers said Saturday's turnout would show the movement
remained strong, and would pile new pressure on Netanyahu's government, which has yet
to take any concrete reform measures. "We going to prove to those who have buried the
movement that they were wrong and that the people are ready to go into the streets for
social justice, affordable housing and the defence of public education and health services,"
protest leader Stav Shafir told AFP. "We must maintain pressure on Benjamin Netanyahu,
this is not the moment to cede ground, while he has not listened to us and done absolutely
nothing," Shafir said. Netanyahu's government has pledged to take the protesters' calls
seriously and set up a committee head by respected economist Manuel Trachtenberg to
examine their demands.
But the demonstrators say the measure is an attempt to stall, and point to Netanyahu's
insistence that his government will not finance reforms by spending outside its current budget.
"We have formulated very specific demands in terms of necessary budget increases for housing,
education and health, but no far not a single concrete measure has been taken,"
protest organiser Uri Metuki said.
 
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