Several New York City elected officials on Friday denounced clashes that took place between pro-Israeli and pro-Palestinian protesters in midtown Manhattan, leading to more than two dozen arrests and at least two people being hospitalised.
Published : 22 May 2021, 03:58 AM
The clashes on Thursday afternoon and evening began in Times Square and spread to the Diamond District, a small neighbourhood south of Rockefeller Center that is home to many Jewish-owned businesses, as Israel and Hamas agreed to a cease-fire after days of fighting that killed more than 230 people in Gaza and 12 in Israel.
By midday Friday, 27 people in the city had been arrested on charges including disorderly conduct and unlawful assembly, the police said.
One video showed groups of young men, many of whom waved Palestinian flags or wore traditional Palestinian scarves, moving through Midtown pushing and shouting obscenities at older men they accused of being Zionists. At one point, a firework was thrown at close range at a group of pedestrians, including protesters, the police said, adding that it was unclear who threw it.
Another video showed a man being beaten by several others while he lay in the street. A Brooklyn man, Waseem Awawdeh, 23, was charged with several counts on Friday afternoon in connection with the beating, including assault as a hate crime, aggravated harassment as a hate crime and criminal possession of a weapon. It was not immediately clear if Awawdeh had retained a lawyer.
The police said they were still searching for five to six other people in connection with the assault. The victim, Joseph Borgen, 29, was punched, kicked, pepper sprayed and hit with crutches. He was taken to Bellevue Hospital, the police said.
Mayor Bill de Blasio condemned the attack on Friday morning. “Anti-Semitism has NO place in our city,” he said on Twitter. “There’s no excuse for violence against someone because of who they are. None. We will bring the perpetrators of this vicious act of hate to justice.”
The renewed fighting between Israel and Hamas set off a wave of protests and political tension in New York and across the nation, with many rallies focused on Israel’s treatment of Palestinian people and what some demonstrators said they felt was an insufficient response to the conflict from the United States.
Multiple events in New York, including one outside the Israeli Consulate near the United Nations and another in the Bay Ridge neighbourhood of Brooklyn, drew several thousand protesters, who were joined by elected officials like Zohran Mamdani, a Democrat in the state Assembly.
Several candidates in the city’s mayoral race also weighed in on the conflict, with the initial positions of some sparking frustration and backlash on social media.
The protests remained overwhelmingly peaceful and organisers said they believed some were among the largest demonstrations in support of Palestinian people in New York in recent memory.
But news of the cease-fire on Thursday came as the mood among some groups in New York grew increasingly tense. The evening would stand out for the starkly different tone, as clashes broke out between groups of pro-Israel and pro-Palestinian demonstrators.
Many details around the incident remained unclear on Friday, and the police said they were unsure who had thrown the firework. The woman who was injured was taken to the hospital in stable condition.
Still, several local elected officials voiced concerns on Friday over the skirmishes and the perception of anti-Semitic bias in several of them.
“This is outrageous and unacceptable,” Councilman Mark Levine, who represents portions of upper Manhattan, said on Twitter. “We cannot allow this in our city.”
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