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Israeli football fans attacked in Amsterdam. The violence was condemned as anti-Semitic
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Israeli football fans attacked in Amsterdam. The violence was condemned as anti-Semitic

Dutch authorities say youths on scooters attacked Israeli fans in hit-and-runs overnight after a soccer match in Amsterdam, apparently fueled by calls to target Jews posted on social media.

AMSTERDAM (AP) — Israeli fans were attacked after a soccer match in Amsterdam by hordes of youths apparently annoyed by calls on social media to target Jews, Dutch authorities said Friday. Five people were treated for injuries in hospitals and dozens were arrested.

Tensions have been rising in the Dutch capital since Israeli campaigns in Gaza and Lebanoneven before Thursday evening Europa League match between Ajax and Maccabi Tel-Aviv. Amsterdam authorities banned a planned pro-Palestinian demonstration near the stadium, and video showed a large crowd of Israeli fans chanting anti-Arab slogans en route to the match.

Then, youths on scooters and on foot crisscrossed the city looking for Israeli supporters, punching and kicking them, then quickly fleeing to escape police, said Amsterdam Mayor Femke Halsema.

In Telegram groups, she added, “we talk about people going on a Jewish hunt. It’s so shocking and so despicable that I still can’t imagine it. »

Police had to escort some supporters back to hotels, according to authorities.

Ofek Ziv, a Maccabi fan from the Israeli town of Petah Tikva, said someone – he did not see who – threw a rock at him as he and a friend were leaving the stadium. He was hit in the head, causing slight bleeding. He said a group of Arab men began chasing him, before he and his friend got into a taxi to pick up other fans. They took refuge in a hotel.

“I’m very scared, it’s very striking. This shouldn’t happen to anyone, especially in Amsterdam. Many friends were injured, kidnapped, robbed, and the police did not come to help us,” he said.

Another fan, Alyia Cohen, said he and his friends were approached by a number of hostile men as they returned to their hotel after the match. Because the group was not wearing Maccabi jerseys, “they didn’t recognize that we were Israelis… Nothing happened to us, but there was a lot of chaos there that we didn’t expect.”

Speaking on his return to Israel, he said he would return for more matches. “We are not afraid of anything, ours belongs to the people of Israel. »

Amsterdam police spokeswoman Sara Tillart said it was too early in the investigation to say whether anyone other than soccer fans was targeted.

Five people were treated in hospital and released, while around 20 to 30 people suffered minor injuries, police said. At least 62 suspects have been arrested, 10 of whom remain in custody, city prosecutor René de Beukelaer told reporters at a news conference on Friday.

With condemnation of the violence as an anti-Semitic influx from across Europe, the attacks shattered Amsterdam’s long-cherished vision of itself as a beacon of tolerance and a refuge for persecuted religions, including Sephardic Jews from Portugal and Spain centuries ago.

Halsema called the violence “an eruption of anti-Semitism that we hoped to never see again in Amsterdam.”

Police said security would be increased at Jewish institutions in the city, which has a large Jewish community and was home to Jews. Anne Frank, chronicler of the Second World War and his family while hiding from the Nazi occupiers.

The violence reverberated intensely in Israel and throughout Europe. Israel’s foreign minister left on an urgent trip to the Netherlands and the government initially ordered two planes to be sent to the Dutch capital to bring fans home. The Prime Minister’s Office later said it would work to help citizens arrange commercial flights.

A statement from Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s office said that “the harsh images of the assault on our citizens in Amsterdam will not be ignored” and that Netanyahu “views this horrific incident with the utmost seriousness.” He demanded that the Dutch government take “strong and rapid action” against those involved.

Maccabi CEO Ben Mansford spoke to the press at Israel International Airport as some fans returned. “A lot of people went to see a football match … to support Israel, to support the Star of David,” he said. For them to be attacked, “it’s a very sad time for all of us, considering the last year we’ve had.”

The extent of Thursday evening’s attacks, nor where or when they took place, was not clear. Tensions had been brewing for days.

A Palestinian flag was torn down from a building in Amsterdam on Wednesday, Dutch television channel NOS reported, and authorities banned a pro-Palestinian demonstration near the stadium.

Before the match, large crowds of supporters of the Israeli team could be seen on video chanting anti-Arab slogans as they marched towards the stadium, escorted by police.

“Let the IDF win and (expletive) the Arabs,” supporters chanted, using the acronym for the Israeli army, as they clenched their fists. It also shows police pushing several pro-Palestinian protesters away from a gathering of Maccabi supporters in a square earlier in the day.

De Beukelaer said police were investigating “to what extent an organization is behind” the attacks on Israeli fans, adding: “I have too few indications at the moment.”

Security concerns over staging matches against visiting Israeli teams led the Belgian football federation to refuse to stage a men’s Nations League match in September. This match against Israel was played in Hungary, without fans in the stadium.

Israel was exiled from the Asian Football Confederation in the 1970s after Arab countries refused to play against it. Israel participated in European qualifying for the 1982 World Cup and has been a member of UEFA, the European football body, since 1994.

The violence in Amsterdam will undoubtedly lead to a review of security at future matches involving Israeli teams. UEFA, the European football body, already announced on Monday that Maccabi’s next match in the Europa League, scheduled in Istanbul on November 28 against the Turkish team Besiktas, would be moved to a neutral venue, yet to be determined, “following a decision by the Turkish authorities”. »

Meanwhile, the Israel national team is scheduled to face France in Paris on November 14 in the Nations League. French Interior Minister Bruno Retailleau said on Thursday the match would go ahead as planned at the Stade de France, just outside the French capital, after obtaining assurances from police.

“I think for some symbolic reason we must not give in, we must not give up,” he said, noting that sports fans around the world came together this year for the Paris Olympics to celebrate the “universal values” of sport.

“We will be uncompromising,” he added. “To touch a fellow Jew is to touch the republic. »

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Associated Press reporters Julia Frankel and Ibrahim Hazboun in Jerusalem, Lee Keath in Cairo, Graham Dunbar in Geneva and Raf Casert in Brussels contributed to this report.