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Monday 18 August 2014 - 09:26

Thousands of left-wing Israelis stage anti-war demo

Story Code : 405363
Demonstrators hold up placards reading in Hebrew: "One justice for all" (L) and "when there is no peace war comes" as thousands of Israelis protest during a left-wing peace rally in the coastal city of Tel Aviv on August 16, 2014
Demonstrators hold up placards reading in Hebrew: "One justice for all" (L) and "when there is no peace war comes" as thousands of Israelis protest during a left-wing peace rally in the coastal city of Tel Aviv on August 16, 2014
The pro-peace protest was the largest in Israel since it launched operation Protective Edge on July 8, an assault that has seen at least 1,980 Palestinian deaths and 67 on the Israeli side.
 
It was organized by the opposition left-wing Meretz party and Peace Now, a group opposed to Jewish settlement building on occupied territory, and the communist Hadash party.
 
Israeli and Palestinian negotiators were Saturday to resume indirect talks with Egyptian mediators on reaching a more permanent ceasefire before a current truce expires at midnight on Monday.
 
Demonstrators denounced Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's government, accusing it of refusing to negotiate with Palestinian Authority head Mahmoud Abbas.
 
"All Netanyahu's government has done is weaken Abbas and strengthen Hamas," Meretz MP Nitzan Horowitz said.
 
Party chief Zehava Galon called on Netanyahu to resign. "He has failed, both for security and for peace -- he must go," he said.
 
Writer David Grossman said Israel must "make peace with the Palestinian Authority and negotiate with the Palestinian unity government."
 
He was referring to the government of independent experts formed in early June following a reconciliation deal between Hamas and Abbas' PLO.
 
However, Netanyahu has refused any discussion with the unity government, accusing it of having links with Hamas, which Israel brands a terrorist organisation.
 
Police were deployed in force Saturday night in Tel Aviv's Yitzhak Rabin Square to prevent trouble with counter-demonstrators from the right wing.
 
On Thursday, the same venue hosted a demonstration by around 10,000 Israelis, supportive of the military operation, urging the government and the army to end rocket attacks from Gaza once and for all.
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