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Thousands march in Tel Aviv to condemn violence against women

Demonstrators in Tel Aviv protest violence against women at a rally on November 26, 2018, marking the International Day for the Elimination of Violence against Women.

Thousands have rallied in Tel Aviv to protest violence against women in Israel, a week after Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu rejected a Knesset proposal to establish a parliamentary commission of inquiry on the issue.

Some 2,000 protesters took to the streets in Tel Aviv to mark the International Day for the Elimination of Violence against Women, chanting “We won’t be silent anymore,” “No means no,” and “We are not transparent – women make revolutions.”

The participants called on authorities in Tel Aviv to take action to halt the murder and abuse of women in Israel.

“We call for an end to the reality in which more and more women are raising their voices, but the authorities refuse to listen,” Miriam Scheller, director of the Tel Aviv Assistance Center, said at the rally.

Scheller said activists will keep up the fight against “a reality,” which has seen nine out of 10 rape cases in Israel being closed without any indictment, “a reality in which they talk about security, but that doesn’t include our security.”

“We will continue to work to change the priorities until we put an end to rape culture,” she added.

The protest was organized by several women’s organizations, including the Tel Aviv Women’s Crisis Support Center; the Israel Women’s Network; the Feminine Spirit; Na’amat and the Women’s Counseling Center.

The organizers said at least 20 women have been murdered by their relatives or partners this year.

Last week, Israel’s ruling coalition voted against a proposal by opposition lawmaker Aida Touma-Sliman from Joint List to establish a parliamentary commission of inquiry “to investigate the failures and omissions in defending women.”

Speaking at the rally, lawmaker Tamar Zandberg, who heads Merez party, urged the Netanyahu administration to “take responsibility.”

“They tell us it’s not political, but when public officials reject a motion in the Knesset against the war against the murder of women, it cannot be said that it is not political. The allocation of resources is political,” she said.


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