Massive demonstrations in Tel Aviv/ Will internal division lead to civil war?
Channel 12 of the Zionist regime reported that between 150,000 and 200,000 supporters of Netanyahu demonstrated in Jerusalem in support of the plan to reform the judiciary and chanted the slogan that people want judicial reforms.
“Yediot Aharonot” newspaper also wrote: Thousands of right-wing “Israelis” demonstrated in front of the regime’s Supreme Court in Jerusalem in support of the judicial reform plan.
“Al-Mayadeen” news channel reported on Thursday evening, quoting the director of this network’s office in occupied Palestine, that after 4 months of weekly demonstrations in the streets of Tel Aviv between supporters and opponents of Netanyahu’s judicial reform plan, now the widespread presence of extreme rightists in the squares of Tel Aviv shows “deepening The gap and failure of internal dialogues” in occupied Palestine.
In this connection, Amir Makhoul, a researcher of Palestinian affairs, in a television interview with al-Mayadeen channel, in an analysis referring to the internal crisis and deadlock in this regime, stated: “The timing of this demonstration has significant implications, because this event is on the eve of the synagogue’s summer vacation.” and Netanyahu is using his street supporters as a parallel force for his goals.
He added: “The Zionist regime is in a crisis of no return, and the next wave of protests will be much more violent as the demonstrations continue.”
He stated that “Israeli” media have never been neutral and have sometimes acted even more dangerously than politicians.
Since the beginning of this week, right-wing Zionist parties have called for people to participate in the so-called Million Demonstrations.
This demonstration is organized by the Likud party led by Netanyahu, the religious Zionist party led by “Bestelel Smotrich” the extremist minister of finance, “Afikha Boron” from the Likud party, the extreme right organization.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu announced last month that he would postpone the vote on his planned judicial reforms as protests against his judicial reforms intensified. He announced that he would postpone the second and third votes on the bill until after Passover, from April 5 to 13, to “provide time for a real opportunity for a real debate.” Netanyahu, however, insisted that a fundamental overhaul was necessary.
In the past three months, the occupied territories have witnessed past demonstrations against Netanyahu’s judicial reform plan, and the opponents of this plan considered it an attempt to reduce the powers of the judicial authorities against the executive powers.