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Germany: Dozens injured at Berlin pro-Palestinian protest

Germany: Dozens injured at Berlin pro-Palestinian protest

Time of India17-05-2025
People attend a pro-Palestinians demonstration to commemorate the Nakba Day in Berlin, Germany (AP)
Several protesters and police officers sustained injuries during violent confrontations at a
pro-Palestinian demonstration
marking Nakba Day in Berlin on Thursday.
According to police, who made over 50 arrests, approximately 1,100 people took part in the demonstration in the Berlin district of Kreuzberg in remembrance of the Nakba and protesting against Israel's continuing military operations in the Gaza Strip.
Nakba means "catastrophe" in Arabic and refers to the forced displacement or fleeing of Palestinians during the Arab-Israeli War of 1948 after Israel's founding. About 700,000 Palestinians fled or were expelled from their homes in the years before and after the proclamation of the State of Israel.
Some 1,200 Israelis, around 800 civilians, were killed and another 250 abducted in the attack on Israel by the Palestinian militant group Hamas on October 7, 2023.
Israel's military response has seen over 53,000 Palestinians mainly women and children, killed, according to health authorities in Hamas-led Gaza Strip, whose casualty counts do not differentiate between militants and civilians but are regarded as reliable by international organizations, and much of the territory laid to waste.
How did the
Nakba Day protest
unfold?
In Berlin on Thursday, demonstrators originally wanted to march from the Südstern square in the south of the capital to the neighboring district of Neukölln, but a local administrative court ruled that the protest must remain stationary.
"The Nakba is a continuing campaign of ethnic cleansing which has never stopped," claimed one speaker at the demonstration. Other protesters reportedly shouted phrases accusing the Israeli government and military of being "child murderers, women murderers, baby murderers" as well as "From the river to the sea, Palestine will be free."
The latter phrase is illegal in Germany as it is considered an approval of a crime under paragraph 140 of the German Criminal Code in that it can be interpreted as a demand for the region between the Jordan River and Mediterranean Sea to be free of the Jewish state of Israel, an interpretation disputed by some Palestinian groups.
Police officer 'trampled on'
According to the
TAZ
daily newspaper, the use of this phrase prompted attempts by police to make arrests. Police said they were also responding to "significant acts of violence" against officers "from within the crowd," out of which bottles and stones were reportedly thrown.
According to the police, one officer was dragged into the crowd, forced to the ground and trampled on. The 36-year-old reportedly suffered severe injuries to his upper body, including a broken arm, and remains in the hospital.
"The attack on a police officer at the demonstration in Kreuzberg is nothing but a cowardly, brutal act of violence," said Berlin Mayor Kai Wegner of the conservative Christian Democrats (CDU). "Attacks against officers are attacks on law and order and therefore against all of us."
According to the police, 11 officers were injured in total as well as an unspecified number of protesters. The injured demonstrators were treated by the Berlin fire department, which said the scale of its deployment wasn't particularly large.
Berlin politicians condemn 'brutal violence'
Berlin's senator for the interior, Iris Spranger of the center-left Social Democrats (SPD), promised tough action against those arrested.
"Yesterday's demonstration in Berlin escalated in a horrific manner," she said." This brutal violence against officers has nothing to do with political protest."
The German-Israeli Society (DIG) spoke of a "strong radicalization in this area and an associated increase in violence," and called for the authorization of such demonstrations to be reconsidered.
"Often, these events are not demonstrations for the rights and the legitimate concerns of Palestinians but merely express outright hatred of Israel," it claimed.
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