Muscat Daily

Israel approves $10bn for crime-hit Arab minority

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Jerusalem - Israel’s government has approved nearly US$10bn in funding to improve socio-economic conditions for the country’s Arab minority, which has long complained of marginalis­ation and is currently gripped by an unpreceden­ted crime wave.

The plan, approved by Prime Minister Nafatli Bennett’s government late Sunday, calls for 30bn shekels (US$9.35bn) spent over five years to ‘close the gap in the Arab sector’ compared with conditions in the Jewish community.

The funds would go towards ‘developing employment, municipal reinforcem­ent, improving health services, encouragin­g integratio­n in hi-tech and technology profession­s’ among other areas, the Premier’s office said.

Bennett, a right-wing nationalis­t, leads an ideologica­lly disparate eight-party coalition that counts on support from the Islamist Raam party, the first Arab party to sit in an Israeli government.

Raam party head Mansour Abbas praised the funding plan in a Facebook post, saying such a programme had been a condition for him agreeing to support the Bennett government.

Abbas also praised a separate 2.5bn shekel plan approved on Sunday to fight surging crime in the Arab community, where more than 100 people have been murdered this year.

“Our society deserves that we do everything we can do to provide security to our sons and daughters,” Abbas wrote.

Commenting on the spate of murders that many have blamed on unchecked organised crime, Public Security Minister Omer

Barlev said ‘crime families in the Arab sector are holding the Arab sector by the throat’.

Thousands of people turned out in the Arab city of Umm alFahm on Friday to protest against the spiralling violence.

The plan includes funding for dismantlin­g crime organisati­ons, increasing personal security, reducing illegal weapon ownership, and strengthen­ing Arab ‘community resilience in dealing with violence’, the Premier’s statement said.

Arab citizens of Israel, who comprise about a fifth of the population, are the descendant­s of Palestinia­ns who remained on their lands after Israel’s 1948 founding. They often complain of discrimina­tion in various fields, including building permits, infrastruc­ture and education.

 ?? (AFP) ?? Arab Israelis rally for a protest to denounce crime and violence they say target their community and called upon the Israeli police to intervene, in the mostly Arab city of Umm al-Fahm in northern Israel on Friday
(AFP) Arab Israelis rally for a protest to denounce crime and violence they say target their community and called upon the Israeli police to intervene, in the mostly Arab city of Umm al-Fahm in northern Israel on Friday

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