Israeli soccer fans in Amsterdam ambushed by gangs of anti-Israel attackers shouting ‘Free Palestine,’ Netanyahu sends planes to evacuate citizens
- WGON
- Nov 8, 2024
- 3 min read
( NYPost )

Hundreds of Israeli soccer fans were hunted down and viciously assaulted by gangs of anti-Israel thugs shouting “Free Palestine” in Amsterdam overnight – prompting the Jewish state to send rescue planes to help evacuate its terrified citizens, officials said Friday.
Scores of Maccabi Tel Aviv fans were set upon by rioters as they were leaving the stadium following a Europa League game against a Dutch team, AFC Ajax, late Thursday in what Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu decried as a “planned antisemitic attack.”
At least 10 Israelis were left injured, including five who had to be hospitalized, the Times of Israel reported, citing officials. A handful of others still hadn’t made contact with their loved ones in the wake of the violence, the outlet said.

More than 60 people were arrested amid the chaos, authorities said.
“This is a very dark moment for the city, for which I am deeply ashamed,” Amsterdam mayor Femke Halsema told reporters, adding the ordeal was orchestrated by “antisemitic hit-and-run squads” who pelted some victims with fireworks.

“Antisemitic criminals attacked and assaulted visitors to our city, in hit-and-run actions,” she continued, adding many of the perps had managed to flee the heavy police presence on scooters.
Footage of the violence showed assailants shouting anti-Israeli slurs as cowering victims were kicked and beaten.
In another disturbing clip, a fan could be surrounded by several attackers, including one that appeared to be holding a Palestinian flag, as a perp kicked him to the ground.

A separate assault showed a helpless victim lying on the ground as he was kicked repeatedly.
One man was mowed down by a car, causing him to flip over the hood, according to footage shared by the Israeli Embassy to the United States.
“Israeli soccer fans should be allowed to support their team without fear of physical danger,” the embassy declared. “The days of chasing Jews down European city streets should remain in the dark annals of history.”
Netanyahu directed two rescue planes to be flown to Amsterdam to assist Israeli citizens, his office said early Friday.
The Israeli National Security Council also urged Israelis to hunker down in their hotel rooms and avoid going out on the street or wearing any visible Jewish or Israeli symbols in the wake of the attack.
Netanyahu, meanwhile, called on the Dutch government and authorities to take “vigorous and swift action against the rioters, and ensure the safety of our citizens.”

“The harsh pictures of the assault on our citizens in Amsterdam will not be overlooked,” the prime minister’s office tweeted.
Dutch Prime Minister Dick Schoof said he was “horrified by the anti-Semitic attacks on Israeli citizens,” which he called “completely unacceptable.”
Schoof said he had assured Netanyahu by phone that “the perpetrators will be identified and prosecuted.”
The horror was widely condemned by Jewish leaders – with some calling it “a new Kristallnacht,” referring to the “Night of Broken Glass” program committed by the Nazis.
“Once again, we are forced to witness that the world has failed to learn from the dark lessons of history as Jewish blood is once again shed with impunity,” Yaakov Hagoel, Chairman of the World Zionist Organization, said in a statement.
“I call, in the strongest and most unequivocal terms, on the leaders of the world: the responsibility for the safety of Jews in your countries is yours alone.”
“Exactly 86 years after Kristallnacht, when Nazis, along with ordinary Germans hunted Jews through the streets of Europe, we see their ideological heirs rampaging through the streets of Amsterdam once again seeking to spill Jewish blood,” Combat Antisemitism Movement CEO Sacha Roytman Dratwa added.
“Thousands of Islamists, who are today’s neo-Nazis in ideology and action, in a clearly premeditated and organized fashion, targeted Jews in what feels to many as a loud echo from history.”

Authorities are still investigating the saga but pro-Palestinian and anti-Israel activists have claimed the Israeli fans were actually the first to engage in the violence.
Officials have said friction had been growing in the lead up to before the match.
Ahead of the game, video showed large crowds of Israeli supporters chanting pro-IDF messages and police pushing several anti-Israel protesters away from a Maccabi fan gathering in a square earlier in the day.
Antisemitism has skyrocketed since Hamas terrorists carried out a deadly attack on Israel on Oct. 7, 2023, leading to a wider and ongoing conflict in Gaza.
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