President Joe Biden 'appalled' by violence during pro-Palestinian protest at Los Angeles synagogue
UNB
Publish: 25 Jun 2024, 03:51 PM
LOS
ANGELES, Jun 25 (AP/UNB) - Opponents of the Israel-Hamas war in Gaza staged a
protest that evolved into brawling and one arrest outside a Los Angeles
synagogue over the weekend in violence condemned on Monday by President Joe
Biden and the city's mayor, who called for more police patrols.
Fighting between
pro-Palestinian demonstrators and counterprotesters erupted Sunday outside the
Adas Torah synagogue in the heavily Jewish Pico-Robertson neighborhood and
police were called in to break it up.
"I'm appalled by
the scenes outside of Adas Torah synagogue in Los Angeles," Biden said in
post on social media site X. "Intimidating Jewish congregants is
dangerous, unconscionable, antisemitic, and un-American."
At a Monday news
conference, Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass said the violence was
"abhorrent" and that blocking access to a place of worship was
unacceptable.
"This violence was
designed to stoke fear, it was designed to divide, but hear me loud and clear,
it will fail," Bass said.
The mayor said she would
ask the city attorney's office to review the permitting process for protests
and look into a possible ban on wearing masks at demonstrations.
One person was arrested
but the incident was still under investigation, police said.
Interim Chief Dominic
Choi said the Los Angeles Police Department on Monday began providing
additional patrols in Pico-Robertson and outside houses of worship citywide.
The department will work with community leaders to protect neighborhoods and
provide a more "robust" tactical response if future demonstrations
spiral into violence, Choi said.
Karen Abital, a
pro-Israel demonstrator who was at Sunday's melee, said it appeared that some
people showed up to the synagogue with the intention of starting trouble.
"People got
aggressive and just started pushing. And someone got punched and fell on the
floor," Abital said. "That's when it got violent very quickly."
Councilwoman Katy
Yaroslavsky, who represents the area, called the violence antisemitic and said
it was particularly concerning that it happened "in front of a synagogue
in the heart of LA's Jewish community."
"Everyone has the
right to protest, and everyone also has the right to be safe from fear and
violence," Yaroslavsky said.
The Israel-Hamas war
erupted in response to the Oct. 7 assault by Hamas-led militants who killed
1,200 people and took 250 people hostage in southern Israel. The war has killed
more than 37,000 Palestinians, according to the Health Ministry in the Hamas-ruled
territory. It has sparked a humanitarian crisis and displaced most of the
territory's 2.3 million population.
END/UNB/AP/PR
