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Police violence towards Israeli Ethiopians evokes Britain's Macpherson Report

As a community in Israel claims an eleventh life has been lost to police violence and racism, Anshel Pfeffer reflects on the difficulties Israel experienced with integration

July 11, 2019 11:02
There wer protests across the country, including this on in Tel Aviv on Monday

ByAnshel Pfeffer, Anshel Pfeffer JERUSALEM

2 min read

The day after the death of Solomon Teka, the 18-year-old shot dead by an off-duty police officer last week, Ethiopian-Israeli activists added him to their list of community members who died — murdered, they claim — as a result of police violence and racism.

Their stories of 11 dead are grist for the mill of an acrimonious debate between the community and police over what is called, for want of a better term, “over policing.”

In each case, the police either claim the young men were acting violently and the officers were responding to a perceived threat, or that it was suicide.

This latest incident is already becoming a similar battle for facts. Depending on who you follow on social media, it is either that the unnamed police officer had a history of violence and needlessly drew his gun at close-quarters, or that Solomon Teka had a history of violent delinquency, that he was endangering the policeman and his family by throwing stones, and that the officer had only fired at the ground but Mr Teka was the unfortunate victim of a ricochet.