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Romanian police to face legal action for dragging Israeli tourists out of a taxi and beating them

The incident occurred during anti-government protests on Friday

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Four Israeli tourists intend to file a criminal complaint after being dragged out from a taxi and beaten by police in Bucharest, according to the Israeli Embassy in Romania.

The tourists were stopped on Friday evening in Victoria Square, where huge anti-government protests were being staged, while travelling to their hotel from a restaurant in Bucharest.

Between 30,000 and 50,000 people turned out for Friday's protest in the Romanian capital against the ruling Social Democratic Party.

The meeting descended into violence when gendarmes intervened and, according to demonstrators, used extreme force.

Israel said it had made a formal protest to the Romanian government.

"They were dragged out of the car, even though they showed their passports and explained they had nothing" to do with the protest, the embassy said, according to AP.

There was no immediate response from the Romanian police, but President Klaus Iohannis condemned the violence, saying "the brutal repression of demonstrators is totally unacceptable."

"In a European state, attacking innocent people, attacking journalists, attacking women and children is inconceivable," he said in a statement on Monday that called for an investigation.

Marco Maximilian Katz, an Israeli and Romanian national who lives in Bucharest, said the police's actions had been "disgraceful".

“It is also scandalous that the police refused to take a look at the passports presented to them by the tourists who had nothing to do with the demonstrations. This should not happen in a EU member state,” he said.

Many Israelis have ancestral roots in Romania and some of them have taken advantage of the country’s nationality law, which allows them to reclaim Romanian citizenship of which they or their family were deprived when emigrating to Israel.

At 800,000, Romania boasted one of the largest pre-war Jewish communities in Europe. Around half survived the Holocaust and most made aliyah after 1945.  

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