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As violent crime soars, Israeli Arabs ask: Where’s the government?

The killing of five people at a car wash in an Arab Israeli town has shocked an Israeli public seemingly inured to the spiraling death toll from violent crime among its Arab citizens. Police say nearly 100 Arab Israelis have been killed already this year, mostly from gun violence, triple the number by the same time last year and far outstripping the rate among Israeli Jews.

Arab Israeli officials and analysts say the violence is almost entirely due to increasingly brazen Arab criminal organizations. But those same officials and analysts attribute much of the blame for the violence to an absence of state attention.

Why We Wrote This

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In Arab towns in Israel, violent crime has been the top concern. The right-wing government is facing accusations of neglect after its predecessor made modest progress. Is a recent massacre enough to shock officials into effective action?

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu this week for the first time convened a ministerial committee to address the gun violence and has proposed, controversially, increasing the role of the Shin Bet internal security service to go after the organized crime groups.

Local Arab officials point to the success the previous government had in slightly decreasing the murder rate last year. More than anything, they maintain, it was made a high-priority issue.

“I’m confident the Israel Police has all the tools to crack down” on the gangs, says Youssef Jabareen, a former parliamentarian. “But they don’t have the political will.”

It was on a recent Thursday afternoon that two cars pulled up to the heavy metal gate of a car wash in Jaffa of Nazareth, a small Arab town in northern Israel adjacent to its better-known ancient neighbor.

A 15-year-old youth, Rami Marjeyeh, opened the gate and let in one of the cars, while the second vehicle idled on the quiet residential street outside.

Minutes later, two gunmen stepped out and opened fire, shattering the weekend calm before speeding away. Rami and four men, including Rami’s cousin Naim Marjeyeh, the owner of the business, were killed instantly. 

Why We Wrote This

A story focused on

In Arab towns in Israel, violent crime has been the top concern. The right-wing government is facing accusations of neglect after its predecessor made modest progress. Is a recent massacre enough to shock officials into effective action?

“It was a massacre,” Wajih Marjeyeh, Rami’s father and Naim’s uncle, says while sitting last week in the family compound overlooking the car wash turned murder scene. “How did this thing happen to us? … We really don’t know; we have no problems with anyone.”

Neri Zilber

Wajih Marjeyeh, in Jaffa of Nazareth on June 15, says he’s at a loss for an explanation after losing his 15-year-old son, Rami, and nephew, Naim, in the shooting at his nephew’s car wash.

The bloodbath this month shocked an Israeli public seemingly inured to the spiraling death toll from violent crime among its Arab citizens. According to police figures, nearly 100 Arab Israelis have been killed already this year, mostly from gun violence, triple the number by the same time last year. Other sources put the toll even higher.

Arab citizens make up some 20% of the Israeli population. But last year, 116 Arab Israelis accounted for three-quarters of all the Israelis killed by violent crime, according to the nonprofit Abraham Initiatives. Local officials say gun ownership has ballooned, with an estimated 400,000 illegal weapons distributed among an Arab Israeli population of 2 million.

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