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Five new arrests in attacks against Israeli soccer supporters, Dutch police say

 
 Policemen detain a person after youth clashed with Israeli football supporters, in Amsterdam, Netherlands, November 8, 2024.  (photo credit: Mizzle Media/Handout via REUTERS)
Policemen detain a person after youth clashed with Israeli football supporters, in Amsterdam, Netherlands, November 8, 2024.
(photo credit: Mizzle Media/Handout via REUTERS)

Dutch police had reported that they arrested 63 rioters during the Thursday night pogrom.

Dutch police on Monday said they had arrested five more people for their suspected involvement in attacks on Israeli football supporters late last week, which authorities have condemned as antisemitic.

The suspects are men aged 18 to 37 who are living in the Netherlands, police said in a statement. Previously, 63 suspects had been arrested.

Earlier on Monday, Dutch Prime Minister Dick Schoof vowed that the Netherlands would focus all its efforts on bringing perpetrators of the violence to justice.

"The images and reports for Amsterdam and what we've seen this weekend of antisemitic attacks against Israelis and Jews are nothing short of shocking and reprehensible," Schoof told a press conference, adding that police and prosecutors are still piecing together the details of what happened.

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The attacks occurred early on Friday on Israeli soccer supporters following a match between visiting Maccabi Tel Aviv and Ajax Amsterdam, leaving at least five people injured. They were denounced as antisemitic by the Dutch authorities and foreign leaders, including Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

 MACCABI TEL AVIV soccer fans arrive at Ben-Gurion Airport on Friday, after they were flown from Amsterdam on an El Al emergency rescue flight. The pogrom in Amsterdam should serve as a wake-up call and a mandate for action, says the writer.  (credit: Jonathan Shaul/Flash90)
MACCABI TEL AVIV soccer fans arrive at Ben-Gurion Airport on Friday, after they were flown from Amsterdam on an El Al emergency rescue flight. The pogrom in Amsterdam should serve as a wake-up call and a mandate for action, says the writer. (credit: Jonathan Shaul/Flash90)

'No excuse whatsoever for what happened'

Following the attacks, Israel sent extra planes to bring Maccabi supporters home.

Reacting to reports that there had also been altercations between Maccabi supporters and locals before the match on Thursday, Schoof said there was no justification for the violence against Israeli supporters.

Dutch police have said Maccabi fans on Wednesday attacked a taxi and burned a Palestinian flag in Amsterdam. On the day of the game, Maccabi supporters were filmed chanting anti-Arab slogans in videos verified by Reuters.


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"We are well aware of what happened earlier with Maccabi supporters, but we think that's of a different category, and we condemn any violence as well, but that is no excuse whatsoever for what happened later on that night in the attacks on Jews in Amsterdam," Schoof said.

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