Violence is Peaking in Israel's Arab Community

A general view shows the Arab-Israeli city of Umm al-Fahm in the foreground and Wadi Ara in the background, Israel January 30, 2020. REUTERS/Ammar Awad
A general view shows the Arab-Israeli city of Umm al-Fahm in the foreground and Wadi Ara in the background, Israel January 30, 2020. REUTERS/Ammar Awad
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Violence is Peaking in Israel's Arab Community

A general view shows the Arab-Israeli city of Umm al-Fahm in the foreground and Wadi Ara in the background, Israel January 30, 2020. REUTERS/Ammar Awad
A general view shows the Arab-Israeli city of Umm al-Fahm in the foreground and Wadi Ara in the background, Israel January 30, 2020. REUTERS/Ammar Awad

Violence in the Israeli Arab community continues to rise despite a number of campaigns that were launched by Arab masses last year against crime and Israeli police’s plan to confront the spread of violence.

Two men were killed in separate overnight incidents in two different areas, according to the Israeli Public Broadcasting Corporation (Kan).

Yousef Abu Sata, 25, was shot dead in the southern town of Rahat, and Ahmad Jamal, 27, was shot dead during a fight as part of an extended dispute between families in Kabul village.

The killings came few hours after Fahmi Hinawi was killed in Lod and Mohammad Badran in Jatt village in the Triangle area of Haifa District.

The crimes took place during armed clashes during which houses were torched and a number of casualties were reported in some Arab villages and areas.

The killing of these four men raised the crimes victims’ tally to 98, including 18 women, since the beginning of 2020, according to data received from the Aman Center (the Arab Center for a Safe Society).

Saturday’s crimes have shed light on the unprecedented spread of violence in the Israeli Arab community.

Israeli media has reported that the Arab community continues to plunge into violence. However, community leaders accuse the Israeli government of failing to confront the crimes.

Arabs have been urging the Israeli government to boost security in the Arab regions to prevent the spread of crime instead of inciting against the Arab community and its culture.

Arab MK Ahmad Tibi slammed the government last week and said a country whose prime minister boasts about killing a nuclear scientist in central Tehran is not capable of arresting a fugitive who killed his wife in Israel.

Former MK Talab El-Sana also verbally attacked the government in an article that was published in Maariv newspaper and stressed that whoever can put his hands on senior Hamas member Mahmoud Al-Mabhouh in Dubai is capable of finding the killers in Rahat and Nazareth.

However, officials in Israel accuse the Arab community of being characterized by a culture of violence and that its members don’t cooperate with the police.



Paramilitary Shelling Kills 3 in Omdurman after Sudan Army Gains

Army soldiers walk in front of the damaged Republican Palace in Khartoum, Sudan, after it was taken over by Sudan's army Friday, March 21, 2025. (AP Photo)
Army soldiers walk in front of the damaged Republican Palace in Khartoum, Sudan, after it was taken over by Sudan's army Friday, March 21, 2025. (AP Photo)
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Paramilitary Shelling Kills 3 in Omdurman after Sudan Army Gains

Army soldiers walk in front of the damaged Republican Palace in Khartoum, Sudan, after it was taken over by Sudan's army Friday, March 21, 2025. (AP Photo)
Army soldiers walk in front of the damaged Republican Palace in Khartoum, Sudan, after it was taken over by Sudan's army Friday, March 21, 2025. (AP Photo)

Three civilians were killed Sunday in an artillery attack by paramilitaries on Omdurman, part of Greater Khartoum, a medical source told AFP, two days after the army recaptured the capital's presidential palace in a major symbolic victory.

Eyewitnesses in the area said the bombardments by the Rapid Support Forces were some of the heaviest in recent months.

Since April 2023, the RSF has been fighting Sudan's regular army in a war that has killed tens of thousands, uprooted over 12 million and created the world's largest hunger and displacement crises.

Analysts have warned that the army's gains, while significant, are unlikely to end the fighting, as the paramilitary claimed territory in remote areas of the country and attacked a famine-hit displacement camp in the western Darfur region.

Since it began, the war has been marked by mass atrocities against civilians, including bombs and artillery routinely hitting homes, markets and displacement camps.

"Before, there used to be four or five rounds of shelling, and there was time between one strike and the next," one resident of Omdurman told AFP, requesting anonymity for fear of retaliation.

"This morning there were seven, one right after the other," he said.

The medical source at Al-Nao hospital, one of the city's last functioning health facilities, said "two children and a woman were killed and eight others injured in the shelling".

Clearing operation

In recent days, the army and allied armed groups have regained most of Khartoum proper's government district, just across the Nile from Omdurman.

RSF fighters remain stationed in parts of the city center including the airport, as well as the capital's south and west.

From their positions in western Omdurman, they have regularly launched strikes on civilian areas.

In February, over 50 people were killed in a single RSF artillery attack on a busy Omdurman market.

After a year and a half of humiliating army defeats, the tide seemed to turn late last year, when a military counteroffensive through central Sudan dislodged the RSF from key bases.

Since January, the army has retaken much of the capital Khartoum, with the army and allied armed groups on Friday seizing the country's presidential palace.

The paramilitary force responded with what it called a "lightning operation" including a drone strike that killed three journalists and a number of army personnel.

The military has since launched a clearing operation to push the RSF out of the city center, on Saturday retaking several strategic state institutions including the central bank, state intelligence headquarters and the national museum.

An RSF source on Saturday told AFP the paramilitary had "withdrawn from some locations" but that forces were waging "a fierce battle" near the airport.

The army has also seized key infrastructure, pushing on Saturday through Tuti Bridge to reclaim Tuti Island, which sits at the confluence of the Blue and White Niles in the center of Greater Khartoum and has been under paramilitary control for nearly two years.

Attacks nationwide

Despite the army's advances in the capital, Sudan remains effectively split in two, with the army holding the east and north while the RSF controls nearly all of the western region of Darfur and parts of the south.

It has been unable to seize the North Darfur state capital El-Fasher -- crucial to consolidating its hold on the vast western region -- despite a 10-month siege.

RSF shelling on the famine-hit displacement camp of Abu Shouk killed two civilians and injured three others, the local activists' committee in El-Fasher said on Sunday.

The day before, the El-Fasher resistance committee said at least 45 civilians were killed when the paramilitary seized the small town of Al-Malha, around 200 kilometers northeast of El-Fasher.

Al-Malha is one of the northernmost towns in the vast desert region between Sudan and Libya, where the RSF's critical resupply lines have come under increasing attack in recent months by army-allied armed groups.

On Sunday, the paramilitary also claimed control of Lagawa, a town in Sudan's southern West Kordofan state, some 600 kilometers (370 miles) southwest of Khartoum.

Eyewitnesses in the town told AFP that RSF fighters had set up checkpoints on the streets.