As Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel addressed the United Nations General Assembly on Friday morning, protesters on the streets of New York City addressed Mr. Netanyahu and the world.
The demonstrators began gathering in Times Square, across town from the United Nations building, early in the morning. A Palestinian flag flapped in the breeze as some of the protesters, most of them young, held signs reading “End All U.S. Aid to Israel,” “Arrest Netanyahu” and “Stop Starving Gaza Now!”
The crowd cheered loudly when organizers announced that heads of state had walked out of the General Assembly chamber en masse during Mr. Netanyahu’s speech. “Netanyahu you can’t hide, we charge you with genocide!” they chanted.
By the time the protesters began marching toward the U.N. at around 10:15 a.m., after Mr. Netanyahu finished, there were about 2,000 of them, the police said.
The protesters also inveighed against America’s continued support of Israel. Trump administration officials “don’t care about the death of brown people who are Palestinians and they’re not considered human beings,” said David Robinson, 64, from Brooklyn. “We are watching this going on. It breaks my heart. And I don’t know why everybody isn’t here.”
Protests also greeted Mr. Netanyahu when he arrived in New York on Thursday. Shortly before midnight, 14 people were taken into custody at a “No Sleep for Netanyahu” demonstration near his hotel on the Upper East Side, the Loews Regency, and issued summonses for unreasonable noise, the police said.
Demonstrations against the Israeli government and in support of Palestinian rights have become common on college campuses and in major cities across the United States during the siege of Gaza that followed Hamas’s 2023 attack on Israel. More than 60,000 Palestinians have been killed in Gaza, according to health officials there, and starvation has spread throughout the territory. Israel is currently leveling parts of Gaza City through near-constant bombing.
A poll by The New York Times and Siena University this month found that in New York City — home to the largest Jewish population outside Israel — only 26 percent of registered voters sympathized more with Israel than with Palestinians, while 44 percent sympathized more with Palestinians.
Andy Newman writes about New Yorkers facing difficult situations, including homelessness, poverty and mental illness. He has been a journalist for more than three decades.
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