World
        

Politics

Protests across Israel against high cost of living

Updated: 2011-08-14 09:48

(Agencies)

Twitter Facebook Myspace Yahoo! Linkedin Mixx

BEERSHEBA, Israel - Tens of thousands of people gathered across Israel on Saturday to call for lower living costs in an effort to show the government their protest movement has countrywide support.

The gatherings followed a rally last weekend in Tel Aviv, Israel's commercial capital, in which over 250,000 demonstrators called for economic reform. It was the biggest socio-economic protest the country of 7.7 million has ever seen.

Past demonstrations on such a scale in Israel have usually been over issues of war and peace but on Saturday rallies from Haifa and Afula in the north of the country to the resort town of Eilat in the far south all focused on "social justice".

Leading Israeli performers entertained the protesters who carried banners highlighting the soaring cost of living.

The protests have put pressure on Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who last week named a 14-member panel of experts led by economist Manuel Trajtenberg to deliver proposals for changes within a month.

The unrest comes despite projected economic growth of 4.8 percent this year and relatively low unemployment of 5.7 percent.

"The gaps between rich and poor have (increased) and I think right now people really feel frustrated because they are working ... in very respectable jobs, but they don't get enough to live their lives and raise their children," Beersheba protester Daniel Eisler told Reuters.

Police spokesman Micky Rosenfeld said some 50,000 had gathered at rallies across the country with the largest number, 25,000, assembling in the port city of Haifa. Organisers and media said at least 70,000 had attended.

Students set up a tent city along Tel Aviv's leafy, affluent Rothschild Boulevard a month ago to protest the high cost of housing and others then sprouted in parks across the country.

The rightist coalition government has vowed to free up more state-owned land for development, build more low-rent housing and improve public transport.

Specials

Star journalist leaves legacy

Li Xing, China Daily's assistant editor-in-chief and veteran columnist, died of a cerebral hemorrhage on Aug 7 in Washington DC, US.

Robots seen as employer-friendly

Robots are not new to industrial manufacturing. They have been in use since the 1960s.

Smurfs up in China

The movie remake of a classic 1980s cartoon series is expected to have special cross-generation appeal to Chinese filmgoers

My Chinese Valentine
Wen pledges 'open' probe
Turning up the heat