Netanyah threatened with murder

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu posted a video on social networks today, showing, as he said, examples of “inciting” against him in recent antigovernmental protests. A video entitled “Nex for the murder of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu breaks record” on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram. The clip shows a photograph of Netanyahu's head in sight and [...]
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu posted a video on social networks today, showing, as he said, examples of “inciting” against him in recent antigovernmental protests.
A video entitled “Nex for the murder of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu breaks record” on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram.
The clip shows a photograph of Netanyahu's head in sight, and he hears protesters threatening him.
“We will bury you along with your wife and children”, says one woman, and the other, holding a poster of Netanyahu, shows with her hand how to cut her neck.
The threat <x0...
The images also include the oath and a call for the killing of Netanyah. The video suggests that all of this happened in recent protests, but it was not immediately clear where they came from, according to Israeli media.
Meanwhile, hundreds of people protesting the government of Netanyah gathered around his residence in Jerusalem and his home in the coastal city of Caesarea.
These are the latest in a series of protests against the Israeli prime minister who has now become almost daily.
Protesters are demanding that Netanyahu be replaced as he is being tried for corruption and due to the government's widespread dissatisfaction with the body's response to the coronary virus pandemic and economic crisis.
Protests that were organised for weeks before the prime minister's residence in Jerusalem, as well as Tel Aviv and other countries, have joined people protesting the government's economic policy during the pandemic.
During the demonstrations, there were also violence and counter-proposses from the right who clashed with police, journalists and protesters protesting the government.












