Crowd storms airport in Russia over arrival of plane from Israel

by Curtis Jones
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Hundreds of protesters stormed an airport located in Dagestan, a predominantly Muslim republican in southern Russia, after a plane from Israel landed there on Sunday, prompting Russian police to take over the airport.

Russian news outlets reported that hundreds of men stormed a tarmac at the Makhachkala airport when a plane from Tel Aviv landed there Sunday night.

The protesters were reportedly looking for Israeli passengers, and there were reports that some people were examining the passports of passengers to determine where they had come from. More than 20 people were injured and 60 people were detained, according to the reports.

Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov said that “external interference” was to blame for the incident, Russian media reported, though there was no immediate evidence to support that assertion.

Some people in the crowd were seen holding signs reading, “Child killers are not welcome in Dagestan” and “We’re against Jewish refugees,” the Associated Press reportedReuters reported that the protesters could be heard shouting “Allahu Akbar” or “God is Greatest,” according to videos the news wire obtained.

The riots come after Israel expanded its ground operations into Gaza over the weekend — about three weeks after militant group Hamas launched a deadly surprise attack on Israel.

The incident also takes place against the backdrop of the Russia-Ukraine war. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky condemned the riots at the Russian airport in a statement, blaming it as a “part of Russia’s widespread culture of hatred toward other nations.”

“The Russian foreign minister has made a series of antisemitic remarks in the last year,” Zelensky said. “The Russian President also used antisemitic slurs. For Russian propaganda talking heads on official television, hate rhetoric is routine.”

“Even the most recent Middle East escalation prompted antisemitic statements from Russian ideologists. Russian antisemitism and hatred toward other nations are systemic and deeply rooted. Hatred is what drives aggression and terror. We must all work together to oppose hatred,” he continued.

The U.S. also condemned the riots in a statement posted by National Security Council spokesperson Adrienne Watson on X, formerly Twitter.

“The United States vigorously condemns the antisemitic protests in Dagestan, Russia. The U.S. unequivocally stands with the entire Jewish community as we witness a worldwide surge in antisemitism. There is never any excuse or justification for antisemitism,” she wrote.

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