Probe into domestic riots shows police faced 'major' weapons shortage

Sources claim police was underprepared for the violence, the scale of which hasn't been seen since Second Intifada, and even asked the military to transfer them equipment, which was not possible due to legal reasons

Eli Senior|
A probe into the conduct of police during May's domestic riots has revealed that officers faced a major shortage of weapons and equipment, which had been used up in the first days of the unrest.
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  • Nationally motivated riots engulfed Israel’s mixed cities in the wake of clashes at the Al-Aqsa Mosque and fighting between Israel and Palestinian terror groups in the Gaza Strip. At least one person was killed in the riots and several others were wounded.
    2 View gallery
    Police Chief Kobi Shabtai, rioters in Lod
    Police Chief Kobi Shabtai, rioters in Lod
    Police Chief Kobi Shabtai, rioters in Lod
    (Photo: Alex Kolomoisky, AFP)
    According to police sources, the fear that disturbances would continue for more than a few days coupled with the lack of sufficient equipment to deal massive riots, at the time led police officials to ask the IDF for additional supplies.
    The request, however, was denied due to legal issues preventing the use of military equipment in civilian areas outside the West Bank.
    "It was violence the scale of which has never been seen here, not even in the Second Intifada,” the sources added. “The intensity of the violence and the large number of hotspots obliged the police to use all its operational forces, its reserves, as well as a massive stock of riot dispersal equipment.
    2 View gallery
    Israeli forces run during clashes with Israeli Arabs in the Israeli mixed city of Lod, Israel
    Israeli forces run during clashes with Israeli Arabs in the Israeli mixed city of Lod, Israel
    Israeli forces run during clashes with Israeli Arabs in the Israeli mixed city of Lod, Israel
    (Photo: AP)
    "If the massive and intense riots would have continued beyond four days, we would have found ourselves without the required equipment to face the rioters," the source added. "It would have taken days, if not weeks, for a additional equipment to arrive from abroad."
    At the end of the operation, Police Chief Yaakov Shabtai requested a comprehensive investigation into the police's conduct during the civil unrest throughout the country.
    This led to the purchase of enough equipment to allow the police to maintain order for 35 consecutive days in case of extreme violence.
    Among the equipment that was purchased are 320,000 stun grenades, gas missiles and sponges worth NIS 30 million, with a purchase of additional riot dispersal gear still pending.
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