Nationwide strikes erupt in Israel as hostage deaths kindle pressure for cease-fire deal
Protests have spilled into Israel’s streets, as the Jewish state braces for a nationwide strike amid mounting pressure on the administration of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to broker a cease-fire deal with Hamas and return hostages from the Gaza Strip.
Arnon Bar-David — the head of Israel’s biggest union Histadrut that represents hundreds of thousands of workers in areas including health care and banking — called for a general strike across Israel’s economy on Monday, the organization said on social media, amid a swelling wave of national frustration over the perceived failure of Netanyahu’s government to clinch a deal and bring captive loved ones back home.
“It is impossible to stand in front of the cries of our children who are being murdered in the tunnels in Gaza, this is unacceptable,” Bar-David said, according to a Google translation.
Israel’s Manufacturers’ Association endorsed the movement, with President Ron Tomer saying, “Too long we have been waiting for the right deal – it’s time to bring the kidnapped home. The government must ensure that it does everything, for the return of the kidnapped as soon as possible, also under the restrictions of a limited cease-fire. We call on all businesses in Israel to act so.”
Several municipalities and councils have declared support for the demonstrations.
Israeli Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich criticized the action and on Sunday asked the country’s attorney general to urgently petition the court for a restraining order to cancel the “political strike” of Monday.
“I ordered the salary supervisor to pass on a clear directive, which has already been published: an employee who does not come to work tomorrow will not be paid,” he said in a Google-translated social media post.
“The heads of the Histadrut will not be allowed to turn the country upside down and use the workers as weapons to advance their political opinion.”