Tuesday, December 24

France ramps up security ahead of Israel soccer match after Amsterdam violence

PARIS — Thousands of police officers are set to be deployed around

Paris

on Thursday ahead of a soccer game between France and Israel, seeking to avoid a repeat of last week’s

violence in Amsterdam

involving locals and Israeli fans.

The international match is expected to be met by widespread protests a week after the unrest in the Netherlands and amid heightened tensions in Europe over Israel’s deadly assault on the

Gaza Strip

and

Lebanon

.

Paris police confirmed to NBC News around 4,000 officers would be on duty, with some 2,500 deployed to ensure security around the Stade de France,


in the suburb of Saint-Denis just north of the capital, and some 1,500 posted elsewhere across the city.

“It’s an exceptional measure, three to four times greater than what we usually mobilize,” Paris police chief Laurent Nunez told RTL radio on Wednesday, according to the Reuters news agency.

As the crowd of protesters began to swell at Aubervilliers, about a mile and half from the Stade de France,

an image was circulating

on social media of masked men in black holding bats. The photo was posted to an account, verified by NBC News, belonging to Betar, which describes itself as a Zionist activist movement, with several global chapters including France.

“Guard duty,” the original caption read. “we will remain in the streets of France,” and that they will be at the game, followed by a emojis of the Israeli flag, a flexed bicep, the Star of David and a crown.

By nightfall, several hundred protesters had gathered, with some chanting, “Beirut, Gaza. Paris is here with you!”

One of the protesters, Irene Karalis, a 22-year-old university student and activist, said she is referring to the game as “the match of shame.”

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“We think that it’s not possible to continue to live normally, to study normally, to work normally, when there’s a genocide in Palestine right now,” she said.

“I’m against all forms of discrimination and racism, and I’m obviously against antisemitism,” Karalis added, referring to the attacks on Israeli soccer fans in Amsterdam that is casting a shadow over the match. “And that’s why I’m also against instrumentalization of antisemitism and against the assimilation of anti-Zionism and antisemitism.”

Inside the stadium, Nunez said that only French and Israeli flags would be allowed, effectively barring the presence of Palestinian flags at the match.

French President

Emmanuel Macron

was expected to attend the match alongside predecessors Francois Hollande and Nicolas Sarkozy, in what Macron’s office described as a show of “fraternity and solidarity” following the events in Amsterdam.

Police said in a

post

on X that they had also received authorization to use drones to survey crowds both Thursday and Friday, though they did not say exactly where these would be deployed. Meanwhile, the National Gendarmerie was expected to deploy dozens of patrol teams assigned to metro lines.

But attendance at the Nations League game is expected to be low, with French media reporting that only about a quarter of the 80,000-capacity stadium will be filled when it kicks off at 2:45 p.m. ET. Israel has warned its citizens against attending sporting events abroad.

At least one demonstration was expected to be held near the Le Front Populaire metro station in Saint-Denis, about 1.5 miles away from the stadium, according to French organization Urgence Palestine.

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“We don’t play with genocide! No to the France-Israel match,” the group said in a post on Instagram on Thursday.

Ramy Shaath, a political activist and co-founder of Urgence Palestine told NBC News that demonstrators wanted to send a message that they would not allow the “whitewashing of Israeli crimes.” He said they also wanted to call on soccer’s governing bodies to ban Israel from participation.

The ramped-up security presence


ahead of the game


comes after the violence surrounding the soccer match between Israel’s Maccabi Tel Aviv and Ajax of Amsterdam put authorities across Europe on high alert.

Officials have said the violence was marked by incidents of people who “actively sought out Israeli supporters to attack and assault them” — in what Macron as well as leaders in the Netherlands and Israel denounced as antisemitic attacks — and violent and inflammatory actions by some of the Israeli team’s supporters, including singing anti-Arab chants calling for “death to the Arabs.”

It also comes after multiple

demonstrations

were held in the French capital on Wednesday night.

They centered on a pro-Israel gala that had been expected to be attended by far-right Israeli finance minister

Bezalel Smotrich

, who recently made headlines after suggesting Israel could look to annex the occupied West Bank next year in the wake of

Donald Trump

‘s election victory.

Smotrich canceled his trip to France to speak at the gala, citing security concerns, but at least two demonstrations went ahead, drawing hundreds of protesters.

At one point during one of the demonstrations, launched by pro-Palestinian groups, tear gas appeared to have been deployed against the crowd, as police in shields and riot gear pushed up against protesters. Meanwhile, organizers at another protest held by leftist Jewish groups condemning the gala told NBC News their rally was shut down by police.

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Demonstrators at both events told NBC News they did not want to allow the normalization of Israel’s actions in Gaza, where local officials say more than 43,000 people have been killed over the past year.

The U.N. said over the weekend that women and children accounted for around 70% of those who have been killed in Gaza since Israel launched its offensive in the enclave following Hamas’ Oct. 7 terror attacks, in which Israeli officials say some 1,200 people were killed and around 250 taken hostage.

“We won’t stop protesting,” one demonstrator, Omar, 30, who declined to provide his last name, said, speaking during a demonstration on Wednesday night that saw protesters march from Paris’ Saint-Lazare station to Place de la République.

“We are not afraid of the police,” he said.

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