Earlier on Sunday, a crowd of haredim [ultra-Orthodox] attacked a Channel 2 camera crew in Beit Shemesh. The crew was in the city to film street signs discriminating against women as a follow-up of their original exposé, and were attacked by residents opposed to their presence. "They called us 'Israel haters,' beat us with their hands and threw stones at us," a Channel 2 reporter said.The crew alerted the police who arrived at the scene of the incident. "If the police hadn't intervened within 10 minutes, I don't know how it would have ended," the journalist said. The police escorted the team out of the city.The reporter said that the assailants smashed the windows of the cars that the team had arrived in, and also broke some of the equipment they were carrying.He explained that they had gone there following Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu's statement earlier in the day, saying that discriminatory signs should be removed.The reporter emphasized that no one tried to stop the attack, and added: "I don't know if they recognized me from the report that we filmed in the city, but that's not important... All morning people were talking about an extreme group, but I saw dozens of people full of hate, and nothing else."
Police remove Beit Shemesh segregation signs
Move follows report exposing extremist harassment of modern orthodox women; haredim attack Channel 2 crew filming in city.
Earlier on Sunday, a crowd of haredim [ultra-Orthodox] attacked a Channel 2 camera crew in Beit Shemesh. The crew was in the city to film street signs discriminating against women as a follow-up of their original exposé, and were attacked by residents opposed to their presence. "They called us 'Israel haters,' beat us with their hands and threw stones at us," a Channel 2 reporter said.The crew alerted the police who arrived at the scene of the incident. "If the police hadn't intervened within 10 minutes, I don't know how it would have ended," the journalist said. The police escorted the team out of the city.The reporter said that the assailants smashed the windows of the cars that the team had arrived in, and also broke some of the equipment they were carrying.He explained that they had gone there following Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu's statement earlier in the day, saying that discriminatory signs should be removed.The reporter emphasized that no one tried to stop the attack, and added: "I don't know if they recognized me from the report that we filmed in the city, but that's not important... All morning people were talking about an extreme group, but I saw dozens of people full of hate, and nothing else."