Russian Court Sentences Five Men for Antisemitic Riots at Dagestan Airport
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by Reuters and Algemeiner Staff

Makhachkala airport, Dagestan, Russia, Oct. 31, 2023. Photo: REUTERS/Kazbek Basayev
A court in southern Russia on Friday sentenced five men to more than six years in prison each in the first convictions related to a mass anti-Israel, antisemitic protest last October at an airport in the predominantly Muslim Dagestan region.
The men, who were given sentences ranging from just over six years to nine years for engaging in rioting, did not admit guilt, the court in the Krasnodar region said. One protester was also found guilty of committing violence against a government official.
The trial was moved from Dagestan to Krasnodar due to the sensitivity of the case.
Last October hundreds of anti-Israel demonstrators stormed an airport in the city of Makhachkala where a plane from Tel Aviv had just arrived in a spate of unrest in the North Caucasus over Israel‘s war against the Palestinian terrorist group Hamas in Gaza.
Video footage showed the protesters, mostly young men, waving Palestinian flags, breaking down glass doors, and running through the airport shouting “Allahu Akbar” (God is greater).
The crowd converged on the airport after a message on a local Telegram channel urged Dagestanis to meet the “uninvited guests” in “adult fashion” and to get the plane and its passengers to turn around and fly somewhere else.
The channel, which was later banned by Telegram, did not use the word “Jew” but referred to the plane’s passengers as being “unclean.”
The incident was part of a wave of antisemitic demonstrations and attacks against Jewish institutions across Russia’s north Caucus region following Hamas’s Oct. 7 massacre across southern Israel.
In the airport riot, more than 20 people were injured before security forces could contain the unrest. No passengers on the plane were hurt.
Police arrested dozens of people, whose cases are now making their way through Russian courts.
President Vladimir Putin blamed the West and Ukraine for the unrest, without providing evidence. Kyiv denied any role and the United States strongly condemned the violence.
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Antisemitism Is Now Being Crowdfunded — Literally
Media Watchdog Group Finally Admits That It Called Gazan Terrorists ‘Journalists’
The New Lebanon Deal Is a Seismic Shift — But Not How You Think
‘Monsters’ and ‘Dark Money’: How Mamdani’s AIPAC Speech Activated Antisemitic Discourse
Two Orthodox Jews Win in NYC Amid Flurry of Anti-Israel Progressive Victories



