Police thwart multiple terrorist attacks on Tel Aviv Pride parade

The police made arrests in two incidents where people bearing weapons approached the parade area. Other non-violent disruptors were also arrested.

Tnuat Hazon's paraglider with sign opposing Tel Aviv Pride Parade. (photo credit: TNUAT HAZON)
Tnuat Hazon's paraglider with sign opposing Tel Aviv Pride Parade.
(photo credit: TNUAT HAZON)
Israel Police announced that it  had thwarted multiple terrorist threats and attempts to disrupt the Tel Aviv Pride parade, as thousands of people headed to the city to celebrate on Friday.
The police said that it had arrested two residents of the Palestinian Authority next to the parade who were in Israel illegally. They were carrying a knife and were taken to a police station for questioning. 
Police detectives also detained a resident of Tel Aviv who was heading to the parade after he was found to be carrying a number of weapons, including a taser, nunchucks and steel chains, among others. In total, some 50 people were arrested by police for attempting to cause harm or commit violence at the parade. 
The suspects will be brought to court for hearings to extend their arrests.
Later in the day, police arrested a couple who were protesting the event and attempted to force their way into the parade. The two attacked a police officer and were transferred for questioning at a police station.
The Hazon movement, which has been largely inactive for over a year, returned on Friday in order to protest the parade with a person paragliding with a parachute reading "Father + Mother = Family."
Later in the afternoon the police announced that they arrested three suspects for illegally operating a motorized paraglider near where the parade participants were supposed to gather. It is unclear if the suspects arrested were the same Hazon activists who were protesting the parade.
Rabbi Dror Aryeh, one of the leaders in the movement, spoke against the parade, saying that "those who didn't want us on the ground, will get us in the air. We will get to as many people as possible with our message; it is our right to protest legitimately and legally against these abomination parades."
Aryeh claimed that many of the residents of the cities where parades take place are against them, but are "scared" of the LGBTQ+ community. "We are their voice," the rabbi said.
THE ANTI-LGBTQ+ Noam Party was founded by members of Hazon, a hardline national-religious organization that campaigns against reform Jews and the LGBTQ+ community.
Hazon entered the public eye in 2019 after the organization displayed a large banner on a hotel near the entrance to Jerusalem reading, "A father and a mother = a family. The courage to be normal."
This banner was part of a much larger campaign started by Hazon, a movement that describes itself as dedicated to "returning the Jewish character to the national agenda in Israel." The campaign was centered on using the time before the election to pressure politicians to agree to a religious Jewish agenda for the state.
The campaign targeted a variety of topics, including work and public transport on Shabbat, the Women of the Wall movement, and the silencing of right-wing and religious movements. Hazon describes all of these things as "not normal" in almost all of its publications.