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5 new arrests made in Amsterdam over violence that authorities say targeted Israeli soccer fans

With tensions high in the Dutch capital, dozens of people set a tram on fire Monday night. Police said it wasn't clear whether the unrest was related to the events surrounding last week's game between Ajax and Maccabi Tel Aviv.
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Five new arrests have been made over the violence surrounding a soccer game last week involving an Israeli team, Dutch police said Monday.

The five men are "suspected of public acts of violence against persons Thursday night," police in the Dutch capital, Amsterdam, said Monday. The arrests were made over the weekend as part of the "large-scale investigation on the violence committed before and after" the game between Israeli team Maccabi Tel Aviv and local team Ajax, police said.

Authorities in Israel and the Netherlands condemned the violence targeted antisemitic attacks, in which authorities said small groups on foot and scooters committed hit-and-run assaults on Israeli fans.

Dutch police have also said Maccabi fans attacked a taxi and burned a Palestinian flag before the game, while a video geolocated by NBC News showed Israeli fans in Amsterdam singing “Death to the Arabs” and “Let the IDF win. We will f--- the Arabs." Another video verified by NBC News showed a brawl break out outside Amsterdam Central Station after the game in what the photographer described as an attack by Israeli fans on local residents.

In their statement Monday, police said two of those arrested "committed these acts before the match was played." The suspects are men ages 18 to 37, all of them Dutch residents, police said. Four remain under interrogation, while one has been freed but remains a suspect.

Police said Tuesday said that they had arrested 68 people in total, including 10 Israelis.

Five people were hospitalized and others received treatment as a result of the violence, authorities said.

With tensions high, dozens of people set a tram on fire in Amsterdam on Monday night. Video geolocated by NBC News showed a group throwing fireworks and other blunt objects at the tram, with some shouting "Cancer Jews." Police said it was not clear who started the unrest and whether it was related to what happened last week. 

Prime Minister Dick Schoof said at a news conference Monday that last week's "attacks against Israelis and Jews were nothing short of shocking and reprehensible" and promised to bring the perpetrators to justice.

He said prosecutors were still piecing together details of what happened.

Schoof said he was "well aware of what happened" before the game involving Maccabi supporters, referring to the videos and police reports that Israeli fans chanted anti-Arab slogans, pulled down a Palestinian flag and attacked a taxi. But, he said, "we think that’s of a different category, and we condemn any violence, as well, but that is no excuse whatsoever for what happened later on that night in the attacks on Jews in Amsterdam.”

Amsterdam Police Chief Peter Holla said there were incidents “on both sides” Thursday.

Israel sent extra planes to bring the soccer fans home from Amsterdam, and it has told Israeli fans not to attend cultural or sports events abroad this week.

European soccer's governing body, UEFA, announced Monday that Maccabi Tel Aviv's coming match against Turkey's Beşiktaş has been moved to a neutral venue in Hungary. The match had been set to take place in Istanbul later this month.

The Israeli men's national soccer team plays France in Paris on Thursday.