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Israel elections: Netanyahu set to win as rival concedes

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Israeli PM Benjamin Netanyahu has said he will annex Jewish settlements in the occupied West Bank if he is re-elected.

Israelis go to the polls on Tuesday and Mr Netanyahu is competing for votes with right-wing parties who support annexing part of the West Bank.

The settlements are illegal under international law, though Israel disputes this.

Last month the US recognised the occupied Golan Heights, seized from Syria in 1967, as Israeli territory.

Israel has settled about 400,000 Jews in West Bank settlements, with another 200,000 living in East Jerusalem. There are about 2.5 million Palestinians living in the West Bank.

Palestinians want to establish a state in the occupied West Bank, East Jerusalem and the Gaza Strip.

What happens to the settlements is one of the most contentious issues between Israel and the Palestinians - Palestinians say the presence of settlements make a future independent state impossible.

Israel says the Palestinians are using the issue of settlements as a pretext to avoid direct peace talks. It says settlements are not a genuine obstacle to peace and are negotiable.

What exactly did Netanyahu say?

He was asked during an interview on Israeli TV why he had not extended Israeli sovereignty to large settlements in the West Bank.

"You are asking whether we are moving on to the next stage - the answer is yes, we will move to the next stage," he said.

"I am going to extend [Israeli] sovereignty and I don't distinguish between settlement blocs and the isolated settlements."

What has been the Palestinian reaction?

Senior Palestinian official Saeb Erekat said the statement by Mr Netanyahu was "not surprising".

He added: "Israel will continue to brazenly violate international law for as long as the international community will continue to reward Israel with impunity, particularly with the Trump administration's support and endorsement of Israel's violation of the national and human rights of the people of Palestine."

A spokesman for Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas told Reuters: "Any measures and any announcements will not change the facts. Settlements are illegal and they will be removed."

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-middle-east-47840033
 
Look at the similarities. Modi vows to scrap Atricle 370 if elected back into office and his friend in the far middle east vowing to annex west-bank settlements.
 
Israel election: PM Netanyahu seeks record fifth term

Israelis are set to vote in their country's most closely-fought general election in years.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, leader of the right-wing Likud Party, is seeking a fifth term in office.

But he is facing corruption allegations and a strong challenge from retired general Benny Gantz.

Mr Gantz, head of the centrist Blue and White alliance, is challenging Mr Netanyahu on the key issue of security and is promising cleaner politics.

No party has won a majority in Israel's 120-seat parliament, the Knesset, so as soon as the results start coming in at 22:00 (19:00 GMT) on Tuesday negotiations start on the formation of a governing coalition.

At a rally in Jerusalem on Monday, Mr Netanyahu told Likud supporters not to be "complacent" and urged them to turn out at polling stations.

He warned that his "leftist" rivals could still win.

The BBC's Tom Bateman in Jerusalem says Mr Netanyahu has appealed to Israel's increasingly right-wing voter base with tough messages on security and a significant announcement in the final days suggesting a new government would annex Jewish settlements in the occupied West Bank.

The settlements are considered illegal under international law, although Israel disputes this.

Our correspondent says Mr Netanyahu has faced an uncomfortable election race, dogged by looming corruption charges, and a flare-up in the conflict with Palestinian militants in the Gaza Strip.

The prime minister denies the corruption allegations, and says he is a victim of a political "witch-hunt" aimed at influencing the election.

Mr Gantz told Blue and White supporters in Tel Aviv that the prime minister wanted to change the law to protect himself from prosecution.

"The whole purpose is to create a legal fortress to guarantee his legal immunity in front of the serious charges he is facing," he said.

Final pre-election polls suggested the two main contenders were neck-and-neck, with both set to win 30 seats.

But, our correspondent adds, in Israel's fragmented party system the advantage remains with Mr Netanyahu, who still looks most likely to be able to form a new coalition government.

In a widely criticised move to lock down extra right-wing seats, Mr Netanyahu brokered a deal in February making it easier for candidates from an extreme-right wing party that many view as racist to enter parliament.

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-middle-east-47852261
 
Interesting times :15:

If Trump gets reelected (looks likely) then the world is indeed going to get a lot weirder
 
Benny Gantz is running against Netanyahu and doesn't seem any better.

He was the former Israeli general chief of staff between 2011-2015, and boasted in his campaign ads about sending Gaza "back to the Stone Age".
 
I hope they annex the whole of Gaza and the west bank. Then maybe the palestinians will get rid of the PA and fight for their rights! One man one vote..afterall isnt Israel a democracy?
 
Israel election: Netanyahu and Gantz on course for dead heat

Israel's general election is on course for a dead heat with nearly all votes counted, local media report.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's Likud party and the centrist Blue and White alliance are projected to win 35 seats each with most votes counted.

The outcome puts Mr Netanyahu in a strong position to form a right-wing coalition government.

No party has ever won a majority in Israel's 120-seat parliament and it has always had coalition governments.

Exit polls had predicted a tight race with no clear winner, prompting both Mr Netanyahu and Blue and White leader Benny Gantz to claim victory on Tuesday night.

But the success of other right-wing parties appears to have put Mr Netanyahu in pole position to form a coalition and clinch a record fifth term in office.

That would see him overtake Israel's founding father David Ben-Gurion as its longest-serving prime minister.

What's the background?
Mr Netanyahu, 69, put forward tough messages on security ahead of the vote and it soon became one of the election's key issues.

He also made a significant announcement in the final days of the campaign, suggesting a new government would annex Jewish settlements in the occupied West Bank.

The settlements are considered illegal under international law, although Israel disputes this.

Mr Netanyahu is also facing allegations of corruption which he denies. He says he is a victim of a political "witch hunt" designed to influence the election.

In a separate controversy on Tuesday, Israeli Arab politicians condemned his Likud party for sending 1,200 observers equipped with hidden body cameras to polling stations in Arab communities.

The Arab alliance, Hadash-Taal, said it was an "illegal" action that sought to intimidate Arabs. Likud said it wanted to ensure only "valid votes" were cast.

Mr Netanyahu's main challenger, Mr Gantz, is a retired lieutenant-general who formed the Blue and White in February, promising to unite a country that had "lost its way".

The 59-year-old former chief of staff of the Israeli military has rivalled Mr Netanyahu's tough stance on security and has promised cleaner politics.

Mr Gantz's campaign platform referred to "separation" from the Palestinians but did not specifically mention them having an independent state. It also called for continued control over the Jordan Valley and retaining West Bank settlement blocs.

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-middle-east-47876539
 
Israel election: Netanyahu set for record fifth term

PM Benjamin Netanyahu is likely to secure a record fifth term after almost complete results from Israel's election suggest a new right-wing coalition.

His Likud party is expected to finish with a similar number of seats as ex-military chief Benny Gantz's centrist Blue and White alliance.

But Likud and right-wing allies are set to be the largest bloc with 65 seats in the 120-seat Knesset, local media said.

The 69-year-old premier is facing corruption allegations.

However, the election result means he could become Israel's longest-serving prime minister later this year, overtaking Israel's founding father David Ben-Gurion.

Exit polls had predicted a tight race with no clear winner, prompting both Mr Netanyahu and Blue and White leader Benny Gantz to claim victory on Tuesday night.

"It will be a right-wing government, but I will be prime minister for all," Mr Netanyahu told cheering supporters.

"I'm very touched that the people of Israel gave me their vote of confidence for the fifth time, and an even bigger vote of confidence than previous elections.

"I intend to be the prime minister of all citizens of Israel. Right, left, Jews, non-Jews. All of Israel's citizens."

No party has ever won a majority in Israel's 120-seat parliament and it has always had coalition governments.

'Netanyahu's most serious challenge yet'

There were roars of celebration at the election night party for Benny Gantz as the first exit poll was released. His supporters believed Israel was on the brink of a new centre-ground government.

But as the votes were counted overnight, Benjamin Netanyahu's success became clearer. The incumbent PM's Likud party appears most likely to be able to form another coalition government with the help of right-wing nationalist and religious parties.

He said history had given the people of Israel another chance as his supporters, using his nickname, chanted: "Bibi, the King of Israel."

With left-wing and Arab-Israeli parties suffering heavy losses, his win appears decisive, despite the most serious challenge yet to his decade in office.

How was the campaign fought?

Mr Netanyahu, 69, put forward tough messages on security ahead of the vote and it soon became one of the election's key issues.

He also made a significant announcement in the final days of the campaign, suggesting a new government would annex Jewish settlements in the occupied West Bank.

The settlements are considered illegal under international law, although Israel disputes this.

In a separate controversy on Tuesday, Israeli Arab politicians condemned his Likud party for sending 1,200 observers equipped with hidden body cameras to polling stations in Arab communities.

The Arab alliance, Hadash-Taal, said it was an "illegal" action that sought to intimidate Arabs. Likud said it wanted to ensure only "valid votes" were cast.

Mr Netanyahu's main challenger, Mr Gantz, is a retired lieutenant-general who formed the Blue and White in February, promising to unite a country that had "lost its way".

The 59-year-old former chief of staff of the Israeli military rivalled Mr Netanyahu's tough stance on security and promised cleaner politics.

Mr Gantz's campaign platform referred to "separation" from the Palestinians but did not specifically mention them having an independent state. It also called for continued control over the Jordan Valley and retaining West Bank settlement blocs.

What allegations is Netanyahu facing?
At the end of February, Attorney General Avichai Mandelblit informed Mr Netanyahu that he intended to indict him on charges of bribery, fraud and breach of trust in connection with three cases, pending a final hearing.

Now that the election is over, the evidence in those cases is to be turned over to the lawyers of the various parties involved.

The prime minister is alleged to have accepted gifts from wealthy businessmen and dispensed favours to try to get more positive press coverage. Mr Netanyahu has denied any wrongdoing and says he is a victim of a political "witch-hunt".

A date for the final hearing, at which the prime minister and his lawyers would be able to argue against the allegations, has not yet been set. Mr Mandelblit has said the Supreme Court will determine whether Mr Netanyahu has to resign if he is charged.

There have been reports that Mr Netanyahu will attempt to persuade his potential coalition partners to pass legislation that would grant prime ministers immunity from prosecution while in office.

The Jerusalem Post reports that Likud and four other allied parties, who together will control 61 seats in the Knesset, have made it clear that they will not require Mr Netanyahu to resign if he is charged.

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-middle-east-47876539
 
the Palestinians need to wake up..time to fight for your rights and claim citizenship of Israel. Ask for voting rights and to be treated equally...this is now the only game in town
 
So corruption and bribery is okay then according to Likud voters.
 
the Palestinians need to wake up..time to fight for your rights and claim citizenship of Israel. Ask for voting rights and to be treated equally...this is now the only game in town

been saying this for ages, the one state solution is the only solution.
 
been saying this for ages, the one state solution is the only solution.

But that'll be the end of Israel as a Jewish state. Instead of existing models, an EU-esque Confederation as endorsed by Israeli President Rivlin and others in the peace movement should be considered, which is the solution I've begun to reconcile myself with.

The thought is the Confederations of Israel and Palestine could coordinate together on security (as they currently do) and economic issues but retain different political systems. Jerusalem would not need to be divided, being the common capital to both with a Palestinian administration headquartered in the east. Many Palestinians in East Jerusalem work in West Jerusalem - but without a hard border, they could continue to do so.

You can skirt around the politically toxic issue in Israel of uprooting the West Bank settlers. They could stay as resident of the Conderation of Palestine, but only vote in the elections of the country of their citizenship (Israel).

Integration of their economies through freedom of labour and goods, and increasing people to people contacts will also help build trust and prosperity.
 
They never recognised those areas belonging to anyone else since day 1, nothing new here.

the Palestinians need to wake up..time to fight for your rights and claim citizenship of Israel. Ask for voting rights and to be treated equally...this is now the only game in tow

been saying this for ages, the one state solution is the only solution.

Arabs are already citizens of Israel and dont have equal rights and never will.

Israel is a modern day crusader outpost, a temporary 'state' while it's allies are the superpowers. Over time it will either weaken to the point of defeat or Israelis will move on due to them not being safe at all.
 
But that'll be the end of Israel as a Jewish state. Instead of existing models, an EU-esque Confederation as endorsed by Israeli President Rivlin and others in the peace movement should be considered, which is the solution I've begun to reconcile myself with.

The thought is the Confederations of Israel and Palestine could coordinate together on security (as they currently do) and economic issues but retain different political systems. Jerusalem would not need to be divided, being the common capital to both with a Palestinian administration headquartered in the east. Many Palestinians in East Jerusalem work in West Jerusalem - but without a hard border, they could continue to do so.

You can skirt around the politically toxic issue in Israel of uprooting the West Bank settlers. They could stay as resident of the Conderation of Palestine, but only vote in the elections of the country of their citizenship (Israel).

Integration of their economies through freedom of labour and goods, and increasing people to people contacts will also help build trust and prosperity.

id support anything allows the free movement of people, i'm no stickler for ideological answers anymore. Israel wont stop the expansion of settlements, and Palestine is too weak and politically isolated to stop them, so whats the point of pretending the west bank isn't Israel.
 
They never recognised those areas belonging to anyone else since day 1, nothing new here.





Arabs are already citizens of Israel and dont have equal rights and never will.

Israel is a modern day crusader outpost, a temporary 'state' while it's allies are the superpowers. Over time it will either weaken to the point of defeat or Israelis will move on due to them not being safe at all.

Not going to happen. Israel wont go anywhere. Infact it will look to further expand once the full one Israeli state is established. In the name of countering threats they will keep pushing into arab territories.

Perhaps we might see breakdown of the US into smaller territories on the other hand. Emergence of Israel as one of the major super powers of the world is a strong possibility in due course of time.
 
Annexation of any West Bank territory would be a renunciation of the premise behind the two-state solution, that the final status of all West Bank land would be determined by Israeli-Palestinian negotiations rather than Israel unilaterally. Even if he only annexed a handful of settlement blocs near the border that would likely go to Israel in any peace deal, it would still dash the already slim hopes of an agreement in the foreseeable future.

But annexation on the scale Netanyahu seemed to be suggesting here would render a Palestinian state essentially impossible. The “isolated settlements” dot the West Bank in such a way that annexing them to Israel would cut off Palestinian population centers from each other, essentially turning them into the holes in Swiss cheese. A Palestinian state would be impossible under these conditions; Israel would in effect be asserting permanent control over Palestinian territory without granting the Palestinians basic rights like the ability to vote in Israeli elections.

You would have an Israel that ruled Palestinians permanently as a separate, legally inferior population, practically the dictionary definition of apartheid. No serious person could consider Israel a liberal democracy — or a democracy of any kind — if this were the way its political system worked.

Netanyahu’s annexation proposal should have destroyed his campaign in a just world. But Israeli public opinion has drifted so far to the right in the past roughly two decades that it in all likelihood helped him.

Who is responsible for the public opinion to drift so far to the right that they only had to choose between two hawkish leaders ? - independent media being stifled or Hamas' pointless needling of Israel ?

Hamas almost certainly prefers Netanyahu who they view as a bit of a coward over Gantz who is baying for blood
https://www.vox.com/world/2019/4/10/18304567/israel-election-results-2019-democracy-palestinian
 
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is set to win re-election after his main rival conceded defeat.

With more than 99 percent of votes counted, Netanyahu's Likud party was set to lead a right-wing bloc with 65 of the 120 seats in parliament.

His main challenger, Benny Gantz, accepted the result on Wednesday, acknowledging that he had failed to unseat the prime minister.

"We respect the decision of the people," he told reporters.

Although Gantz's Blue and White Party was set to win a similar number of seats to Likud, there was no obvious path for its leader to find a parliamentary majority.

A number of right-wing parties expressed their support for Netanyahu and are on course to give him a parliamentary majority.

Addressing a jubilant gathering of supporters early on Wednesday, Netanyahu praised the crowd for an "almost inconceivable achievement".

"I was very moved that the nation of Israel once again entrusted me for the fifth time, and with even greater trust," he added.

Final results are expected to be announced on Thursday.

Despite facing the possibility of being indicted on charges of corruption, fraud and breach of trust in three cases, Netanyahu is now set to embark on a record fifth term in office and will also become Israel's longest-serving prime minister.

His previous terms have been marked by a rightward shift in Israeli policy towards the occupied Palestinian territories, as peace talks with the Palestinians have collapsed and the expansion of illegal Israeli settlements in the West Bank had accelerated. In the run-up to the election, he said he would annex Israeli settlements if he won a fifth term.

"I think the whole rules of the game are changing, because now Israel is clearly superimposing all of Greater Israel on all of historical Palestine," said Hanan Ashrawi, PLO executive committee member.

"They have totally cancelled any agreements. They have nullified the two-state solution. They have totally negated the requirements of peace. They have totally violated international law. Now we need a whole new strategy to deal with this."

US President Donald Trump phoned to congratulate Netanyahu on his victory, the Israeli leader said later on Wednesday.

Trump told reporters at the White House that Netanyahu's re-election improved the chances of a peace deal between Israel and the Palestinians.

"He's been a great ally and he's a friend. I'd like to congratulate him on a well-thought-out race," Trump said.

However, Diana Buttu, a Palestinian Haifa-based analyst and former legal adviser to Palestinian peace negotiators, told Al Jazeera that Netanyahu's renewed mandate will allow him to continue his "policies of apartheid, colonisation and racism".

Buttu said that for as long as Netanyahu has been prime minister, the Palestinian Authority (PA) has been urging the international community to intervene during the bombing of Gaza, construction of illegal settlements, demolition of Palestinian homes, passage of the nation-state law and regarding the annexation of the West Bank.

"[Netanyahu] is ideologically opposed to Palestinian freedom [and] he's going to continue to do whatever he wants against Palestinians," Buttu said.

"The message that the Israeli public has sent is very clear. They support him, they support his policies of apartheid, they support his policies of colonisation and they support a racist."

Israel's President Reuven Rivlin is due to begin meeting with the political parties who won entry into the Israeli parliament, the Knesset, next week to see who they will support for prime minister. He will then select a leader to try and form a coalition.

Voter turnout was 67.9 percent, down from 71.8 percent in 2015. Turnout in the Arab community was significantly lower, standing at 46 percent an hour before the polls closed.

Despite a low voter turnout among Palestinians, the Arab alliances of Hadash-Ta'al and Ra'am-Balad passed the threshold, gaining six and four seats respectively.

However, their total of 10 Knesset seats is lower than in the 2015 elections, when the Arab Joint List won 13, making them the third-largest faction in parliament.

Some voters blamed the low turnout on the split between Arab factions, which had united for the 2015 vote, while there was also a campaign to boycott the election.

On Tuesday, Likud activists placed 1,200 hidden cameras in Palestinian polling areas, prompting the Central Elections Committee (CEC) chairman Judge Hanan Melcer to file a complaint to police.

Netanyahu responded saying there should be cameras everywhere to "ensure a fair vote". The cameras were subsequently removed.

https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2019...u-set-win-rival-concedes-190410180846741.html
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-lang="en"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">My dear friend Bibi, Congratulations! You are a great friend of India, and I look forward to continuing to work with you to take our bilateral partnership to new heights. <a href="https://twitter.com/netanyahu?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">@netanyahu</a></p>— Chowkidar Narendra Modi (@narendramodi) <a href="https://twitter.com/narendramodi/status/1115916217431277568?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">April 10, 2019</a></blockquote>
<script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
But that'll be the end of Israel as a Jewish state. Instead of existing models, an EU-esque Confederation as endorsed by Israeli President Rivlin and others in the peace movement should be considered, which is the solution I've begun to reconcile myself with.

The thought is the Confederations of Israel and Palestine could coordinate together on security (as they currently do) and economic issues but retain different political systems. Jerusalem would not need to be divided, being the common capital to both with a Palestinian administration headquartered in the east. Many Palestinians in East Jerusalem work in West Jerusalem - but without a hard border, they could continue to do so.

You can skirt around the politically toxic issue in Israel of uprooting the West Bank settlers. They could stay as resident of the Conderation of Palestine, but only vote in the elections of the country of their citizenship (Israel).

Integration of their economies through freedom of labour and goods, and increasing people to people contacts will also help build trust and prosperity.

Israel needs to make a choice between being a democracy or a Jewish state. There is no other way. They can come up with a new constitution that protects jewish isrealis by law and prevents them from being expelled or attacked etc..But ultimately the only way this issue will get resolved is if we have one israel for both arabs and jews.
 
the Palestinians need to wake up..time to fight for your rights and claim citizenship of Israel. Ask for voting rights and to be treated equally...this is now the only game in town

Don't the Israelite's claim that Israel is for Jews only so how can the Palestinian Muslims or Christians claim Israeli citizenship.??
 
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Israeli democracy is rotting from the inside

Tuesday’s election results exposed two major threats to Israeli democracy.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu during the campaign. Amir Levy/Getty Images
Israel’s 2019 election results are in, and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is all but certain to stay in office for a record fifth term. The consequences of his victory for both Israelis and Palestinians could very well be catastrophic.

The past several years of Netanyahu’s time in office have been characterized by drift in two illiberal, anti-democratic directions.

The prime minister has tried to buy off the independent media, further marginalized Israel’s Arab minority, and gone after civil society groups critical of his policies. Some of this behavior was, according to Israel’s attorney general, actively criminal; Netanyahu is likely to be indicted in the coming months but is expected to try to pass a law shielding himself from prosecution while in office.

In essence, this apparent victory could allow Netanyahu to continue his scorched-earth campaign to maintain power at all costs — up to and including doing serious harm to the foundations of Israeli democracy.

It has also become obvious that he has no interest in a negotiated solution to the conflict with the Palestinians, and seems content to indefinitely occupy Palestinian land without concern for the harm the occupation does to the Palestinians. At the end of the 2019 campaign, Netanyahu vowed to take this further and begin annexing West Bank settlements — a move toward permanent occupation and, ultimately, apartheid.

These two axes of authoritarianism — weakening Israel’s democratic institutions while perpetuating rule over the Palestinians without granting them political rights — are connected. The conflict with the Palestinians has destroyed Israel’s left and empowered a seemingly ever-more-radical right. In Netanyahu’s fifth term, this connection could become even more explicit: Experts on Israeli politics are concerned he might support a more concrete annexation plan as part of a Faustian bargain for the extreme right’s support in his quest for immunity from prosecution.

Israel has survived existential threats before, including two invasions that nearly wiped out the young Jewish state. Yet the threat to Israeli democracy today is not external, but rather of Israelis’ own making — a long-running illness that could soon turn acute.

The threat to democracy

If Netanyahu is still in office by the summer, which seems extremely likely, he will become the longest-serving prime minister in Israeli history — passing David Ben-Gurion, the first Israeli prime minister, who has often been referred to as Israel’s George Washington. But if Ben-Gurion is remembered as the midwife of Israeli democracy, Netanyahu could be remembered as its gravedigger.

Under Netanyahu’s leadership, Israel passed a law declaring that “the right to exercise national self-determination in the State of Israel is unique to the Jewish people” — an exclusive vision of national identity that excludes Arabs and other non-Jewish minorities. It passed a law aimed at silencing NGOs that monitored the Israeli military’s human rights abuses in the Palestinian territories, and passed a law removing a significant check on the prime minister’s power to take the country to war.

Perhaps the single most worrying example of authoritarian drift in Israel is Netanyahu’s efforts to suborn the media.

One of the hallmarks of democratic backsliding is the government exerting control over independent media outlets — as a compliant media allows the government to get away with other kinds of wrongdoing. In Hungary, Prime Minister Viktor Orbán has either gotten cronies to buy up independent media outlets or pressured other publications into shutting down through punitive tax policies. In Turkey, President Recep Tayyip Erdogan took a less subtle route, jailing journalists and seizing control of independent newspapers.

Two of the legal cases against Netanyahu, known as Case 2000 and Case 4000, allege that he has attempted a smaller-scale version of these anti-media actions.

In Case 2000, Netanyahu allegedly attempted to strike a deal with the owner of Yedioth Ahronoth, Israel’s largest newspaper: He would pass a law limiting circulation of one of its rivals, the already pro-Netanyahu Israel Hayom, in exchange for more favorable coverage in the Netanyahu-skeptical Yedioth.

In Case 4000, Netanyahu allegedly manipulated regulatory powers in order to benefit Bezeq, a major Israeli company. In exchange, the Bezeq-owned news organization Walla gave the prime minister more favorable coverage. Unlike Case 2000, this apparently went beyond the conspiracy stage, with Netanyahu trading regulations for good press over a five-year period.

These attempts to manipulate the media, Israeli observers warned, were a clear and present danger to their democracy.

“What many of the allegations against Netanyahu point to is a systematic attempt to skew media coverage of the prime minister in his favor. And this is no piffling matter,” writes eminent Israeli journalist David Horovitz. “If a leader can line up most or even many of the ostensibly competing media organizations that cover national events reliably on his side, he can subvert their role as independent watchdog, misdirect the reading and watching public, and advance a long way toward cementing his position as prime minister — his non-term-limited position as prime minister in Israel.”

Israeli protestors opposed to the “nation-state” law last August.

Earlier this year, Israeli Attorney General Avichai Mandelblit announced plans to go after Netanyahu on bribery and “breach of trust” charges for these media conspiracies, and will formally indict him pending a hearing. Unlike in Hungary and Turkey, where would-be authoritarian leaders managed to cement control over the media, the Israeli legal system is treating Netanyahu’s ability to do the same as a crime.

But Netanyahu has been framing the election as a referendum on his fitness for office. If he wins, the logic goes, indicting him and forcing him out would be a way of overturning the people’s just-expressed will. Hence the justification for the immunity bill, which he is almost certain to pursue as a top priority.

The brazenness of Netanyahu’s argument — that it would be undemocratic to prosecute him for his efforts to undermine Israeli democracy — is matched only by its danger. While some of the prime minister’s allies in the Knesset have expressed opposition to an immunity law, it’s best not to underestimate Netanyahu’s ability to convince them otherwise. He’s a canny politician who cares first and foremost about survival and will do whatever he can to undermine the legal case against him.

If passed, an immunity law would represent a double blow to Israeli democracy: both legitimizing the prime minister’s efforts to neuter the media and blocking an independent check on wrongdoing by the premier. It would not yet put Israel in the company of faux-democracies like Hungary and Turkey, but it would push the country in that direction — continuing Israel’s slide down what feels like a very slippery undemocratic slope.

Netanyahu’s dangerous annexation pledge

The Saturday before the election, Netanyahu went on Israel’s Channel 12 to make the case for his election. He promised something astonishing: that he would annex Jewish settlements in the West Bank.

“I will impose sovereignty, but I will not distinguish between settlement blocs and isolated settlements,” he said, per an Associated Press translation. “From my perspective, any point of settlement is Israeli, and we have responsibility, as the Israeli government. I will not uproot anyone, and I will not transfer sovereignty to the Palestinians.”

Annexation of any West Bank territory would be a renunciation of the premise behind the two-state solution, that the final status of all West Bank land would be determined by Israeli-Palestinian negotiations rather than Israel unilaterally. Even if he only annexed a handful of settlement blocs near the border that would likely go to Israel in any peace deal, it would still dash the already slim hopes of an agreement in the foreseeable future.

But annexation on the scale Netanyahu seemed to be suggesting here would render a Palestinian state essentially impossible. The “isolated settlements” dot the West Bank in such a way that annexing them to Israel would cut off Palestinian population centers from each other, essentially turning them into the holes in Swiss cheese. A Palestinian state would be impossible under these conditions; Israel would in effect be asserting permanent control over Palestinian territory without granting the Palestinians basic rights like the ability to vote in Israeli elections.

You would have an Israel that ruled Palestinians permanently as a separate, legally inferior population, practically the dictionary definition of apartheid. No serious person could consider Israel a liberal democracy — or a democracy of any kind — if this were the way its political system worked.

Netanyahu’s annexation proposal should have destroyed his campaign in a just world. But Israeli public opinion has drifted so far to the right in the past roughly two decades that it in all likelihood helped him.

A protest along the border between Israel and the Gaza Strip.

Labor, the center-left party that dominated Israeli politics for most of its early existence, was decimated in this election — winning a scant six seats in the Knesset out of a total of 120. After the failure of the peace process and the subsequent violence of the Second Intifada, Israelis lost faith in a two-state solution and are increasingly punishing parties associated with it and elevating ones that threaten to torpedo it.

Now the question is this: Just how serious is Netanyahu about turning this threat into a reality?

That’s very difficult to say. It’s possible he was just posturing, trying to win over right-wing voters in the end stages of the election. We have to hope that’s the case. But there are two reasons to believe it might not be.

First, President Donald Trump has pursued what’s best described as a “blank check” policy toward Israel. Trump took a hardline pro-Netanyahu stance during every flare-up with the Palestinians and has done quite a bit to bolster Netanyahu politically. He moved the US Embassy to Jerusalem and, just before the election, recognized Israeli sovereignty over the Golan Heights — both signs that Trump is fine with Israeli territorial maximalism. Netanyahu likely believes that with this president, he can get away with murdering the two-state solution (in fact, some believe he already has).

Second, Netanyahu may have strong political incentives to conduct at least a limited annexation. More than anything, he wants to stay out of jail — and his coalition partners know it. He needs their votes for an immunity bill, and they can demand a steep price in exchange for it. The extremist United Right party might very well condition their support on Netanyahu annexing some settlements to Israel.

If that comes to pass, it would be an utter catastrophe for Israeli democracy. The prime minister would simultaneously be dismantling checks on his power within its recognized borders and moving Israel towards apartheid outside of them. The world’s only Jewish democracy would be in mortal peril.

This, ultimately, is what this election means. It is not merely a narrow victory for a legally embattled incumbent — but rather a signal that Israeli democracy is about to enter a period of acute crisis.

It’s very possible, maybe even likely, that it survives this crisis. Maybe the immunity bill fails and Netanyahu backs away from his annexation promise. Maybe Netanyahu’s indictment breaks his government and another one — one more open to a truly democratic vision of Israeli society — takes its place. Maybe.

But then again, maybe not. The forces that have pushed Israel in this dark direction are deep and fundamental, the result of Israel’s particular historical traumas and political institutions. Even if Netanyahu’s remaining time in office proves to be short-lived, the threats to Israel’s democratic survival likely will not.

https://www.vox.com/world/2019/4/10/18304567/israel-election-results-2019-democracy-palestinian
 
Don't the Israelite's claim that Israel is for Jews only so how can the Palestinian Muslims or Christians claim Israeli citizenship.??

thats kind of irrelevant in the struggle for rights. you see if Palestinians pursue a one state solution they can easily paint Israel as a racist apartheid state that discriminates. Smart israelis should realise that it is in their interest to come up with a solution that involves coming to terms with the palestinians and to live together not separate.
 
thats kind of irrelevant in the struggle for rights. you see if Palestinians pursue a one state solution they can easily paint Israel as a racist apartheid state that discriminates. Smart israelis should realise that it is in their interest to come up with a solution that involves coming to terms with the palestinians and to live together not separate.

You are right. And i have mentioned the same thing numerous times.

Work for one state solution, it will automatically become aparthied state, work for equal rights in a democratic set up and simultaneously start outnumbering the jews. Use democracy to get control of the nation.
 
I don’t think people here have followed the Israeli POV. There are very few takers to the single state solution there and they believe their security is better off by having more control over the Palestinian Territories. The options as they see it is a two state solution (now dead) or a single state solution with a separate government for the Palestinian Territories. Palestinians will never be accepted as Israeli citizens.
 
Netanyahu is good for Israel. No wonder, he will get re-elected. All attempts to remove him have been futile and what was the basis really, champagne and cigars? Seriously?
 
I don’t think people here have followed the Israeli POV. There are very few takers to the single state solution there and they believe their security is better off by having more control over the Palestinian Territories. The options as they see it is a two state solution (now dead) or a single state solution with a separate government for the Palestinian Territories. Palestinians will never be accepted as Israeli citizens.

I have studied their POV too. it all comes down to their insecurity of being wiped out again. At the end of the day they are an endangered people. Their numbers are dwindling. So i can understand why they feel insecure. However they want to secure their nation by discriminating and inflicting pain on another nation. In the long term this is self defeating and will ultimately lead to the very thing they are trying to avoid.
 
Looks like there'll be a second election.

Netanyahu fails win the support of Avigdor Lieberman's party.
 
Israel to hold fresh election as Netanyahu fails to form coalition

Israeli lawmakers have voted to dissolve parliament after Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu failed to form a coalition government.

The decision triggers a fresh election, to be held in September.

Mr Netanyahu was unable to reach a deal for a fresh right-wing coalition following last month's election.

At the heart of the impasse was a military conscription bill governing exemptions for ultra-Orthodox Jewish seminary students.

Parliament voted 74-45 in favour of dissolving itself after the prime minister missed a midnight local time (21:00 GMT) deadline on Wednesday night
.
Mr Netanyahu appeared set for a fifth term after his Likud Party won 35 of the Knesset's 120 seats in April's election, but he could not reach a deal with former Defence Minister Avigdor Lieberman, whose support became vital.

Israel to hold fresh election as Netanyahu fails to form coalition https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-middle-east-48454514
 
Looks like there'll be a second election.

Netanyahu fails win the support of Avigdor Lieberman's party.

Yeh it's quite a major issue the Haredi's...their exemption from military service, that they don't work, have large families and live off stipends and benefits so they can study Torah...something that irks the secular populace in particular in regards to their military exemption...

Liberman is demanding an increase in the level of ultra-Orthodox enlistment in the Israel Defense Forces, with the threat of economic sanctions on ultra-Orthodox institutions if they do not meet these goals...while other parties are demanding more exemptions...

Netanyahu needs both camps onside which frankly isn't going to happen...

Liebermans proposal?

Liberman’s Defense Ministry last year would initially require 3,348 ultra-Orthodox men to enlist in the IDF each year and another 648 take part in some kind of national service, a small increase on the current quotas. These numbers would increase, first by eight percent each year for three years, then 6.5 percent for another three years and finally by five percent for four more years, reaching 5,737 ultra-Orthodox military recruits and 1,107 national servicemen after a decade.

Nothing to do with the need for manpower...just the struggle between the concept of a Jewish state and a Halachic state...Israelisation or Haredisation...


The right/left wing thing is becoming less of an issue...more-so it's religious v secular...
 
Will this help or hinder Netanyahu?

Well of course another election is a nightmare for him...Bibi's corruption issues have meant he's derided by a lot of Israeli's...and he has a trial in October...

And Lieberman is smart...there are two things secular Israeli's are annoyed about and that's Bibi and the Ultra-Orthodox...the fact that Likud pander to them hasn't gone down well with many...

The Ultra-Orthodox do wield some power...10% of the population and unlike the rest they always all vote...

In the 2015 election Likud had 30 seats and needed 61 to form a government so they formed a coalitian with the ultra-orthodox United Torah, Shas and the centrist Kulanu...this coalitian got the required 61 ...

This time they didn't and Lieberman thus played his card..and the slagging match has begun with Bibi trying to label Lieberman a leftist which couldn't be further from the truth...

Winning an election is only part 1 in the process ...the other part is forming a coalitian...even if Bibi loses it might be difficult for Gantz to form a coalitian...more people voted right wing than left...
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-lang="en"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Breaking News: Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel pledged to annex parts of the occupied West Bank if he wins re-election, citing U.S. support. <a href="https://t.co/M7YeEVuJDG">https://t.co/M7YeEVuJDG</a></p>— The New York Times (@nytimes) <a href="https://twitter.com/nytimes/status/1171455762863775745?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">September 10, 2019</a></blockquote>
<script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
Isreal, the Jewish invaders, fully supported by the so called 'Secular West' for a certain religious objective of acquiring a holy land.

And then the enlightened western super powers say " We are peacekeepers".

Rubbish.
 
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Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has claimed a "huge win" in a vote that challenged his leadership of the Likud party.

About 49% of Likud's 116,000 eligible members voted on Thursday, party figures show.

Challenger Gideon Saar conceded defeat, saying he would now back Mr Netanyahu in March's general election.

The internal party vote was seen as a test of Mr Netanyahu's hold on power at a time of mounting difficulties.

Mr Netanyahu, 70, faces trial on bribery and corruption charges, as well as a third national election within a year.

Previous elections held in April and September saw Likud deadlocked with the centrist Blue and White party - with neither able to form a government.

After polls closed at 23:00 local time (21:00 GMT) on Thursday, Mr Netanyahu tweeted a claim that he had won, although a result is not expected until early on Friday.

"With God and with your help, I will lead the Likud to a big victory in the upcoming elections and continue to lead the State of Israel to unprecedented achievements," he posted (in Hebrew).

Mr Saar, a 53-year-old former minister, later conceded defeat in a tweet (in Hebrew).

"I am content with my decision to have stood. Those who are unwilling to take a risk for what they believe in will never succeed," Mr Saar wrote.

"My colleagues and I will stand behind [Netanyahu] in campaigning for the Likud's success in the general elections," he added.

Mr Saar, a well-known figure in the party, had wanted to take Likud on a new path.

Earlier on Thursday, with reports of low turnout amid bad weather, Mr Netanyahu appeared on a Facebook Live broadcast appealing for members to get out and vote.

He was predicted to win comfortably but campaigned tirelessly because he wanted the result to show his grip on the party remained strong, the BBC's Barbara Plett Usher in Jerusalem said.


Media captionMiddle East correspondent Tom Bateman explains the allegations against Benjamin Netanyahu
Mr Netanyahu, who is the country's longest serving leader, is facing mounting scrutiny after being indicted in three corruption cases last month.

He denies wrongdoing and claims the charges are a politically motivated "witch-hunt" against him.

One exit poll cited by local media suggested Mr Netanyahu had won more than 70% of the vote.

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-middle-east-50920575
 
A third General Election is a joke.

Surely if there is a third consecutive deadlock then there will need to be constitutional changes.
 
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has claimed victory in Israel's general election, after exit polls put him ahead of his main rival Benny Gantz.

Three projections gave Mr Netanyahu's right-wing Likud party 36 or 37 seats, and Mr Gantz's centrist Blue and White alliance between 32 and 34.

However, the polls suggested Likud and its right-wing allies might fall just short of a majority in parliament.

Monday's election was Israel's third in less than a year.

Neither of the two main party leaders was able to command a majority in the 120-seat parliament following the last two rounds.

Mr Netanyahu, 70, is Israel's longest-serving leader. He is seeking a record fifth term, having been in office from 1996 to 1999 and again from 2009.

The election took place two weeks before the prime minister is due in court to face corruption charges, which he denies.

What do the exit polls suggest?
Pre-election opinion polls suggested Likud and Blue and White were more or less tied, with neither Mr Netanyahu nor Mr Gantz sure of a clear path to victory.

But the exit polls published by Israel's three main broadcasters indicated Likud was on course to win between three to five more seats than Blue and White.

The Joint List alliance of Arab parties was projected to get 14 or 15 seats; the ultra-Orthodox parties Shas and United Torah Judaism 16 or 17 between them; the nationalist Yisrael Beitenu party six or seven; the right-wing Yamina alliance six or seven; and the centre-left Labour-Gesher-Meretz list six or seven.

If the exit polls are accurate, it would mean that Likud and its right-wing allies end up with 59 or 60 seats - one or two seats shy of a majority in parliament.

The initial results are expected on Tuesday, and exit polls have displayed inaccuracies in the past.

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-middle-east-51709699
 
Israel West Bank annexation looms as unity government sworn in

Israel's main political rivals become its leaders when a new unity government is sworn in on Thursday, ending over a year of unprecedented deadlock.

Benjamin Netanyahu returns as prime minister for a record fifth time while his electoral opponent Benny Gantz will be deputy under a power-sharing deal.

The country has been in political limbo after three inconclusive elections.

The two men have agreed to push forward with a controversial plan to annex part of the occupied West Bank.

The move is in line with President Trump's Israel-Palestinian peace plan unveiled in January, which also envisages a Palestinian state in about 70 per cent of the West Bank, all of Gaza, and with its capital on the fringes of East Jerusalem.

The Palestinians - who claim all of the West Bank, Gaza and East Jerusalem - have rejected the plan, dismissing it as biased towards Israel and a denial of their rights.

Israel has occupied the territories since the 1967 Middle East war. More than 600,000 Jews live in about 140 settlements in the West Bank and East Jerusalem. Most of the international community considers the settlements illegal under international law, though Israel disputes this.

In the time of Covid-19, Israel's parliament looks different as lawmakers sit apart wearing masks, but some things remain the same.

Benjamin Netanyahu is still prime minister after striking a coalition deal with Benny Gantz to end an unprecedented year of political deadlock.

"It's a remarkable achievement," says journalist Anshel Pfeffer, who wrote a biography of Mr Netanyahu.

"The coronavirus certainly played a role by creating a feeling of emergency, a feeling that the arguments between the pro-Netanyahu and anti-Netanyahu camps needed to be put aside in favour of setting up a unity government."

Some Israelis are outraged that a sitting prime minister is to go on trial for serious criminal charges. They've joined large protests. But others are glad to have a tested leader in charge during this pandemic.

"I'm happy to have a government," says Carmi, a mother in Jerusalem. "Education and business, I guess that's all it needs to take care of right now."

The unity government - a rarity in Israel - was agreed upon after neither Mr Netanyahu, leader of the right-wing Likud party, nor Benny Gantz, who heads the centrist Blue and White party, managed to form governing coalitions after a record three elections in just under a year.

Under its terms, Mr Netanyahu will serve as prime minister for the first 18 months, during which time Mr Gantz will serve as his deputy. The roles will rotate after that.

Mr Gantz - a former military chief of staff - had initially vowed never to join a government led by Mr Netanyahu because the latter faces criminal charges.

However, with the advent of the coronavirus crisis, Mr Gantz changed his position, saying an emergency national unity government was needed as these were "not normal times".

The move led to the disintegration of the centre-left alliance of parties which supported Blue and White, with ertswhile colleagues accusing Mr Gantz of selling out.

While Mr Netanyahu has given his firm backing to apply Israeli sovereignty over all areas containing Jewish settlements, Mr Gantz has taken a more cautious approach, reportedly supporting a more limited annexation.

Both men have agreed on the need to annex the Jordan Valley - a wide corridor of land on the eastern part of the occupied West Bank - which they see as vital for Israel's security.

The formation of the new government comes just 10 days before Mr Netanyahu is due to go on trial - the first time for a sitting prime minister in Israel.

He has been charged with bribery, fraud and breach of trust in connection with three separate cases. He is alleged to have accepted gifts from wealthy businessmen and dispensed favours to try to get more positive press coverage.

Mr Netanyahu has denied any wrongdoing, claiming he is the victim of a political witch-hunt.
https://www.bbc.com/news/world-middle-east-52631959
 
Israel gets first Ethiopia-born minister, in Pnina Tamano-Shata

Israel is set to get its first Ethiopia-born minister, with the nomination of a female MP brought there in a secret operation in the 1980s.

Pnina Tamano-Shata has been chosen by incoming deputy prime minister Benny Gantz, who is forming a unity government with PM Benjamin Netanyahu.

The new government is expected to be sworn in on Sunday after a delay over ministerial appointments.

Israel's Ethiopian-Jewish community often complains of discrimination.

Incidents of police using force against Israelis of Ethiopian origin - including fatal shootings - have led to street protests and clashes in recent years.

The 140,000-strong community is among the poorest in the country and suffers from high rates of unemployment.

However, many second generation Ethiopian-Israelis have become successful across society, achieving notable positions in the military, judiciary and politics.

Pnina Tamano-Shata, who belongs to Benny Gantz's centrist Blue and White party, has been named as immigration minister.

The 39-year-old came to Israel at the age of three as part of a dramatic evacuation of Ethiopian Jews from Sudan nicknamed Operation Moses.

She, her five brothers and her father were among almost 7,000 Ethiopian Jews airlifted out of the country by Israel between November 1984 and January 1985. Her mother followed several years later.

"For me, this is a landmark and the closing of a circle," Ms Tamano-Shata told Israeli newspaper Maariv. "From that three-year-old girl who immigrated to Israel without a mother on a cross-desert foot journey, through growing up in Israel and the struggles I led and am still leading for the community, integration, the acceptance of the other, and against discrimination and racism."

In the early 1980s some 16,000 Ethiopian Jews walked by foot from their homes in northern Ethiopia to get to Sudan and onward to Israel. They - as well as non-Jewish citizens - were barred from leaving Ethiopia, so they made the journey in secret. About 1,500 died on the way or in refugee camps in Sudan.

Sudan - a Muslim-majority country and part of the Arab world - was at war with Israel at the time, and the evacuation was carried out clandestinely. The first operations to bring Ethiopian Jews to Israel were carried out by the Mossad, Israel's secret service, in a series of daring actions from 1980.

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-middle-east-52675585
 
China’s ambassador to Israel found dead in his apartment in a Tel Aviv suburb, Israeli media report.
 
JERUSALEM (Reuters) - Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu presented his new unity government to parliament on Sunday, ending more than a year of political deadlock as he prepares to go on trial in a week for alleged corruption.

His power-sharing agreement with former election rival, centrist Blue and White leader Benny Gantz, opens the way for the right-wing Netanyahu to proceed towards a pledged de facto annexation of parts of the occupied West Bank, land Palestinians seek for a state.

Under his accord with Gantz, after three inconclusive elections, Netanyahu will remain prime minister for 18 months before handing over to his new partner. Gantz, a former armed forces chief, will be Netanyahu’s defence minister.

“The people wanted unity, and that is what it got,” Netanyahu told parliament, citing a desire to avoid a fourth election after three inconclusive ballots since April 2019, and a national battle against the coronavirus crisis.

Israel’s longest-serving leader, Netanyahu, now 70, first came to power in 1996 and has served three consecutive terms since 2009. He goes on trial on May 24 on charges of bribery, breach of trust and fraud, which he denies.

With a record 36 ministers, the cabinet will be the largest in Israel’s history, a reflection of weeks of deal-making that bolstered Netanyahu’s reputation as a political survivor
 
China’s ambassador to Israel found dead in his apartment in a Tel Aviv suburb, Israeli media report.

Du Wei: Chinese ambassador to Israel found dead at home

China’s Ambassador to Israel, Du Wei, has been found dead in his apartment north of Tel Aviv, an Israeli official told BBC News.

The official said Israeli police had launched an investigation but initial findings suggested no foul play.

Mr Du, 57, was only appointed ambassador in February having previously served as envoy to Ukraine.

The ambassador was married and had a son but his family had still to join him in Israel.

He was living in Herzliya, some 10km north of Tel Aviv.

An Israeli police spokesman told Reuters news agency: "As part of the regular procedure, police units are at the scene."

Israel's Channel 12 TV, quoting unnamed medical sources, said initial indications were that Mr Du had died in his sleep of natural causes.

There was no immediate comment on Mr Du's death from Chinese officials.

In a message published on the embassy's website just after his appointment as ambassador, Mr Du praised the relations between "the second largest economy in the world and Israel the start-up nation".

Self-isolation on arrival

When he arrived in Israel on 15 February, Mr Du had immediately to self-isolate for two weeks because of coronavirus restrictions.

In an interview with Israeli newspaper Makor Rishon last month, Mr Du said China was being made the world's scapegoat.

"In history, more than once, a certain group of people was accused of spreading pandemics," he said.

"That is despicable and should be condemned. The disease is an enemy of the entire humankind and the world should fight it together."

On Friday, his embassy made a scathing attack on US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo who had criticised China's handling of the coronavirus pandemic on a visit to Israel.

In a response published in the Jerusalem Post, the embassy condemned Mr Pompeo's "absurd comments", denying that China had ever covered up the crisis.
https://www.bbc.com/news/world-middle-east-52696833
 
An Israeli court has convicted a Jewish settler of murdering three members of a Palestinian family in a 2015 arson attack in the occupied West Bank.

Judges found Amiram Ben Uliel threw a firebomb into a home in the village of Duma, killing Saad and Riham Dawabsha and their 18-month-old son Ali.

Ali's brother Ahmed, who was then four, suffered severe injuries but survived.

Ben Uliel was also found guilty of attempted murder, but was acquitted of belonging to a terrorist organisation.

His lawyers said he planned to appeal against the convictions at the Supreme Court, arguing that Israeli investigators had forced him to make a false confessions.

The night-time attack on the Dawabsha family's home in July 2015 sparked international condemnation and inflamed Israeli-Palestinian tensions, contributing to a rise in violence.

Saad, Riham and their children were asleep when masked assailants threw a firebomb through their bedroom window and daubed walls with slogans in Hebrew, including the word "revenge".

Ali died during the ensuing blaze, while his parents succumbed to their wounds later in hospital. Ahmed spent months in hospital undergoing treatment for burns.

In 2016, Israeli prosecutors charged Ben Uliel with murder and a second suspect, a minor who has not been named, with being an accessory to murder.

According to the indictment, the attack was carried out in retaliation for the killing of a settler in a drive-by shooting one month before.

Last year, a court approved a plea deal in which the minor admitted to conspiring to set fire to the Dawabsha's home.

Ben Uliel, who is 25 and from the settlement of Shilo, sat with his head down as he was found guilty of three counts of murder by the Lod District Court on Monday.

Israeli media reported that he confessed to the crime three times.

Two of the confessions were ruled inadmissible because they were extracted by physical force or soon after physical force was used, according to the Haaretz newspaper. The third was accepted by the judges, who said it was supported by detailed evidence, including his reconstruction of the crime scene.

Following the verdict, Ben Uliel's lawyers said it was "a black day" for Israel, on which a court had convicted "a man whose innocence cries out to the heavens".

Ahmed Dawabsha's grandfather Hussein said: "The trial was for others, not for me."

"It won't bring back my daughter; her husband and my grandson won't return, but I don't want another child to be in Ahmed's place," he was quoted as saying by Haaretz. "We experienced a great trauma, and I won't forget it in 100 years. I don't want this to happen to another family."

In a rare statement, Israel's domestic security service, the Shin Bet, described the verdict as "an important milestone in the fight against Jewish terrorism". Ben Uliel's crimes represented a "severe crossing of a red line", it added.

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-middle-east-52705466
 
Israeli court tells Netanyahu he must appear at start of trial

JERUSALEM (Reuters) - An Israeli court rejected on Wednesday a request by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to be absent from the opening of his corruption trial next week, saying he must abide by the practice of hearing the charges in person.

Netanyahu had asked Jerusalem District Court to be excused from his May 24 arraignment, deeming the event a formality and arguing that bringing his bodyguards would be a waste of public funds and a strain on coronavirus rules against congregations.

Some critics, however, believed Netanyahu was trying to reduce the optics of the first criminal prosecution of a sitting Israeli prime minister. Indicted for bribery, fraud and breach in three long-running cases, he denies wrongdoing.

The court said in response that it could accommodate the fifth-term Netanyahu’s security detail, though it declined his additional request to bring a larger legal retinue.

“It is incumbent upon the requester, as with all other defendants, to appear and have his say in court,” the three-judge panel said in its ruling.

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-...e-must-appear-at-start-of-trial-idUSKBN22W22W
 
Thousands of Israelis have protested in front of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's residence in Jerusalem, demanding his resignation as the government comes under fire over its handling of the coronavirus pandemic.

Some placards carried by demonstrators on Tuesday read "Netanyahu's corruption makes us sick" and "Netanyahu, resign".

"The most deadly virus is not COVID-19, but corruption," protester Laurent Cige, who came from Tel Aviv to take part, told AFP news agency.

Netanyahu was indicted in January for bribery, fraud and breach of trust in three cases.

In May, he forged a new unity government after more than a year of political turmoil and insisted the charges were trumped up to drive him from office.

The next trial date at Jerusalem district court is set for July 19.

Under Israeli law, a sitting prime minister is only required to resign if convicted of a criminal offence with all appeals exhausted, which in Netanyahu's case, could take several years.

Protesters criticised Israel's handling of the novel coronavirus pandemic, as the health ministry announced more than 1,400 new cases recorded in the past 24 hours.

On Monday, police dispersed a group of activists who set up tents outside Netanyahu's official residence.

Thousands also protested in Tel Aviv on Saturday to voice frustration at the prime minister and his economic policies.

Netanyahu is also facing a growing wave of discontent over his handling of the coronavirus crisis.

Israel is now experiencing a sharp rise in coronavirus cases and the economy is struggling as unemployment remains above 20 percent.

The country of some nine million people has recorded more than 41,200 coronavirus cases, including 368 deaths.

After receiving widespread praise for quickly sealing Israel's borders in March and imposing other restrictions, Netanyahu acknowledged last week that he reopened the economy too quickly.

The government lifted some restrictions at the end of May, but announced new ones last week, including closing bars, nightclubs and gyms.

Israel's unemployment has jumped from 3.4 percent in February to 27 percent in April, before falling slightly in May to 23.5 percent.

https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2020...erusalem-call-pm-removal-200714190337012.html
 
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