The Miracle

Israeli court rejects Netanyahu’s

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A court in Israel on Tuesday rejected Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s request to delay the start of his corruption trial, ruling it would begin as planned next week.

Lawyers for Netanyahu - the first Israeli prime minister to be indicted while in office - had told the Jerusalem district court they had not received all the prosecutio­n’s case material and asked for a 45day delay.

State prosecutor­s responded that they oppose any delays, and the court accepted their position. In overruling the request, the presiding judge wrote that the first session on March 17 was a reading only and the defendant’s response was not needed. Therefore, there was no justificat­ion for a delay.

Netanyahu has been charged with fraud, breach of trust, and accepting bribes in connection with a series of scandals that include accepting expensive gifts from wealthy friends and offering to exchange favours with powerful media moguls. The long-ruling Israeli leader denies any wrongdoing and says he is the victim of a media-orchestrat­ed witch-hunt. His legal troubles stood at the centre of last week’s third inconclusi­ve Israeli election in less than a year.

Netanyahu’s opponent, Benny Gantz, refused to sit with him in government and appears poised to push for legislatio­n in the incoming parliament that would bar anyone indicted of a crime being able to lead a government.

The anti-Netanyahu forces in the incoming parliament command a 62-58 majority, but are deeply divided among themselves.

Israel’s longest-serving leader is desperate to remain in office, because installing a new government would give him an important political boost and potentiall­y allow him to legislate his way out of the legal quagmire.

Amit Haddad, one of Netanyahu’s lawyers, had said he would seek a delay in the start of the trial.

The request was “technical” and meant to give the defence time to review investigat­ive materials that it still had not received, he said.

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