Stabroek News Sunday

Israel domestic security warns of violence as Netanyahu faces unseating

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- The head of Israel’s domestic security service issued a rare warning yesterday of possible violence during one of the most politicall­y charged periods in decades, with the country on the verge of unseating Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, its longest serving leader.

Netanyahu is facing the prospect of an end to his 12-year run as premier after Israel’s centrist opposition leader Yair Lapid announced on Wednesday that he had succeeded in forming a governing coalition following a March 23 election.

The new government, yet to be sworn in, is an unlikely patchwork of left-wing, liberal, rightist, nationalis­t and religious parties, as well as - for the first time in Israel’s history - an Arab Islamist party.

Netanyahu in online posts has warned the partnershi­p was “a dangerous leftist government.”

Some right-wing groups are angry at Naftali Bennett, head of a small ultra-nationalis­t party who is slated to replace Netanyahu in a powershari­ng pact with Lapid, garnering many postings attacking him on social media.

Before the election, Bennett had promised he would not join the centrist Lapid, or any Arab party in a coalition.

“We have recently identified a rise in increasing­ly extreme violent and inciteful discourse particular­ly on social networks,” Nadav Argaman, head of the Shin Bet security force, said in a statement without mentioning any names.

“This discourse may be interprete­d among certain groups or individual­s, as one that permits violent and illegal activity that may even cause physical harm,” he said.

Since Bennett announced he was joining forces with Lapid, security services have ramped up his protection with right-wing demonstrat­ions held near the homes of his party members, hoping to keep them from joining the government.

Argaman called on political and religious leaders to show responsibi­lity and tone down potential incitement­s. His warning was reminiscen­t to some in Israel of the days leading up to the 1995 assassinat­ion of thenprime minister Yitzhak Rabin, who was shot by a Jewish ultra-nationalis­t for pursuing a land-for-peace deal with the Palestinia­ns.

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