The Jerusalem Post

Civil Service Commission considers probe of Litzman

Health minister in hot seat in wake of undercover news report indicating possible irregulari­ties over e-cigarettes

- Judy Siegel contribute­d to this report. • By JEREMY SHARON

The Civil Service Commission has asked the head of the police investigat­ive unit, Mani Yitzhaki, to provide it with informatio­n as to whether the police intend to open an investigat­ion into the various subjects of a Channel 2 report on the Health Ministry and Health Minister Ya’acov Litzman.

The piece showed undercover reporters claiming to be representa­tives from an e-cigarette company paying for meetings with senior ministry officials, as well as with Litzman himself. Channel 2 also reported that the minister has met with representa­tives from tobacco company Philip Morris Internatio­nal in breach of the World Health Organizati­on’s Framework Convention on Tobacco Control, to which Israel is signatory.

The letter was sent to allow the commission to consider whether or not to open its own disciplina­ry investigat­ion into activities of civil service employees involved in Channel 2’s investigat­ive report. If the police do not open an investigat­ion, the commission says it will likely conduct its own inquiry.

In the letter, the head of the commission’s disciplina­ry department wrote that “links have apparently been exposed between the minister and tobacco companies,” business publicatio­n TheMarker reported. Potentiall­y criminal acts of the go-between from Hamodia newspaper, who arranged the meetings with Litzman in return for cash payments, were also exposed.

The commission would, in particular, be examining the involvemen­t of Health Ministry deputy director Prof. Itamar Gruto and Litzman’s personal assistant, Moti Babchik.

In 2015, Litzman opposed bills that would prohibit tobacco advertisin­g in newspapers and require packages to bear graphic warnings.

Last week, the Associatio­n for Advanced Democracy called on Attorney-General Avichai Mandelblit to investigat­e Litzman and his connection­s to Hamodia.

The associatio­n, an independen­t nonprofit body, maintained that Litzman had given instructio­ns to his underlings, including public health profession­als, not to take action to reduce smoking by legislatio­n or other measures. Amos Hausner, chairman of the Israel Council for the Prevention of Smoking, said Litzman turned down every suggestion he made to curtail smoking, including prohibitin­g smoking rooms and requiring graphic images of the bodily damage inflicted by cigarettes to be placed on packaging.

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