The Jerusalem Post

Cabinet ministers call for Azaria to be pardoned

Security of Israel’s citizens necessitat­es an immediate pardon, says Bennett

- • By GIL HOFFMAN Jeremy Sharon contribute­d to this report.

Education Minister Naftali Bennett responded to the sentencing of Sgt. Elor Azaria on Tuesday, calling for him to be immediatel­y pardoned. “The security of Israel’s citizens necessitat­es an immediate pardon for Elor Azaria,” he said.

Bennett stated that Azaria, who was sentenced to a year and a half in jail, “was sent to defend the citizens of Israel during the height of a Palestinia­n knife terror wave, and the entire investigat­ive process was contaminat­ed from the start.”

The Bayit Yehudi leader said that “even if he made a mistake, Elor must not serve time in jail. We will all pay the price.”

Transporta­tion Minister Israel Katz (Likud) also called for Azaria to be pardoned. “The court has had its say – due process has been carried out. Now the time has come for a pardon. We must bring Elor back home.”

In an appeal sent to Defense Minister Avigdor Liberman and IDF Chief of Staff Gadi Eizenkot, Constructi­on Minister Yoav Galant wrote: “The IDF has paid a heavy price for this incident and it created unnecessar­y rifts. What Azaria did was unacceptab­le, but we must recall that even a soldier that made a mistake is our soldier.

“Just as we worry about the return of a wounded soldier and just as we are obligated to save any soldier that falls into captivity, we must worry about a soldier that has made a mistake, even when the mistake was harsh and dramatic,” he continued.

Culture and Sport Minister Miri Regev said the sentencing made it a sad day, adding, “Elor should not spend a single day in jail. We should not have gone to court, he should have been dealt with within his unit.”

Regev called on Eizenkot to recommend a pardon for him out of considerat­ion for what he has already endured.

By contrast, Yesh Atid MK Ofer Shelah said Azaria’s sentencing must end this painful incident.

“We must tell the politician­s who are trying to gain cheap popularity points on the back of Elor and his family while harming the IDF’s values and the ability of its officers to command it, ‘Enough is enough,’” he said. “No one is happy to see Azaria go to jail, but pardoning him will make a mockery of the legal system in the army.”

Joint List MK Yousef Jabareen responded to the sentencing, stating that the punishment did not fit the crime.

“It sends a message that the blood of Palestinia­ns is worthless,” Jabareen said. “The incident with Azaria is not an isolated case, it is a much larger problem within the army, which is supported by the political echelon and fueled by a lack of prosecutio­n of soldiers.”

Jabareen added that he had asked Attorney-General Avichai Mandelblit to open an investigat­ion into Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who called for Azaria’s pardon shortly after his conviction.

Jabareen called Netanyahu’s comments an obstructio­n of justice, claiming that they influenced the court’s decision.

Zionist Union MK Omer Bar-lev, a former head of the elite commando unit Sayeret Matkal, called on his fellow politician­s to respect the principle of separation of powers and refrain from heating tensions with calls to pardon Azaria.

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