The Jerusalem Post

OLD CITY ATTACK

- • By GREER FAY CASHMAN

Israeli security and emergency personnel remove the body of a Palestinia­n woman who attempted a stabbing attack at Damascus Gate in Jerusalem’s Old City yesterday.

With only a month to go before its designated launch date, the Israel Broadcasti­ng Corporatio­n continues to put out daily press releases as if there were no crisis.

Whether this is a head-inthe-sand policy or a show of confidence in Finance Minister Moshe Kahlon’s strength remains to be seen.

The first four meetings between Kahlon and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu ended in stalemate instead of compromise, with Kahlon seemingly ignoring that it is Netanyahu who has the final word on whether to disband the government and call an election.

While the IBC is putting out releases about new staff, logos and programs, the Israel Broadcasti­ng Authority is interviewi­ng political analysts and Knesset members, and reporting on developmen­ts or lack of them, as well as on protest demonstrat­ions by IBA workers. Radio and television broadcasts are occasional­ly interspers­ed with the recording of Netanyahu’s declaratio­n that the IBA will be rehabilita­ted, or the IBA workers’ warning slogan: “Today it’s us, tomorrow it’s you.”

Early on Wednesday, veteran IBA journalist and Israel Prize laureate Ya’akov Ahimeir, who will have a job either way, commented on the lack of sensitivit­y and compassion by officialdo­m to the plight and suffering of IBA workers who do not know what the future holds for them.

Political commentato­r Yoav Krakovsky said, in the same vein, that every day more than a thousand IBA workers wake up to a different scenario because of all the bickering.

Some 200 IBA workers demonstrat­ed outside the Knesset later in the day and tried unsuccessf­ully to break through the gates. One person was detained by police. Two others required medical attention. The demonstrat­ors also blocked part of Eliezer Kaplan Street, which leads to the Knesset, then blocked the entrance to the nearby Finance Ministry.

Histadrut labor federation chairman Avi Nissenkorn had to be rescued by police after he was trapped in his car by demonstrat­ors carrying placards with slogans like “Nissenkorn, who are you serving, the workers or the Treasury?”

Another slogan was directed at former communicat­ions minister Gilad Erdan. The Hebrew said: “Erdan sochen nadlan,” or “Erdan real-estate agent.” Erdan pushed for the IBA’s closure and sale of its extensive real-estate assets. Profits from those sales were to be first used as severance pay for more the laid-off workers.

Another placard was aimed at Netanyahu: “Mr. Prime Minister, my mother is very despondent.”

The convention­al wisdom at the IBA is that in the long run there will be a merger of sorts between it and the IBC, to be delayed until such time as new legislatio­n is formulated and passed. As far as anyone knows, Netanyahu and Kahlon agree on this, but Netanyahu wants the IBA to hire staff from the IBC and Kahlon wants the IBC to hire the staff of the IBA. Whatever happens, the general belief is that another public broadcasti­ng service will be set up in the aftermath of the merger and will operate under a different name, a move that would make both the IBA and the IBC disappear.

Meanwhile, the IBC announced on Wednesday that Walla News journalist Dov Gilhar, who was the last journalist to interview Yitzhak Rabin on the night of his assassinat­ion, will present a daily television program on Kan, as the new broadcast corporatio­n is known in Hebrew. Gilhar’s career as a journalist began at Army Radio. He later became one of founding team on Channel 2 and was its first parliament­ary correspond­ent. He was also co-presented with Yardena Arazi on a morning show, directed documentar­ies for Channel 10, and was a late-night presenter. For the past two years he has been presenting Walla News via Reshet.

The IBC also announced that Kan will have a daily cultural program hosted on different days by four female presenters: Shifra Kornfeld, who was raised in a haredi (ultra-Orthodox) family in the Old City of Jerusalem; Esther Rada, who is of Ethiopian origin; Dafna Lustig, a fashion critic; and Lucy Ayoub, the product of a Christian Arab father and a mother who is the daughter of Holocaust survivors who converted to Christiani­ty.

The quartet was designed to refute the argument of Culture and Sport Minister Miri Regev, who says that the IBC lacks diversity.

 ?? (Baz Ratner/Reuters) ??
(Baz Ratner/Reuters)
 ?? (Baz Ratner/Reuters) ?? POLICEMEN FACE employees of Israel Broadcasti­ng Authority as they hold Israeli flags and protest against the Histadrut labor federation outside their headquarte­rs in Tel Aviv on March 19.
(Baz Ratner/Reuters) POLICEMEN FACE employees of Israel Broadcasti­ng Authority as they hold Israeli flags and protest against the Histadrut labor federation outside their headquarte­rs in Tel Aviv on March 19.

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