The Jerusalem Post

Knesset NGO probe heads to first vote

- • By LAHAV HARKOV

The first step toward the Knesset establishi­ng a parliament­ary commission of inquiry into foreign government funding of NGOs is set to take place on Wednesday.

Yisrael Beytenu MK Oded Forer plans to put forward a motion to the Knesset’s agenda calling to establish the committee looking into “the involvemen­t of foreign government­s in the funding of political organizati­ons and activities to harm IDF soldiers,” after the coalition agreed to do so last week.

If the Knesset votes in favor of the motion, it will go to the Knesset House Committee, which will hold a vote on whether to establish the committee or not. The coalition has yet to decide who would lead the commission of inquiry, and only plans to do so if the motion is accepted.

“When a foreign country promotes its interests through NGOs, it needs to be looked into,” Forer said on Tuesday. “When foreign countries fund NGOs acting against IDF soldiers, it needs to be investigat­ed.”

Forer added that foreign government­s wouldn’t want Israel to intervene in their internal affairs or influence the lives of their citizens.

“There is nothing wrong with receiving donations, but a parliament­ary commission of inquiry is necessary to examine who stands behind NGOs that act against IDF soldiers,” he said.

The Yisrael Beytenu MK is bringing the motion to a vote despite the position of Knesset Legal Adviser Eyal Yinon that the topic of the inquiry goes beyond the Knesset’s authority, saying that it is an “ideologica­l clarificat­ion,” and suggesting that laws be passed to deal with the problem, instead.

There are transparen­cy laws already in place for foreign government-funded NGOs, and the coalition hopes to pass more laws banning such donations to political organizati­ons.

Another initiative Tourism Minister Yariv Levin, whom Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu tasked with dealing with this issue, is working on, is legislatio­n banning outright any organizati­on that seeks to put IDF soldiers on trial in foreign tribunals.

In a position paper, right-wing organizati­on Im Tirtzu outlined its defense of the idea of a commission of inquiry and what it should investigat­e.

According to Im Tirtzu, “There is no parallel in the world to such a twisted relationsh­ip between countries that are supposed to be allies, like the case of Israel and Europe.

“In a democracy, organizati­ons have the right to have and promote extreme, anti-Zionist positions, but it is not legitimate that foreign countries use foreign organizati­ons to trample Israel’s sovereignt­y, thus harming Israeli democracy... European states allow themselves to behave toward us in a way they wouldn’t toward each other as part of an old, colonialis­t view that sees Israel as its protectora­te,” the paper reads.

Im Tirtzu called on the committee not to focus solely on NGOs activities, but rather look at the funding itself, regardless of the political positions of the recipients.

As such, the organizati­on called on the commission of inquiry to invite ambassador­s from all foreign states that donate to political NGOs and ask them how much money they give to the organizati­ons and how, for what purpose, who makes the decision and more.

The report also includes the publicly available informatio­n on how much 28 far-left NGOs have received from foreign political entities since 2012, which adds up to a total of NIS 252,538,756.

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