The Jerusalem Post

MK backtracks on bill to jail journalist­s for publishing police investigat­ion informatio­n

- • By JEREMY SHARON

Following heavy media attention and significan­t political opposition, MK David Amsalem says he will remove a clause in the so-called “recommenda­tions bill” that could see journalist­s jailed for a year for publishing informatio­n leaked from police investigat­ions.

The clause is part of Amsalem’s legislatio­n aimed at prohibitin­g police from making a recommenda­tion to the attorney-general to either indict or acquit the subject of a completed investigat­ion.

He told the Knesset Interior Committee on Tuesday that the clause was “a printing error” and that the person who had drafted the law for him had done a poor job. He added that it would be removed from the draft bill scheduled for a vote on Thursday.

According to the clause, a person “who publishes informatio­n from material of an investigat­ion or passes that material to an unauthoriz­ed individual without permission from a court [is liable to] imprisonme­nt for a year.”

Amsalem denied that it was designed to muzzle the press, telling Army Radio on Monday that journalist­s were not his target.

“My intention does not concern journalist­s – journalist­s don’t interest me so much,” said the Likud MK.

He added that the intent was to prevent individual­s in the police or State Attorney’s Office from leaking such informatio­n.

“We are not trying to close freedom of expression in Israel,” he said.

Despite Amsalem’s denial, he did not explain why the clause states that both those who “pass on” investigat­ive material and those who “publish” it would be subject to prison sentences.

When asked about his opposition to President Reuven Rivlin’s decision not to pardon Elor Azaria for having shot dead a wounded Palestinia­n terrorist lying on the ground in Hebron, the MK took the opportunit­y to snipe at the press.

“By the way, [for] the majority of journalist­s, their children aren’t going around Hebron,” Amsalem stated during the radio interview, implying that the children of journalist­s do not serve in IDF combat units.

Zionist Union MK Ksenia Svetlova has denounced the proposed legislatio­n, saying it is designed to protect Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu from investigat­ions currently under way.

“In a democracy, one doesn’t threaten journalist­s doing their job with imprisonme­nt,” said Svetlova. “Someone with nothing to hide doesn’t send his emissaries to legislate such laws.”

Gil Hoffman contribute­d to this report.

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