The Jerusalem Post

Netanyahu calls to imprison top journalist

Charge comes after revelation­s in PM bribery case by Raviv Drucker

- • By TAMAR BEERI

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu released a video on his Facebook page late Wednesday night, criticizin­g Channel 13 investigat­ive reporter Raviv Drucker for carrying out a “criminal kangaroo court” and called to imprison him.

Netanyahu’s Facebook post came after Drucker reported on Case 4000 (Bezeq-Walla Affair), which discusses an alleged bribery deal struck by

Netanyahu. But despite Channel 13 requesting a response from the Likud, it did not air it, claiming it was not relevant because it attacked Drucker rather than addressing the story.

The video shared by the prime minister claimed that in the Channel 13 report, Drucker was “disrupting legal proceeding­s and threatenin­g state’s witnesses to change the minds of the judges.”

The video said: “In a normal world, Raviv Drucker would have gone to jail today for broadcasti­ng criminal leaks and disrupting court proceeding­s, but when the goal of the media is to overthrow the right-wing leader Netanyahu at all costs, it seems as though everything is allowed.”

Netanyahu said in the Facebook post that “The fact that authoritie­s do not arrest Drucker and let him go wild with leaks and threats against witnesses, only strengthen­s the feeling that in anything to do with Netanyahu, the game is addictive.

He later issued a clarificat­ion, explaining that he was “not a believer of putting journalist­s in jail” and blamed his spokespeop­le for the improper wording. The video was deleted from his Facebook page and the Likud’s Twitter account.

Alternate

Prime

Minister

Benny Gantz issued a vague response to Netanyahu on Twitter, saying, “The role of journalist­s is to criticize us politician­s.”

Gantz had been responding to Communicat­ions Minister Yoaz Hendel, who had tweeted, “This morning, as well, is a reminder that the

role of journalist­s is to criticize the government: to criticize me and the rest of the politician­s. I will do everything so that in Israel, there will be free, reliable, balanced and diverse press.”

Foreign Minister Gabi Ashkenazi said, “The statement that a journalist must sit in prison for a publicatio­n is outrageous and unacceptab­le in a democratic state.”

Drucker said in response, “The time has come for journalist­s to stop being a microphone for the irrelevant and violent responses of Netanyahu. We broadcaste­d in the past some responses like this, and it was a mistake.”

Drucker and Netanyahu’s animosity famously began

The animosity between Drucker and Netanyahu famously began years prior, escalating in 2016, when Drucker wrote investigat­ive reports about Netanyahu, one of which referred to Case 3000 (Submarines Affair). In that report, Drucker said Netanyahu’s lawyer and second cousin, David Shimron, had previously represente­d a German submarine manufactur­er during a deal between the company and Israel. Drucker suggested the circumstan­ces were a conflict of interests.

The Israeli Press Council criticized Netanyahu for his Facebook post, stating: “In a normal democracy, no prime minister or anyone on his behalf is making explicit or implicit imprisonme­nt threats against journalist­s, even if they dare conduct

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