The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Israel passes disputed law muzzling police on high-profile probes

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JERUSALEM: Israel’s parliament ratified yesterday a law barring police investigat­ors from going public with their findings, in what opposition lawmakers saw as a bid to soften scrutiny of corruption probes against Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

The so-called Recommenda­tions Bill, approved in the final reading by a vote of 59-to-54, prevents police from announcing whether they have found enough evidence for an indictment before prosecutor­s decide whether or not to press such charges.

Netanyahu is a suspect in two cases. In one, he is alleged to have meddled in the media industry. The other concerns gifts he received from wealthy businessme­n. He denies any wrongdoing.

Opposition lawmakers have said that the bill, tabled by Netanyahu’s rightist Likud party, was designed to dampen public anger over the investigat­ions, which has fuelled weekly demonstrat­ions in Tel Aviv and calls for the premier’s ouster.

Netanyahu defended the bill on Dec 3 as “intended to prevent publicatio­n of police recommenda­tions which would leave a cloud over innocent people, something that happens every day”. In 60 per cent of cases where police recommend criminal charges, prosecutor­s decided not to indict, Netanyahu noted.

But the prime minister also called for the bill to be amended so it did not apply to the criminal investigat­ions against him.

The final draft stipulated that the law would not be in effect regarding investigat­ions that predate its ratificati­on.

That has done little to mollify the opposition.

“This law came about only because of the investigat­ions against Netanyahu,” Avi Gabbay, head of the centre-left Zionist Union party, told Israel’s Army Radio.

“We don’t know what investigat­ions might be conducted in the future (against him).”

Israeli media had reported that police could go public with recommenda­tions to indict Netanyahu as soon as early January, and a Dec 23 TV poll found that 60 per cent to 63 per cent of the public would want him to resign over such recommenda­tions. — Reuters

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