Netanyahu to be indicted for breach of trust and bribery
Israel’s Attorney General yesterday announced plans to indict Benjamin Netanyahu, the prime minister, on charges of breach of trust and bribery.
The move followed months of mounting pressure and comes just six weeks before closely contested elections seen as a referendum on Netanyahu’s legacy.
The 69-year-old has entered uncharted territories as the first sitting Israeli prime minister put on notice for prosecution.
Charges can only be filed after a hearing, likely to be held after the April 9 elections, in which Netanyahu can contest the allegations.
The claims concern three separate cases in which Netanyahu is accused of accepting expensive gifts and conspiring for positive media coverages in exchange for political favours.
Netanyahu has roundly denied any wrongdoing and vowed to remain in office and fight the charges. His Likud party has pledged to stand by him.
By law, he does not need to step down when indicted. He is only required to step down if he is convicted and that conviction is upheld through the appeals process, which could take years.
Netanyahu has in turn repeatedly dismissed the allegations as a conspiracy by the Left and media to bring down his Right-wing government.
In a statement after the indictment’s release, Likud called it ‘‘a witch hunt’’ and ‘‘political persecution’’.
‘‘Unilateral publication of the Attorney General’s announcement just a month before the elections, without giving the prime minister an opportunity to refute these false accusations, is a blatant and unprecedented intervention in the elections,’’ the statement said.
Yesterday morning, Likud failed in an attempt to delay the indictment in an appeal to the Supreme Court. Netanyahu initially called for early elections in December to get ahead of the pending indictments.
Any actual trial is still months or years away.
In the meantime, the question remains what impact the indictments will have on ‘‘King Bibi,’’ as the former special forces soldier has become known.
In recent weeks, a coalition of centrist parties, led by Benny Gantz, the former chief of staff of the Israeli Defence Forces, has emerged as a significant electoral threat.
But Netanyahu is also feeling heat from the Right, as he fears losing votes to his more Right-wing opponents.
In a highly controversial move aimed at securing some of these votes, last week Netanyahu pushed through an unprecedented alliance with an extreme fringe and religious-nationalist party, Jewish Power. The group’s leaders are disciples of the late Rabbi Meir Kahane, who both Israel and the United States had sanctioned for terrorism, incitement to violence, and racism.
Some analysts are portraying the proposed indictment as the beginning of the end for Netanyahu.
A recent website predicted that Netanyahu’s Likud would lose four parliamentary seats if the prime minister was indicted, while Gantz’s coalition, known as the Blue and White Party, could gain enough seats to take the premiership. poll by the Israeli
Others, however, are not dismissing him yet. Netanyahu can rely on a large and loyal base.
Another recent poll found that a majority of Likud and ultraorthodox voters did not trust the police, claims of corruption, or the media – which seems to signal popular support for Netanyahu’s
‘‘Unilateral publication of the Attorney General’s announcement just a month before the elections, without giving the prime minister an opportunity to refute these false accusations, is a blatant and unprecedented intervention in the elections.’’
Likud statement
characterisation of these cases as a conspiracy against him.
Netanyahu was elected prime minister for the second time in 2009. If he wins the April election he will become the longest serving Israeli prime minister, a title currently held by founding father Ben Gurion.