Dayton Daily News

State witness a turning point in Netanyahu corruption case

- By Ian Deitch

Now that one of Benjamin Netanyahu’s closest confidants has turned state witness, according to Israeli media reports Wednesday, it may mark a turning point for the beleaguere­d prime minister facing a slew of corruption allegation­s that could topple him from power.

The testimony by Shlomo Filber, a longtime Netanyahu aide, is the latest in a dizzying series of developmen­ts and scandals that have engulfed the prime minister, his family and his inner circle.

Police would not confirm whether Filber would testify against Netanyahu, but all the major Israeli media outlets said a deal to do so had been reached.

Aluf Benn, editor-in-chief of the Haaretz daily, wrote Wednesday that “these are the final days of Benjamin Netanyahu’s rule” and that “Netanyahu’s leadership has been dealt a harsh blow, apparently a mortal one.”

Filber, the former direc- tor of the Communicat­ions Ministry under Netanyahu, is under arrest on suspicion of promoting regulation worth hundreds of millions of dollars to Israel’s Bezeq telecom company. In return, Bezeq’s popular news site, Walla, allegedly provided favorable coverage of Net- anyahu and his family.

The reports came shortly after another bombshell alle- gation that a different Netanyahu confidant attempted to bribe a judge in exchange for dropping a corruption case against Netanyahu’s wife. Nir Hefetz, a longtime media adviser to Netanyahu and his family, remains in custody.

The prime minister, who held the communicat­ions portfolio until last year, has not yet been named a sus- pect, though he may soon be questioned. Netanyahu has denied all the charges, call- ing them part of a media-or- chestrated witch hunt that has swept up the police and prosecutio­n as well, and has vowed to carry on.

Still, the string of accusation­s appears to be taking its toll.

Senior Cabinet ministers from Netanyahu’s ruling Likud party, who until just recently have marched out dutifully to defend him, have largely gone silent. Netanyahu himself appeared ashen in a video released late Tuesday, calling the claims “total madness.”

Netanyahu projected busi- ness as usual on Wednesday evening.

At a gathering of Jewish leaders in Jerusalem, he spoke about Israel’s diplomatic and technologi­cal successes as well as regional developmen­ts and the threat of “Iran’s aggression.” He made no mention of his domestic woes in the speech to major American Jewish organizati­ons.

Former Prime Minister Ehud Barak, a bitter rival of Netanyahu, told Channel 10 TV “there is no way back” for the premier. “This chapter in the political history of Israel is about to end,” he said.

Barak said he closely knows Netanyahu and believes he “understand­s that this is the end of the story” but will try to postpone the inevitable in different ways.

Other leading Israeli columnists on Wednesday suggested that if Filber told all he knew, Netanyahu was probably more worried about avoiding prison than staying in office.

“When so many dark clouds accumulate in the sky, the chances of rain increase,” wrote Nahum Barnea in Yediot Ahronot. “His appearance lent the fight he is waging the dimensions of a Shakespear­ean tragedy. This isn’t the end. It isn’t even the beginning of the end. But it cannot have a different end.”

Filber is one of the closest people to Netanyahu, a loyal aide dating back to when Netanyahu first took office in 1996. Netanyahu’s former chief of staff Ari Harow has also signed a state witness settlement in which he agreed to testify against his former mentor. The collapse of Netanyahu’s inner circle has spawned rampant speculatio­n that he may step down in return for a deal that offers him amnesty.

 ?? SVEN HOPPE / DPA ?? Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has said corruption allegation­s against him are “total madness,” but a close confidant has become a state witness in the case against him.
SVEN HOPPE / DPA Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has said corruption allegation­s against him are “total madness,” but a close confidant has become a state witness in the case against him.

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