Las Vegas Review-Journal

Netanyahu criticizes protests

Media ‘inflaming’ demonstrat­ions, distorting news, PM says

- By Tia Goldenberg The Associated Press

TEL AVIV, Israel — Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Sunday railed at protests against his rule, saying they were egged on by biased media that distort facts and cheer on the demonstrat­ors.

Netanyahu has faced a wave of protests in recent weeks, with demonstrat­ors calling for the resignatio­n of the long-serving leader, who is on trial for corruption charges. They’ve also panned his handling of the coronaviru­s crisis. Netanyahu has painted the protests as dens of “anarchists” and “leftists” out to topple “a strong right-wing leader.”

The protests have largely been peaceful. In some cases they have ended with clashes between demonstrat­ors and police. In others, small gangs of Netanyahu supporters and individual­s affiliated with far-right groups have assaulted demonstrat­ors.

At a meeting of his Cabinet, Netanyahu

slammed the media for “inflaming” the protests and for misreprese­nting instances of violence against the protesters.

“There has never been such a distorted mobilizati­on — I wanted to say Soviet but it has already reached North Korean terms — of the media in favor of the protests,” he said.

Netanyahu said the media ignored “wild and unfettered incitement, including daily calls — including the day before yesterday — to murder the prime minister and his family.”

He said the protests were breeding grounds for the virus that were being allowed to take place with no limits, shutting down streets and neighborho­ods. He said right-wing protests have not been given such free rein.

He condemned violence “from all sides” at the start of his remarks before tearing into the media he has long viewed as hostile toward him.

Also at the Cabinet meeting, Israeli Defense Minister Benny Gantz, who is the country’s “alternate” prime minister under a power-sharing deal, said the protests must be allowed to take place with demonstrat­ors shielded from violence.

“The right to protest is the lifeblood of democracy, and violence is the erosion of the foundation of democracy,” he said.

A Jerusalem court ruled that Netanyahu’s son Yair Netanyahu must remove a tweet that published the names, addresses and phone numbers of protesters and called for his followers to demonstrat­e outside their homes “day and night.” Protesters said they received threatenin­g calls after the tweet. The court also decided he must “refrain from harassing” the protesters for six months.

“Turns out that in our ‘democracy’ you aren’t allowed to protest outside the homes of anarchists who have called to for the prime minister’s murder,” tweeted Yair Netanyahu after the ruling.

 ??  ?? Benjamin Netanyahu
Benjamin Netanyahu

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States