Marin Independent Journal

Israeli PM's family gets death threat, bullet in the mail

- By Josef Federman

JERUSALEM >> Prime Minister Naftali Bennett's teenage son has received a death threat and bullet in the mail, Israeli officials said Thursday, the second such warning against the Israeli leader's family this week.

The threats have come at a time of deep political divisions in Israel. In a major speech on Wednesday night marking Israel's Holocaust memorial day, Bennett had spoken out against the polarizati­on in Israel, urging citizens not to let internal divisions rip society apart.

Israeli police said that both incidents were being investigat­ed, but gave few other details, including where the items were sent and who might have sent them.

Bennett has been the target of fierce criticism from Israel's hard-line right wing since forming his governing coalition last year. In 1995, Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin was assassinat­ed by a Jewish ultranatio­nalist opposed to his peacemakin­g efforts with the Palestinia­ns.

Bennett's government is made up of eight parties from across the political spectrum, including religious nationalis­ts, centrists and an Islamic party. It is the first Arab party to be part of a governing coalition.

These parties have little in common beyond their shared animosity to former Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. They have agreed to put aside many of their difference­s while focusing on common ground, such as the economy, managing the coronaviru­s crisis and spending on education and social services.

Netanyahu, now the opposition leader, has worked hard to undermine the coalition.

Critics have accused Bennett, who leads a small, religious nationalis­t party, of abandoning his core hardline beliefs. One member of his Yamina party was sanctioned this week as a “defector” for repeatedly supporting the opposition in hundreds of votes. Another member of his party recently resigned from the coalition, leaving the fragile alliance without a parliament­ary majority.

 ?? AMIR COHEN — POOL PHOTO ?? Israeli Prime Minister Naftali Bennett and his wife,
Gilat, take part in the ceremony marking Holocaust Remembranc­e Day at Warsaw Ghetto Square at the Yad Vashem memorial in Jerusalem on Thursday.
AMIR COHEN — POOL PHOTO Israeli Prime Minister Naftali Bennett and his wife, Gilat, take part in the ceremony marking Holocaust Remembranc­e Day at Warsaw Ghetto Square at the Yad Vashem memorial in Jerusalem on Thursday.

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