The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Israeli AG warns Netanyahu he’s violating the law

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Israel’s attorney general on Friday warned Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu that he has violated the country’s law on conflict of interest, which barred him from direct involvemen­t in his government’s divisive plans for a judicial overhaul while standing trial for corruption.

Netanyahu’s far-right government has barreled ahead with plans to weaken the Supreme Court and grant politician­s less judicial oversight in their policymaki­ng despite massive protests from across Israeli society — including an uproar among business leaders, top legal officials and military reservists. On Thursday, just hours after his coalition passed a law that would protect the Israeli leader from being deemed unfit to rule because of his corruption trial and claims of a conflict of interest, Netanyahu defiantly pledged to proceed with the overhaul.

Netanyahu contended that stripping the attorney general of the power to remove him from office was necessary to clear the way for him to participat­e in the negotiatio­ns on the judicial overhaul and try to “mend the rift” in the polarized nation.

Attorney General Gali Baharav-miara thoroughly disagreed, sharply rebuking him in a letter Friday for breaking a conflict of interest agreement that had allowed him to continue leading the country while charged with corruption, bribery and breach of trust. The deal Netanyahu was pressed to sign in 2020 prevented him from being involved in legislativ­e issues or key judicial appointmen­ts that could affect his ongoing trial.

“Your statement last night and any further actions by you that violate that agreement are completely illegal and in conflict of interest,” Baharav-miara wrote in Friday’s letter. “The legal situation is clear — you must avoid any involvemen­t in measures to change the judicial system.”

The contentiou­s law that makes it harder to remove Netanyahu from office, passed late Wednesday by a slim majority of 61 in the 120seat parliament, does not undo the court’s earlier conflict of interest ruling, Baharav-miara said.

Supporters of the judicial overhaul underway in Israel say it will restore power to elected legislator­s and make the courts less interventi­onist. Critics say the move upends Israel’s system of checks and balances and pushes it toward autocracy.

 ?? OHAD ZWIGENBERG/AP ?? Israeli police scuffle with demonstrat­ors blocking a road Thursday in Tel Aviv, Israel, during a protest against plans by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s government to overhaul the judicial system.
OHAD ZWIGENBERG/AP Israeli police scuffle with demonstrat­ors blocking a road Thursday in Tel Aviv, Israel, during a protest against plans by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s government to overhaul the judicial system.

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