The Hamilton Spectator

Netanyahu denounces protesters after massing near salon serving wife

Gathering fuelled by divisive overhaul of Israel’s judiciary

- ILAN BEN ZION

JERUSALEM Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his allies on Thursday denounced protesters as “anarchists” after they massed outside a Tel Aviv salon where his wife was getting her hair done — a chaotic end to a day of demonstrat­ions against the government’s plan to overhaul the judiciary.

Sara Netanyahu has long been a polarizing figure in Israel, and the incident late Wednesday in a posh neighbourh­ood in Tel Aviv reflected Israel’s emotionall­y charged divide over the overhaul, seen by opponents as an existentia­l threat to the country. Demonstrat­ors outside the salon chanted, “shame, shame” — but did not try to force their way inside. Hundreds of police were sent to the scene and eventually escorted her into a limousine.

In a post on Instagram, Sara Netanyahu thanked the police for helping her and thanked the public for what she said was an outpouring of support. “Yesterday’s incident could have ended with murder,” she said. She called on opposition leaders to condemn “the violence, anarchy and incitement.”

Meanwhile, Netanyahu and his political partners showed no signs of easing up on a push to pass a series of bills to overhaul Israel’s judiciary. These moves have further inflamed an already deeply riven country and drawn the largest protests in over a decade.

Protest organizers held a small demonstrat­ion outside Netanyahu’s office on Thursday, with some 200 people, most of them army veterans, joining former Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni a day after their self-proclaimed “day of disruption” turned violent when police used a heavy hand against participan­ts at a Tel Aviv rally.

Thursday’s demonstrat­ions in Jerusalem are expected to include speeches by former government ministers and senior security officials. Former top economists, including two former Bank of Israel heads and a Nobel Prize laureate, were set to speak at a conference in Tel Aviv about the economic fallout from the overhaul.

Justice Minister Yariv Levin, one of the architects of the judicial overhaul, said Wednesday night that despite the mounting public outcry, Netanyahu’s government “will not stop the legislatio­n.”

The proposed bills would give politician­s and parliament control over judicial appointmen­ts, the power to overrule the Supreme Court and the ability to pass laws impervious to judicial review.

 ?? ?? Police stand guard outside a Tel Aviv salon where protesters demonstrat­ing against the government’s planned judicial overhaul amassed on Wednesday after learning that the prime minister’s wife, Sara Netanyahu, was getting her hair done inside.
Police stand guard outside a Tel Aviv salon where protesters demonstrat­ing against the government’s planned judicial overhaul amassed on Wednesday after learning that the prime minister’s wife, Sara Netanyahu, was getting her hair done inside.
 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his wife Sara gesture after first exit poll results for the Israeli Parliament­ary election last fall.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his wife Sara gesture after first exit poll results for the Israeli Parliament­ary election last fall.
 ?? OREN ZIV THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ??
OREN ZIV THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

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