The Peterborough Examiner

Israeli coalition partner pushes for early vote

Crisis for Netanyahu after meeting with party chief goes awry

- KARIN LAUB

JERUSALEM — Israel moved closer to early elections Friday after Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s main coalition partner, the ultra-nationalis­t Jewish Home party, said it wants a vote “as soon as possible” and will press for consultati­ons on a date on Sunday.

The call for early elections came after a meeting Friday between Netanyahu and Education Minister and Jewish Home leader Naftali Bennett.

The two men have been locked in a tense rivalry, with Bennett often criticizin­g Netanyahu from the right.

Bennett had demanded the post of defence minister, after the incumbent, Avigdor Lieberman, resigned earlier this week in protest over Netanyahu’s Gaza policies.

A senior Jewish Home official said it became clear after the Bennett-Netanyahu meeting that there “is a need to go to elections as soon as possible.”

He spoke on condition of anonymity because he was discussing the content of a closed meeting.

The official said leaders of coalition parties will meet Sunday to co-ordinate the date for early elections.

The apparent failure of the Netanyahu-Bennett meeting seemed to seal the fate of the coalition.

The departure of Lieberman and his Israel Beitenu party had left the coalition with a one-seat majority in the 120-member parliament.

Without Bennett’s Jewish Home, Netanyahu’s coalition would lose its parliament­ary majority.

The political crisis began with a botched Israeli undercover raid in Gaza on Sunday.

The raid led to two days of intense cross-border fighting. Gaza’s Hamas rulers fired hundreds of rockets at southern Israel, while Israeli warplanes targeted scores of targets in Gaza.

After two days, Egypt brokered an informal truce between Israel and the Islamic militant Hamas. Netanyahu averted a war, but drew blistering criticism from ultra-nationalis­ts.

Lieberman resigned in protest on Wednesday.

On Friday, he toured southern Israel and accused Netanyahu of being soft on terrorism.

And he said that Netanyahu’s Gaza policy is strengthen­ing Hamas.

Lieberman alleged the truce will put southern Israel under a growing threat from Hamas, similar to the threat posed to northern Israel by Lebanon’s heavily armed Hezbollah militia.

“It’s impossible that after Hamas launches 500 rockets at the Israeli border communitie­s. the heads of Hamas are actually getting immunity from the Israeli cabinet,” he told reporters.

“We are now feeding a monster” that will only grow if not stopped, he said. “Within a year we will have a twin brother of Hezbollah, with all the implicatio­ns.”

But on Friday, Hamas kept border protests widely restrained.

Thousands of Palestinia­ns participat­ed in a Hamas-led rally along the perimeter fence dividing Gaza from Israel, with most crowds staying 300 metres from the fence.

However, Gaza’s Health Ministry said 40 Palestinia­ns were wounded, 18 by live fire from Israeli forces.

Witnesses said others were wounded in stone-throwing incidents at the usual five protest locations.

No tire burnings or attempts to breach the fence were reported. Such acts have often triggered lethal Israeli army fire.

Since the near-weekly protests began in March, more than 170 Palestinia­ns have been killed.

Hamas is pressing for an end to an Israeli-Egyptian blockade that beleaguere­d Gaza’s two million residents since the Islamic group took full power there in 2007.

 ?? ADEL HANA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Protesters walk toward the Gaza Strip border fence with Israel Friday during a rally east of Gaza City. Hamas kept border protests widely restrained, reports said.
ADEL HANA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Protesters walk toward the Gaza Strip border fence with Israel Friday during a rally east of Gaza City. Hamas kept border protests widely restrained, reports said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada