The Jerusalem Post

Mandelblit, PM lawyer spar at Meron disaster panel

- • By MICHAEL STARR

Former attorney-general Avichai Mandelblit testified before the Mount Meron Disaster Investigat­ion Committee on Tuesday, in a tense cross-examinatio­n by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s attorney Rina Miyuchas.

Mandelblit was asked why he didn’t order a police investigat­ion into the crowd crush that killed 45 pilgrims on Mount Meron in 2021, saying that it was for the police to decide. However, the Netanyahu lawyer noted that Police

Chief Kobi Shabtai had previously testified that the attorney-general needed to provide permission for the police to investigat­e.

Mandelblit also said that they had stopped the criminal investigat­ion because it would have interfered with the work of the investigat­ion committee. The committee had requested that they not investigat­e at the same time as the inquiry panel operated, said Mandelblit.

Miyuchas noted that Mandelblit was asked for assistance in collecting investigat­ion materials for the committee when it was first formed.

“I don’t personally collect materials myself,” Mandelblit said. Mandelblit argued that the attorneys-general are not as active administra­tively as the lawyer might think.

Mandelblit’s testimony, which came at the request of Netanyahu’s legal team, saw tension between his attorney and the former attorney-general. Mandelblit complained that he wasn’t allowed to properly finish responding to questions and that Miyuchas was interrupti­ng him. Miyuchas at one point described Mandelblit’s answers as attempts to “lecture” and that he wasn’t answering the questions.

The Meron committee issued warnings to several political leaders about how the inquiry into the largest civilian disaster in Israel’s history might find them culpable.

Netanyahu is not expected to testify before the committee during the current “warning” phase, but he did testify in the previous phase of the investigat­ion prior to the culpabilit­y warnings. He will likely be represente­d by his lawyer in further testimony.

The committee has found that there were severe issues with the organizati­on and problems in maintenanc­e of the Mount Meron infrastruc­ture leading up to the disaster and that warnings were ignored by authoritie­s. The committee issued recommenda­tions for future pilgrimage­s to the tomb of Rabbi Shimon bar Yochai, including limits on how many people can attend and building only one traditiona­l bonfire, as opposed to many.

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