Arab Times

Israeli minister resigns

Protest against Netanyahu

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JERUSALEM, Oct 3, (AP): Israel’s tourism minister resigned from the fractious government Friday, saying he doesn’t have an “ounce of trust” in Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and accusing him of putting his personal and legal issues ahead of the response to the coronaviru­s crisis.

Asaf Zamir is a member of the centrist Blue and White Party, which battled Netanyahu’s right-wing Likud in three stalemated elections in under a year before forming an emergency government with it in May to combat the pandemic.

Israel went into a second nationwide lockdown last month and is now grappling with one of the worst outbreaks in the world on a per capita basis. The emergency government has been roiled by infighting and has faced widespread criticism over its confusing and often contradict­ory response to the pandemic.

“I can no longer sit in a government in which I don’t have an ounce of trust in the person at its head,” Zamir tweeted. “I have unfortunat­ely determined that the coronaviru­s crisis and its terrible impact is at best in second place in the list of priorities of the prime minister. Personal and legal considerat­ions are at the top of Netanyahu’s priorities.”

Netanyahu has been the target of weekly demonstrat­ions outside his official residence for months, with protesters calling on him to resign over his trial on multiple corruption allegation­s and his response to the pandemic.

Earlier this week, Israel’s parliament passed a law that would allow the government to curtail public protests during the lockdown, as Netanyahu’s critics accused him of trying to muzzle dissent. Netanyahu says the restrictio­ns are needed to prevent transmissi­on of the virus.

The Likud slammed Zamir’s decision to step down, accusing him of playing politics at a time when Netanyahu is “fighting around the clock in order to save the lives and the livelihood­s of Israeli citizens.”

“Blue and White needs to decide if they are working in unison within the government in fighting the coronaviru­s or if they are continuing to create chaos within the government and therefore harm the necessary actions for the sake of Israeli citizens.”

Israel garnered praise last spring when it moved quickly to seal its borders, close most businesses and impose strict stay-at-home orders. By May the rate of new daily cases had dropped to around a dozen.

But that month authoritie­s abruptly reopened the economy, lifting nearly all restrictio­ns. Case numbers have soared since then, with the country now reporting more than 7,000 new infections a day and authoritie­s warning that hospitals could soon be overwhelme­d. The economy has meanwhile been slow to recover.

Israel, with a population of just 9 million, has reported a total of more than 250,000 cases and more than 1,600 deaths.

Defense Minister Benny Gantz, the head of Blue and White, said he accepted Zamir’s resignatio­n with “understand­ing and regret,” adding that “we wanted unity, and yet this isn’t the government we hoped for.”

“We joined the government to reign in the coronaviru­s, not to curb democracy or the rule of law,” he said. “If anyone disagrees, they can set a date for elections.”

 ?? 1. (AP) ?? Israeli police officers detain an Israeli protester during a demonstrat­ion against lockdown measures that they believe are aimed at curbing protests against Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in Tel Aviv, Israel
on Oct
1. (AP) Israeli police officers detain an Israeli protester during a demonstrat­ion against lockdown measures that they believe are aimed at curbing protests against Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in Tel Aviv, Israel on Oct

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