The Borneo Post

Netanyahu threatens snap polls after broadcasti­ng row

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JERUSALEM: Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu raised Sunday the possibilit­y of snap elections following a dispute with his finance minister over a new national broadcasti­ng service.

Local papers, radio and television channels carried Netanyahu’s threat to dissolve the government – the most rightwing in the country’s history – if the Public Broadcasti­ng Corporatio­n ( PBC) isn’t dissolved before its scheduled start date on April 30.

Netanyahu, whose Likud party is part of a slim parliament­ary majority, has long been opposed to the new service but he appeared last week to reach an agreement with Finance Minister Moshe Kahlon, before rowing back.

“You cannot have a situation in which Likud respects all coalition agreements while small parties don’t keep their commitment­s on important points,” Netanyahu said in remarks broadcast Sunday by public radio.

Some media suggested Netanyahu had deliberate­ly triggered the cabinet crisis as a way to deflect attention from a long-running investigat­ion into alleged corruption that has seen him questioned several times by police in recent weeks.

Kahlon heads the Kulanu party which, with 10 seats in parliament, is a crucial part of Netanyahu’s government.

He is known as being committed to reforming Israel’s public broadcasti­ng and is reported to have held talks with opposition leader Isaac Herzog of Labour on Saturday evening as the row dragged on. — AFP

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