Cape Argus

Calls to recall Israeli envoy

Opposition tells Netanyahu to dismiss his US ambassador for failing to report sex scandal

- ARON HELLER

An opposition Israeli lawmaker yesterday called on Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to dismiss his ambassador to the US for failing to report sexual assault allegation­s against a top Netanyahu aide, ballooning an already embarrassi­ng scandal for the Israeli leader.

Karin Elharrar said Ron Dermer should be recalled from Washington for not reporting the warnings he received about David Keyes, Netanyahu’s spokespers­on to foreign media.

Last week, Julia Salazar, a candidate for New York’s state senate, accused Keyes of sexually assaulting her five years ago.

Wall Street Journal reporter Shayndi Raice tweeted that she also had a “terrible encounter” with Keyes before he became Netanyahu’s spokespers­on. She described him as a “predator” and someone who had “absolutely no conception of the word ‘no’ ”.

At least a dozen other women have since come forward with varying allegation­s, some of which are said to have been committed since Keyes took up his current position in early 2016.

Keyes, 34, denies the allegation­s, saying all “are deeply misleading and many of them are categorica­lly false”.

But the scandal has since spread to the rest of Netanyahu’s inner circle, previously rocked with accusation­s of sexual impropriet­ies.

Natan Eshel, a former top aide, was forced to resign in 2012 after allegation­s emerged that he harassed and intimidate­d a woman in the prime minister’s office, including taking pictures up her skirt.

Earlier this year, Netanyahu’s son Yair came under fire after a recording emerged of him joyriding at taxpayers’ expense to Tel Aviv strip clubs and making misogynist­ic comments about strippers, waitresses and other women.

Over the weekend, Dermer, who was perhaps Netanyahu’s closest associate before taking office in Washington, confirmed he was warned in late 2016 by New York Times columnist Bret Stephens, then of the Wall Street Journal, about Keyes’s questionab­le behaviour toward women.

The New York Times reported that Stephens, who said he had barred Keyes from visiting the Wall Street Journal offices because of harassment complaints of women there against him, warned Dermer that “Keyes posed a risk to women in Israeli government offices”.

Dermer said he did not report this further since he did not consider the harassment allegation­s criminal.

But Elharrar noted in her letter to Netanyahu that Dermer was unqualifie­d to judge this. Under Israeli law sexual harassment is a crime and public servants are required to report any knowledge of it.

Therefore, she said, she demanded Dermer’s dismissal since “it is unreasonab­le that someone holding such a prominent position would violate the law so blatantly”.

Netanyahu has yet to comment on the matter. Michal Rozin, a legislator with the opposition Meretz party, said his silence could be interprete­d as tolerance of the alleged acts and she demanded he take a clear stance against sexual assault and harassment

Rozin, who formally headed Israel’s umbrella organisati­on for victims of sexual violence, has appealed to Israel’s civil service commission­er asking for the allegation­s against Keyes to be investigat­ed because of the “serious concern of serial behaviour”. She demanded Dermer’s conduct be examined as well.

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