Cape Argus

Netanyahu remains defiant as he passes baton to Bennett

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VETERAN leader Benjamin Netanyahu handed over power in Israel yesterday to new Prime Minister Naftali Bennett but remained defiant as the patchwork government faced tensions with Palestinia­ns over a planned Jewish nationalis­t march.

Minutes after meeting Bennett, Netanyahu repeated a pledge to topple the new government approved on Sunday by a 60-59 vote in parliament.

Formation of the alliance of rightwing, centrist, left-wing and Arab parties, with little in common other than a desire to unseat Netanyahu, capped coalition-building efforts after a March 23 election, Israel’s fourth poll in two years. Instead of the traditiona­l toasts marking Bennett’s entry into the prime minister’s office, Netanyahu held a low-key meeting there with the former defence chief, who heads the nationalis­t Yamina party, to brief him on government business.

The government was already facing a decision over whether to approve a procession planned for today by Jewish nationalis­ts through the Muslim quarter of Jerusalem’s Old City.

Palestinia­n factions have called for a “day of rage” against the event, with memories of clashes with Israeli police still fresh from last month in contested Jerusalem’s Al-Aqsa Mosque compound and in an area of the city where Palestinia­ns face eviction in a court dispute with Jewish settlers. “This is … an aggression against our Jerusalem and our holy sites,” Palestinia­n Prime Minister Mohammad Shtayyeh said.

The Hamas Islamist movement that rules the Gaza Strip warned of the possibilit­y of renewed hostilitie­s if the march goes ahead, less than a month after a ceasefire ended 11 days of cross-border hostilitie­s with Israeli forces. A route change or cancelling the procession could expose the Israeli government to accusation­s from its right-wing opponents of giving Hamas veto power over events in Jerusalem.

Deputy internal security minister Yoav Segalovitz said past government­s had stopped nationalis­ts visiting Muslim sites in times of tension. “The main thing is to consider what’s the right thing to do at this time,” he said.

Palestinia­ns want East Jerusalem to be the capital of a state they seek to establish in the occupied West Bank and Gaza. Israel, which annexed East Jerusalem in a move that has not won internatio­nal recognitio­n after capturing the area in a 1967 war, regards the entire city as its capital.

Under the coalition deal, Bennett, an Orthodox Jew and tech millionair­e who advocates annexing parts of the West Bank, will be replaced as Prime Minister in 2023 by centrist Yair Lapid, 57, a former TV host.

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