Bangkok Post

Netanyahu family in spotlight

-

JERUSALEM: Israeli police accusation­s this week against Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu involving fancy cigars, Champagne and jewellery have revived older stories of alleged misbehavio­ur by the premier and some family members.

The accusation­s were the most serious against Mr Netanyahu during his long tenure in power, but they follow a series of stories about him and his family that have captured public attention.

To name a few: the family dog biting a lawmaker, allegation­s that the premier’s wife falsified housekeepi­ng expenses and the broadcast of a recording of their eldest son drunk outside a strip club.

Mr Netanyahu, who has repeatedly proclaimed his innocence, says the attention paid to his family has been grossly unfair, and calls many of the stories obvious attempts to discredit him.

Tamar Hermann, an expert on public opinion at the Israel Democracy Institute think tank, said Mr Netanyahu supporters would certainly agree. But for others, she said, “it’s like having a neighbour whose domestic scene makes you look at it and say, ‘God forbid! I hope it won’t infect my home.’”

In recommendi­ng that Mr Netanyahu be indicted, police said he and “members of his household” were given cigars, champagne and jewellery worth about 1 million shekels (8.82 million baht) by Hollywood producer Arnon Milchan and Australian billionair­e James Packer.

Mr Netanyahu is alleged to have tried to help Milchan in return, including by promoting his business interests in Israel.

While the police document recommende­d that Mr Netanyahu be charged with bribery, fraud and breach of public trust, it made no mention by name of his wife Sara or their son Yair, who also live in the heavily guarded official residence in central Jerusalem.

But dozens of reports since police first interrogat­ed the prime minister in January 2017 state that Sara Mr Netanyahu was aware of certain gifts, with some allegedly delivered at her request.

Haaretz newspaper referred to “an expensive piece of jewellery requested by Sara Mr Netanyahu as a birthday gift” from Milchan, and said Mr Packer gave Yair free air tickets and paid for hotel rooms.

In a separate case, Sara Netanyahu also faces a possible trial over alleged misuse of public funds, which she denies.

The allegation­s announced last year are that she and an aide falsely declared there were no cooks available at the prime minister’s official residence and they ordered from outside caterers at public expense.

The cost amounted to 359,000 shekels, the justice ministry said in a statement in September.

A former butler has also accused her of pocketing cash from deposit refunds for empty bottles returned from the official residence between 2009 and 2013, money that should have gone to the treasury.

In 2013, Mr Netanyahu reimbursed the state $1,000 but the butler has said the figure should have been six times higher.

In February 2016, a court awarded 170,000 shekels in damages to a former housekeepe­r who accused the couple of repeated workplace abuse.

The Netanyahus have dismissed the allegation­s, widely circulated in local media, as a smear campaign.

Yair, 26, is a regular target of the family’s critics as a grown man living in the premier’s residence despite having no official role.

Last August, left-wing thinktank Molad published “Five things you didn’t know about heir to the throne Yair Netanyahu”, slamming his lifestyle, particular­ly the cost to the taxpayer of his round-the-clock protection and government car with driver.

That perk backfired last month when a driver’s recording of Yair outside a strip club drunkenly boasting to a friend about his father’s role in a natural gas deal by his government was widely broadcast.

Yair is heard speaking with the son of Kobi Maimon, a stakeholde­r in a company that owns a share in Israel’s offshore Tamar gas field.

“My dad arranged $20 billion for your dad; you can give me 400 shekels,” he says.

Yair said he was joking in the audio, said to be from 2015, and acknowledg­ed he had been “under the influence of alcohol”.

It was not the first time he drew media fire. In September, Yair raised eyebrows with a bizarre Facebook post suggesting there was a conspiracy against his family. The post included a series of anti-Semitic images.

Before that there was what the Jerusalem Post called “Dog poop-gate” in which a neighbour of the Netanyahus complained that she had seen Yair walking the family dog Kaiya and failing to bag its leavings. She wrote on Facebook that when she challenged Yair to clean up after the animal, he made an obscene gesture.

 ?? AP ?? Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in Tel Aviv on Thursday.
AP Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in Tel Aviv on Thursday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Thailand