Gulf News

Netanyahu wants dirty laundry kept private

He is suing his own office and attorney general to prevent them from releasing laundry bills of him and family

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Benjamin Netanyahu doesn’t want details of his dirty laundry aired in public — and he is suing his own office and Israel’s attorney general to try to prevent it.

Legal documents published yesterday showed that the prime minister, citing a right to privacy, is asking a court in occupied Jerusalem to overturn a decision to release his laundry bills and those of his family under the regime’s Freedom of Informatio­n law.

Israeli media have focused in the past on food and beverage expenses at Netanyahu’s official and private homes. Three years ago, he drew flak over a $127,000 charge to fit a bedroom into a chartered plane for a flight to London to attend the funeral of former Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher.

The current case involves a request by The Movement for Freedom of Informatio­n, a group seeking greater public transparen­cy in Israel, for details of all state-paid expenses in Netanyahu’s private home and official residence in 2014.

Netanyahu’s attorneys argue that the inclusion of laundry expenses would be tantamount to “peeping” into his private affairs, but Anat Revivo, who oversees compliance with the Freedom of Informatio­n law at the prime minister’s office, maintains that the public has a right to know.

When Revivo consulted attorney-general on matter, he agreed.

Netanyahu was given time to mount a legal challenge and on Monday filed a 27-page lawsuit against Revivo and AttorneyGe­neral Avichai Mandelblit.

In the petition, which the Movement for Freedom of Informatio­n posted on its website, Netanyahu’s lawyers cited Israel’s Protection of Privacy Law, as well as Britain’s Human Rights Act and the European Convention on Human Rights to support their case. Israel’s the

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