Monterey Herald

Netanyahu critics urge Germany, Britain to cancel his visit

- By Josef Federman

Hundreds of Israeli writers, artists and intellectu­als on Tuesday called on Germany and Britain to cancel upcoming visits by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, saying his plan to overhaul Israel's judicial system has put the country on a destructiv­e course.

Netanyahu's coalition, a collection of ultranatio­nalist and ultra-Orthodox parties, has barreled ahead with legislatio­n that aims to weaken Israel's Supreme Court and give them control over the appointmen­t of the nation's judges.

They say the plan is a long-overdue measure to curb what they see as outsize influence by unelected judges. But critics say the plan will destroy Israel's fragile system of checks and balances by concentrat­ing power in the hands of Netanyahu and his parliament­ary majority. They also say it is attempt by Netanyahu, who is on trial for corruption charges, to escape justice.

Tens of thousands of Israelis have taken to the streets over the past two months to protest the sweeping overhaul. Protests last week were so large that Netanyahu was forced to take a helicopter to the airport in order to catch a flight for an official visit to Italy.

High-tech leaders, Nobel-winning economists and prominent security officials have spoken out against it, military reservists have threatened to stop reporting for duty and even some of Israel's closest allies, including the U.S., have urged Netanyahu to slow down. Repeated efforts by Israel's figurehead president, Isaac Herzog, to broker a compromise have not yielded fruit.

In a letter addressed to the German and British ambassador­s in Israel,

some 1,000 Israeli figures said Tuesday that Israel is in the midst of the most extreme crisis in its history and that Netanyahu is trying

to turn the country into a “theocratic dictatorsh­ip.”

“In the face of Mr. Netanyahu's dangerous and destructiv­e leadership,

and in light of a vast democratic civilian resistance against the destructio­n of state institutio­ns by undemocrat­ic law-making, we are asking that Germany and Great Britain swiftly announce to the defendant Netanyahu that his planned state visits to your countries are canceled,” reads the letter. “If these visits go ahead as planned, a dark shadow will hang over them.”

The letter was signed by internatio­nally acclaimed author David Grossman, novelist Dorit Rabinyan, Oscar-nominated director Uri Barbash and scores of academics, business figures and profession­als.

Netanyahu is scheduled to meet German Chancellor Olaf Scholz on Thursday in Berlin, where Israeli expats say they are organizing a large protest against their visiting prime minister.

Netanyahu returned to power in December, following the country's fifth election in under four years, at the head of the most right-wing government in Israel's 75-year history.

 ?? OHAD ZWIGENBERG — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Police disperse demonstrat­ors and activists as they block a road near the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and other government offices over plans by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's government to overhaul the judicial system, in Jerusalem, Tuesday.
OHAD ZWIGENBERG — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Police disperse demonstrat­ors and activists as they block a road near the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and other government offices over plans by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's government to overhaul the judicial system, in Jerusalem, Tuesday.

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