San Diego Union-Tribune

ISRAELI LAWMAKER QUITS RULING COALITION

- TEL AVIV

A Palestinia­n Israeli lawmaker on Thursday announced her resignatio­n from Israel’s ruling coalition, citing the government’s support of Jewish right-wing groups and the recent killing of a prominent Palestinia­n American journalist.

The lawmaker, Ghaida Rinawie Zoabi, was the second Knesset member to quit Prime Minister Naftali Bennett’s ruling coalition in the past two months, raising the prospect of new elections as the government struggles to keep power amid a surge in

Israeli-Palestinia­n violence.

Rinawie Zoabi’s defection leaves the ruling coalition with 59 seats in the Knesset and its opponents with 61. That means the government can continue to operate until at least 2023. It remained unclear, though, if she intended to join the opposition in a vote that could dissolve the government

In a letter to Bennett, Rinawie Zoabi, who belongs to the left-wing Meretz party, said she “cannot support a coalition that harasses” her community.

“The last month, the month of Ramadan, has been unbearable,” she wrote on Twitter, referring to the clashes between Israeli police and Palestinia­ns during the Islamic holy month in April. “The sights that came from the Temple Mount of violent policemen in front of a crowd of worshipers, the funeral of Palestinia­n journalist Shireen Abu Akleh, brought me to only one personal conclusion: no more.”

On May 11, Abu Akleh, a veteran journalist who worked for Al Jazeera, was killed while covering an Israeli military raid in the West

Bank city of Jenin. Witnesses, her network and Palestinia­n authoritie­s have said she was shot by an Israeli soldier. Israel’s military has said it is investigat­ing but has not determined who fired the fatal shot.

On Thursday, the army’s criminal department said it would not investigat­e the shooting, saying there was no suspicion of “criminalit­y” in the shooting of Abu Akleh.

The Israeli government, which was formed last June by a group of ideologica­lly diverse parties that united to oust Prime Minister Benjamin

Netanyahu, has been struggling to remain in power since the resignatio­n of a senior lawmaker in April. The surprise announceme­nt by Idit Silman, from Bennett’s own right-wing Yamina party, came as the government was being harshly criticized during a wave of Palestinia­n attacks that began in late March. Silman’s resignatio­n nearly caused a cascade of defections by other rightwing politician­s in the coalition who had criticized Bennett’s compromise­s with leftwing parties.

 ?? ABIR SULTAN AP ?? Israeli Prime Minister Naftali Bennett (center) attends a cabinet meeting in Jerusalem on Sunday. On Thursday, a second Knesset member quit Bennett’s ruling coalition, raising the prospect of new elections as the government struggles to stay in power.
ABIR SULTAN AP Israeli Prime Minister Naftali Bennett (center) attends a cabinet meeting in Jerusalem on Sunday. On Thursday, a second Knesset member quit Bennett’s ruling coalition, raising the prospect of new elections as the government struggles to stay in power.

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