News Nosh 09.05.16

APN's daily news review from Israel
Monday September 05, 2016 
 
Quote of the day:
"[Prime Minister Binyamin] Netanyahu sees the approaching disaster, but doesn’t have the courage to do anything. Lacking leadership, it is our right and duty as citizens to determine our fate. Only a decision as part of a referendum will give a true expression to the desire of the majority and will enable the continued building of the Zionist enterprise without violence between us.” 
--Former Shin Bet chief and minister, Ami Ayalon ahead of the launching today of a left-wing initiative for a national referendum on the future of the occupied territories.**


Breaking News:
Palestinian Killed in East Jerusalem Refugee Camp After Suspected Attempt to Run Over Police
A passenger was wounded. Police said the men drove quickly toward the officers, refused to stop and were shot. There were no police injuries. The incident took place at night inside the refugee camp. Maan photos show the incident took place in a commercial area at night and while it's possible that the Palestinians did not see the police, all the Israeli media with the exception of Haaretz assumed the two young men intended to kill the police. (Haaretz, Ynet, Israel Hayom, Maan)

Front Page:
Haaretz
Yedioth Ahronoth
  • Expose: Netanyahu’s zigzag (on approval of work on train infrastructure)
  • Poll: 49% say Netanyahu is guilty for this crisis; 14% say (Transportation Minister) Katz is
  • Coming out of the shadows – Col. Shlomi Binder, who was commander of Sayeret Matkal, was revealed as Golani Brigade commander
  • Saving lives – Four former combat soldiers requested a gun license to work in security. Only one received it. Guess which. (Photo of 3 Ethiopian young men and one Ashkenazi)
  • Bereaved parents: Allow us to bring a child from the sperm of our son
Maariv This Week (Hebrew links only)
  • Israel Railways warns: More disruptions in transportation next week
  • Poll: 52% support Katz; 25% support Netanyahu
  • The organs of the man killed horseback riding saved 5 people
Israel Hayom

News Summary:
The Shabbat train work crisis continues to fill the front pages, with Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu apparently withdrawing from his intention to fire Transportation Minister Yisrael Katz (although criticizing him) and polls showing that Israelis blamed Netanyahu for the crisis, not the Transportation Minister. Haaretz reported that work on the railway on Shabbat has been routine for years and Yedioth reported that Netanyahu himself approved it in November.
 
**Meanwhile, a group of prominent left-wing leaders and movements, including Peace Now and Blue White Future, announce today an initiative to bring the issue of the future of the occupied Palestinian Territories to a national referendum, Maariv and Haaretz+ reported. The initiative comes marking 50 years of the occupation of the West Bank and the Gaza Strip and is signed by former Shin Bet chief and minister Ami Ayalon, former Labor chairman Amram Mitzna, and former ministers Yuli Tamir, Uzi Baram, Ophir Pines-Paz and Michael Melchior, former MKs Daniel Ben Simon and Tzali Reshef, retired police commander Alik Ron, Brig. Gen. Giora Inbar, among others. In a letter sent to Prime Minister Netanyahu, the heads of the initiative wrote: “A decision by referendum on the most critical issue for Israel’s future will be a declaration of Israel’s intentions to the world, and will constitute a guideline for Israel’s elected governments to work toward realizing the decision, and until then to take diplomatic steps in all realms, including determining the border and settlement areas, in accordance with the decision made.” Maariv’s Ben Caspit, wrote about the new organization, called “Deciding at 50,” and its initiative last month. (Translated to English by Al-Monitor) 
 
Also, Yedioth’s Ronen Bergman reported that over the last year, Israel, Iran and Hezbollah have been cooperating to solve the mystery of where Ron Arad, IDF navigator, disappeared to after falling captive in Lebanon some 30 years ago. Hezbollah performed digs in various locations in Lebanon and transferred bones to Israel. Hezbollah specifically said it did not know if the bones belonged to Arad, but it was transferring them to be examined. But the DNA did not match. The contacts between Israel and Hezbollah were through a middleman from a Western country. Iran’s Revolutionary Guards were also involved because, according to sources, they held Arad from 1988 until he died and because the Iranian government wants to solve the mystery of the four Iranian diplomats who went missing in Lebanon in 1982. Iran accused Israel of kidnapping them. A ‘Tweet’ by Europe-based Iranian journalist Amir Taheri was a sign of Iran’s strong desire to solve the diplomats’ issue. Taheri wrote on June 10th that Iran’s Speaker of Parliament suggested a deal with Israel: Ron Arad in exchange for the four diplomats. Shortly thereafter he wrote that Iran and Israel held a meeting in May in Cyprus and that Hashemi Rafsanjani was present alongside senior Israeli officials. Due to the new information received a year ago, Hezbollah expressed optimism in talks with the Western source that it would find Arad’s bones. But after it failed it told the source that “the ground in the area where Arad was buried had moved and changed since it happened. They continue to try and are sure that in the end they will find the grave,” said the source. Israel’s intelligence services declared the mystery of Ron Arad as solved in 2005, saying that the captive navigator had died, apparently from an illness, in Lebanon between 1995-1997 and that his place of burial was unknown.
 
Separately, Yedioth reported that Israel’s High Court ruled that Israel does not need to return to Lebanese citizen Mustafa Dirani the $21,000 IDF soldiers confiscated from his home when they took him captive in 1994 as a negotiating card to get Ron Arad returned nor does it need to pay him compensation for the torture he suffered in Israeli hands. The court said that the money was booty that belongs to Israel and that it does not need to deal with a legal suit that was filed by someone who had joined a terror organization (Hezbollah). 
 
Quick Hits:
  • Settler shoots at Palestinian cab, is not accused of hate crime - An 18-year-old Israeli man who chased a cab that caused him to divert to the side of the road, and then fired an air gun at it, has been indicted for the fairly tame charge of firing at a vehicle. (Ynet, Maan and Haaretz)
  • Witnesses: Israeli forces ransack home of slain Palestinian, threaten to detain 10-month-old girl - According to witnesses, Israeli troops raided the home of the family of Fadi Faroukh, who was shot and killed in November near Hebron after he allegedly attempted to stab an Israeli soldier. Fadi’s brother Saed said soldiers “destroyed the interior of the house” before they “threatened to detain Fadi’s 10-month-old daughter.” Then they hung a sign on the front door warning residents that the IDF would “operate with increased effort against terrorists and against anyone involved in such activity.” (Maan)
  • Palestinian minor briefly detained, assaulted in custody in East Jerusalem - Locals said 16-year-old Jamal al-Zaatari was released Saturday evening after he was detained by Jerusalem police for several hours. During his detention, Israeli forces pepper sprayed and beat Jamal, resulting in injuries. (Maan)
  • AG to Decide This Month on Incitement Charges Against Rabbi - Rabbi Yosef Elitzur, who teaches at the Od Yosef Chai yeshiva in Yitzhar, expressed hope that Duma arson-murderers escaped justice, called for violence against Israeli authorities. (Haaretz+) 
  • Silwan residents detained after removing roadblocks in E. J'lem - The two suspects claim they were instructed to remove the concrete barricades, thinking there was authorization; roadblocks were put by municipal water company as part of infrastructure work in the neighborhood. (Ynet
  • Bambi of peace - A Palestinian who accidentally hit a fawn decided to leave politics behind and passed the injured baby deer to a settler field school in nearby Gush Etzion; the fawn is expected to make fully recovery. (Ynet
  • Stray dogs find shelter in battered Gaza - While religious authorities in the predominantly Muslim territory consider dogs unclean or impure and would rather shoot or poison them, new kennel built in relatively well-off suburb south of Gaza City provides shelter for strays and domesticates them. (Agencies, Ynet
  • Hunger striking Palestinian prisoner rushed to intensive care unit - Palestinian prisoner Mahmoud Balboul, who has been on hunger strike in Israeli custody since July 4 in protest of being held without charge or trial, was rushed to the intensive care unit at Israel’s Assaf Harofeh Hospital on Sunday following serious health complications. (Maan
  • Israeli court extends detention of veteran Palestinian prisoner held without charge - An Israeli military court decided to extend the administrative detention of 63-year-old Palestinian prisoner Omar Barghouthi, held without trial or charge since November after more than two decades of periodic detentions by Israel. (Maan)
  • Netanyahu promises to bring missing soldiers' bodies home - Herzl Shaul succumbed to cancer on Friday but never relented in his fight to have the body of his son, Staff Sgt. Oron Shaul, returned to Israel for burial. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu: Herzl battled heroically until he drew his last breath. (Israel Hayom and Haaretz
  • The campaign to recruit Muslim police officers - Despite the societal taboo and previously low levels of interest, a recent media campaign aimed at recruiting police officers from the Arab and Muslim sector has begוn to demonstrate progress, with a 290% increase in résumé submission in the last year alone. Increase in interest comes as Arab officers earn high-profile promotions in rank and job. (Yedioth/Ynet)
  • Raid on brothel reveals military police officer has a second job - Israel Police who raided an alleged brothel in a residential area on Sunday detained an apparent sex worker there who is performing her mandatory military service as a police officer. (Ynet
  • Stabbing attack foiled near Cave of the Patriarchs in Hebron - Two Palestinian youths arrested after metal detector alerts troops to knives in their bags. Boys confess to planning to stab Israeli soldiers. IDF strikes Hamas post in the Gaza Strip after soldiers on routine patrol near border fence come under fire. (Israel Hayom and Maan)
  • Israeli forces close main entrance, side streets in Nablus-area village - Israeli bulldozers under military protection closed the main entrance to Beita village and side roads that connect it to Huwwara town. Later on, Israeli forces also closed with cement blocks the road that connects Huwwara to the neighboring village of Einabus to its immediate south. Meanwhile, forces reopened a road in Sair near Hebron, that was previously closed some three months ago. (Maan)
  • World scout body: controversial Jerusalem troop not a member - World Organization of the Scout Movement stated that it has no connection to a Palestinian troop in Jerusalem that recently celebrated a terrorist; Palestinian Media Watch disputes that claim. (Agencies, Ynet
  • Golani infantry brigade welcomes new commander - Col. Shlomi Binder, former commander of Sayeret Matkal commando unit, replaces Col. Rasan Alian, now to be IDF Infantry Corps commander. "I am aware of the immense responsibility," Binder says. IDF fires at Syrian targets after errant fire hits border. (Israel Hayom)
  • IDF soldiers to get new winter gear as part of coat overhaul - Deputy Chief of Staff Maj. Gen. Yair Golan hopes distributing fleece jackets will reduce reliance on private donors. Jackets to be inner layer of newly designed coat. IDF to interview girls after first draft notice, as it currently does for boys. (Israel Hayom
  • Sporting-goods merchant indicted for selling scuba gear to Hamas - The Gazan owner of a chain of sporting-goods stores has been charged in an Israeli court for selling to Hamas scuba gear, weights and workout clothing at a discount to Hamas's militant wing. (Ynet and Israel Hayom
  • Fearing BDS backlash, Syracuse U official uninvites Israeli director - Filmmaker Shimon Dotan was due to appear at a Syracuse University symposium to discuss his acclaimed film "The Settlers." Invitation rescinded over concerns that anti-Israel movement on campus would disrupt conference. Dotan: This is very troubling. (Agencies, Israel Hayom)
  • Turkish tanks roll into northern Syria, opening fresh line of attack  - Ankara's Operation Euphrates Shield sees new incursion launched from Kilis province. Offensive coincides with a separate push by Turkish-backed Syrian rebels. U.S. reports successful airstrikes against Islamic State targets in the region overnight. (Agencies, Israel Hayom
  • U.S., Russia Meeting on Sidelines of G20 Summit Ends Without Deal on Syria War - Kerry, Lavrov unable to agree to terms for a ceasefire at meeting on the sidelines of the G20 summit in Hangzhou, China. (Agencies, Haaretz
  • Sculpture honoring fallen soldiers scandalizes Egyptians - A traditional artistic personification of Egypt, as a slender peasant woman embraced by a helmeted soldier, has been deemed inappropriate by Sohag residents who claimed that it portrayed sexual harassment. (Agencies, Ynet)
  • In bid to preserve history, Egypt looks out for Jewish antiquities - Antiquities Ministry official says Egypt is struggling to finance preservation efforts following tourism downturn, calls for global support. Ministry does not discriminate between Islamic, Coptic or Jewish antiquities and tries to protect all, he says. (Agencies, Israel Hayom


Commentary/Analysis:
Why I'm Not Proud of My Country, Israel (Rogel Alpher, Haaretz+) Face facts: there won’t be a Palestinian state, and Israel will no longer be the state of the Jews.
The Iran deal, one year later (Sever Plocker, Yedioth/Ynet) Many of the assumptions—good and bad—made by pundits and politicians after the Iran deal was signed in 2015 have proven false so far. What may be next for the Shi'ite state? 
Invest in East Jerusalem, Then Think About Annexing Parts of the West Bank (Moshe Arens, Haaretz+) Such a venture would bring services in Arab East Jerusalem to Israeli levels. These efforts could be a model for the whole land.
Religious coercion is anti-Zionist (Ze’ev Jabotinsky, Israel Hayom) By manipulating the railway construction controversy, anti-Zionist ultra-Orthodox parties are creating a deterrent for the prime minister and pushing the country further toward becoming a religious state.
Let's Tell the Truth About Fuad: He Was the Essence of Everything Bad in Israeli Politics (Raviv Drucker, Haaretz+) Benjamin Ben-Eliezer was a model for everything that the public gripes over: No ideology, just the desire for authority and political power.

 
Prepared for APN by Orly Halpern, independent freelance journalist based in Jerusalem.