News Nosh 2.27.19

APN's daily news review from Israel
Wednesday February 27, 2019
 
Quote of the day:
"The Lamed Hey convoy was a group of people who fought shoulder to shoulder and fell together: secular and religious, Ashkenazis and Mizrachis. So to turn this subject into a source of division for horrible election propaganda with all the photos from terror attacks, this makes me so sad.”
--Attorney Nili Egozi, the daughter of the widow of one of the fallen from the Lamed Hey reacted to the Likud election campaign video.*

Front Page:
Haaretz
Yedioth Ahronoth
  • The Likud’s graves campaign - Crossing all lines - The election campaigning deteriorated to a new low
  • Look who’s talking // Amichai Atalli slams Netanyahu for ‘warning against the left-wing’ when numerous Israelis died while he was prime minister
  • “Seven people entered the house and began to kick me and step on me” - Special: Rabbi of the Argentinian community retells the moments of terror
  • Kim-Trump, second round
  • Eurovision in Beqaa - Prices (of hotels) in center (of Israel) outrageous? Beqaat Hayarden (settlers in Jordan Valley in West Bank) offers free hosting and transportation to tourists at Eurovision
Maariv This Week (Hebrew links only)
Israel Hayom
  • Vietnam test - ‘Israel Hayom’ correspondent reports from Hanoi
  • (US lawyer Alan) Dershowitz tells Attorney General: Indictment of Prime Minister over his relations with the media is a danger to democracy
  • Study: Home birth triples chance of baby’s death
  • The attackers shouted: “We know you are the rabbi” - Shock after assault on (Argentina Chief) Rabbi Davidovich
  • The answer: Immigrate to Israel // Ariel Schmidberg
  • Prime Minister departed to meeting with Putin: “I will speak with him about removing the Iranians from Syria”
  • Video clip storm: Bereaved parents attacked the Likud broadcast against Gantz

Elections 2019 News:
*A LIkud campaign video ad in a military cemetery, in which a narrator stood before graves and said that "the public isn't stupid. [Benny] Gantz is left and left is dangerous,” sparked a furor making the top story in today’s Hebrew newspapers. Election rivals called on Likud leader, Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu, to apologize to bereaved families over the video broadcast on Likud TV. Likud later removed the video and said that Netanyahu did not approve it. Netanyahu was quick to condemn it. Yedioth interviewed people whose relatives were buried there. The brother of one of the people buried in that section of that cemetery recognized it as the place where the Jewish fighters of the Lamed Hey convoy who fell in the 1948 War of Independence were laid to rest. “I was disgusted to see that people who sacrificed their lives for the the state were being used for the purpose of political messages,” said Alexander Doron, the nephew of one of the fallen. “The Lamed Hey convoy was a group of people who fought shoulder to shoulder and fell together: secular and religious, Ashkenazis and Mizrachis. So to turn this subject into a source of division for horrible election propaganda with all the photos from terror attacks, this makes me so sad,” said Attorney Nili Egozi, the daughter of the widow of one of the fallen. Eli Ben Shem, chairman of the Yad Labanim association, which commemorates fallen soldiers, said the video's release was "a serious incident that hurt bereaved families. Leave us alone, leave our children alone. Take IDF soldiers out of the political debate."

Elections Quickees:
  • Israel's Election Panel to Consider Barring Kahanist Party From Running - Petition urges Central Elections Committee to disqualify followers of outlawed rabbi from Knesset run. (Haaretz and JPost)
  • Bennett Disavows Kahanists Who Merged With His Former Party: I Don't Accept Their Positions - Union of Right-Wing Parties members strike back, saying Bennett had encouraged the merge and 'suffers badly from credibility problems.’ (Haaretz+)
  • 'He's a Crazy Man': Decades Before Netanyahu Welcomed Heirs, Begin Warned of 'Dangerous' Kahane - In a secret meeting with the U.S. ambassador in 1980, former Prime Minister Menachem Begin voiced loathing for the racist rabbi. (Haaretz+)
  • Israeli Former Supreme Court Justice Condemns Netanyahu's 'Wretched' Remarks About Arabs - Salim Joubran responds after Netanyahu said Arab parties are forming an obstructive bloc and 'working to eliminate the State of Israel.’ (Haaretz+)
  • Tibi: ‘Deal of the century’ is a horrible proposal - Ta’al Party head Dr. Ahmed Tibi told Ynet that he doesn’t consider a Lapid-Gantz coalition akin to the Rabin government of the 90’s nor does he have any expectations of the Trump peace plan. (Ynet)

Other News Summary:
The other two main stories in today’s Hebrew newspapers were the severe beating of a leading Argentinian rabbi in Buenos Aires and that Netanyahu was cutting short his visit today to Russia, where he is meeting President Vladimir Putin, because tomorrow (Thursday) the Attorney General will likely announce that Netanyahu is indicted in two if not three of the corruption cases against him. Worthy of note, the pro-Netanyahu paper, Israel Hayom, ran across its front page an article reporting that US lawyer Alan Dershowitz told the Attorney General that indicting Netanyahu before elections would “endanger democracy.”

Haaretz suggested that the Argentine police were wrong to investigate the beating of Rabbi Gabriel Davidovich as a criminal act and not a hate crime. But Yedioth’s Itamar Eichner interviewed the rabbi and his son by phone and did not come to that conclusion. Rabbi Davidovich said he doesn't rule out that the attack could have been anti-Semitic in nature, but he urged to await the results of the police investigation. None of the attackers swear words were anti-Semitic and they did not beat the rabbi’s wife. “What we think is that they wanted to steal," said his son. "They said he was the head rabbi, and that he must have money. But the community thinks it is anti-Semitism, because the rabbi was beaten until he passed out, and they only asked for money from his wife."

Quick Hits:
  • Top Palestinian official Erekat slams Trump peace plan as pro-settler - PLO secretary general says any plan that doesn't ensure a Palestinian state on pre-'67 borders 'is not worth discussing.’ (Haaretz)
  • Tension Building on Temple Mount Amid Reports of Imminent Israeli Action - Palestinians gathering there as state mulls closing Golden Gate to Muslim worshippers. (Haaretz+)
  • Two Israeli NGOs go head-to-head over EU 'occupation' exhibition - Breaking the Silence organizes photo exhibition at European Union headquarters in Brussels displaying the 'damages of the occupation,' while members of Reservists on Duty group arrive in Belgian capital to convince European MPs that IDF is a moral army. (Yedioth/Ynet)
  • Opioid crisis engulfs blockaded Gaza Strip - Addictive painkillers have taken over the black market in the coastal enclave over the past decade. The drugs are smuggled through tunnels into Gaza and add another layer of misery to the impoverished population where many are afraid to admit their addiction. (Agencies, Ynet)
  • Israeli Professor: Israeli pharmaceutical firms test medicines on Palestinian prisoners - Speaking at Columbia University in NY, Professor Nadera Shalhoub-Kevorkian, said that the Israeli authorities issues permits to large pharmaceutical firms to carry out tests on Palestinian prisoners, according to Middle East Monitor news outlet. Hebrew University “distanced” itself from claims made by the professor. (Maan)
  • Palestinian re-released from Israeli prison, banned from hometown - Abed al-Rahman Khalil Mahmoud, 38, was released Tuesday after 17 years in prison and banned for the next ten days from entry to the Issawiya neighborhood, where his family home is located. Israel expelled him to Jericho district. (Maan)
  • Israel orders demolition, construction halt to several homes in Hebron - The 500-meter road in the village of Ithna was being constructed to facilitate the movement of Palestinian farmers to their agricultural lands in the area. (Maan)
  • Israeli bulldozers raid Palestinian lands, farmers targeted in Gaza - Additionally, Israeli forces fired tear-gas canisters towards Palestinian farmers in eastern al-Fukhari town in the Khan Younis district in the southern Gaza Strip. (Maan)
  • Israeli forces injure 3 Palestinians during Gaza night protests - three Palestinian protesters were shot and injured with live ammunition by Israeli forces during night protests near the return camps in southern Gaza. (Maan)
  • Israel vows to drastically cut wait time for Jerusalem Palestinians' citizenship application - Following High Court petition, Population Authority says it aims to process applications within a year, instead of the six years the process can sometimes take currently. (Haaretz+)
  • Israeli ex-minister convicted of spying for Iran gets 11 years in prison - Gonen Segev, who was caught trying to smuggle ecstasy into Israel in 2004, admitted the charge in a plea deal. (Haaretz+ and Ynet)
  • Israel’s East Mediterranean Pipeline Dreams Fading as Egypt, Cyprus Go It Alone - Without the pipeline, Israel’s export prospects look dim. (Haaretz)
  • A Bumpy Ride to the Moon: Israeli Spacecraft Hits Technical Snag - The Genesis spacecraft restarted on its own, cancelling a maneuver that would have advanced its course towards the moon. (Haaretz+)
  • TechNation: Israelis Develop Armored Backpack to Protect Against School Shootings - Israeli company ArmorMe has developed a normal-looking backpack with not-so-normal capabilities: it comes with one or two kevlar panels, making it bulletproof on one or two sides. (Haaretz and Ynet)
  • After uploading 28,000 historical images, Wikimedia signs deal with National Library of Israel - The archivists initially accused Wikimedia of acting 'violently' and like 'thieves in the night' for uploading trove of historical photos. (Haaretz+)
  • Israel university head questions government boycott strategy - Ron Robin, chairman of Israel's Association of University Heads, says government is mishandling its battle against BDS movement • Israeli universities would be better off making a "moral" case by stressing their diversity and inclusiveness, he says. (Israel Hayom)
  • Dutch Green Left party votes to endorse Israel boycott - 'BDS is a legitimate means to help Palestinians,' says first mainstream political group in the Netherlands to back the boycott, sanctions and divestment movement. (JTA, Haaretz and Israel Hayom)
  • Amnesty International calls on Hamas to cancel reporter's trial - Prosecution of Hajar Harb "outrageous assault on media freedom," rights group says. Harb was sentenced to prison after reporting that healthy people had paid doctors at Gaza Health Ministry to bypass blockade by issuing referrals for hospitals abroad. (Israel Hayom)
  • Turkey renews criticism of China over Muslim Uighur minority - In address to U.N. Human Rights Council, Turkey's Foreign Minister Mevlüt Çavuşoğlu says Ankara recognizes "China's right to combat terrorism," but urges Beijing to respect freedom of religion and safeguard Uighurs' and other Muslims' cultural identities. (Israel Hayom)
  • U.K.'s Labour Asks for 'Clear and New Evidence' to Justify Hezbollah Ban - The UK announced plans to designate the Lebanese group a terrorist organization in its entirety, not just its military wing. (Agencies, Haaretz)
  • Iran's Zarif hopes resignation 'restores Foreign Ministry's position' - A day after announcing he is quitting, the ministry's spokesman said President Rohani had not accepted Zarif's resignation. (Agencies, Haaretz)
  • Iran's president rejects resignation of Foreign Minister Zarif - Senior Revolutionary Guard commander: Zarif main person in charge of Iran's foreign policy and has support of Supreme Leader Ayatollah Khamenei • Former official: Resignation could have domino effect Iran cannot tolerate under pressure of U.S. sanctions. (Israel Hayom)


Features:
25 years after Hebron massacre, debate sparked over burial site of murderer Baruch Goldstein
Israeli left-wing party calls for legislation to change tombstone at Meir Kahane Park that glorifies Goldstein, who killed 29 Muslim worshipers at the Tomb of the Patriarchs. (Yotam Berger, Haaretz+)
 
Elections 2019 Commentary/Analysis:
Israel's Political Map Has Shifted Rightward – and That’s Bad News for Netanyahu (Anshel Pfeffer, Haaretz+) Israeli politics is further to the right than in 2015, yet instead of adding votes for a right-wing governing coalition it is actually broadening the opposition to it.
Long dead: The notion that elections are between left and right is false (Lilach Sigan, Maariv) Let's talk about the two real alternatives: the next government will form a right-wing government with the guardians of Kahane or a centrist government in any format.
The Silence of the Likud Lambs (Irit Rosenblum, Haaretz+) The supposed liberal MKs and cabinet ministers who are quick to post photos from pride parade are the very ones who remain silent when Kahanists attack the LBGT community.
Israel's Arab Politicians Have Become the Kosher Seal of the Jewish Race (Zvi Bar'el, Haaretz+) Partnership with Arabs is not just an accusation, slander or low blow that can wreck a 'democratic' Jewish party. It’s a separation wall.
Leftists in disguise (Ariel Bolstein, Israel Hayom) It appears Benny Gantz and his advisers are trying to recreate the electoral success Yitzhak Rabin and Ehud Barak achieved in the 1990s through the branding of left-wing candidates as centrists.
Find the Leftist (Noa Osterreicher, Haaretz+) The Israeli left is aware of its own impending extinction and the preponderant reaction is to assimilate into another life form until the worst is over, but it's self-defeating.
Why Is Adelson-backed Zionist Organization of America Defending Israel's KKK Slime? (Bradley Burston, Haaretz+) To be clear, I am not suggesting that Mort Klein immigrate to Israel. Nor Sheldon Adelson. But if they lose their Bibi, where is their Zionism of America going to put them?

Commentary/Analysis:
Blight of the Nation-state Law (Haaretz Editorial) What do Netanyahu, Meir Kahane and the nation-state law all have in common? A desire to delegitimize Arabs of equal citizenship.
Zarif's resignation may be the last step before Iran exits the nuclear agreement (Jonah Jeremy Bob, Maariv) The sudden announcement by the Iranian foreign minister apparently symbolizes the end or the last-minute rescue of the agreement from 2015. Either way, this is a clear turning point.
A welcome sight (Ariel Kahana, Israel Hayom) Were it not for their expected exit from the EU, we can assume the British would still be playing the EU's game of pretend when it comes to distinguishing between Hezbollah's military and diplomatic wings.
Who is violating the status quo? (Ophir Dayan, Israel Hayom) You don't need to be right-wing or religious to understand that what is happening on the Temple Mount threatens our sovereignty, public trust in the police, and the physical markers of our legacy in this land.
Lessons from the Polish imbroglio (Isi Leibler, Israel Hayom) Jewish cooperation with outright fascists is unthinkable. But if the leaders of right-wing populist parties repudiate their antecedents' crimes, it would be a major mistake to spurn their support.
 
Interviews:
The Director Who Won't Take Money From Israel but Wants Israelis to See His Films
Kamal Aljafari was born in Ramle but works from Berlin. In a conversation with Haaretz, he explains how his work is about the place he left: ‘I use cinema as an act of reclamation.’ (Interviewed by Yasmin Zaher in Haaretz+ includes VIDEO)

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