News Nosh 05.28.14

APN's daily news review from Israel
Wednesday May 28, 2014

Quote of the day:
"It views the skinheads and their swastika tattoos with sincere concern, yet shares their opinions and understands their behavior toward foreigners."
--Haaretz+ commentator Zvi Barel raises Israel's dilemma following the victory of extreme right-wing parties in the European Parliament elections, but also says there are 'benefits' to European anti-Semitism.**


Front Page News:
Haaretz
Yedioth Ahronoth
  • The raid on the port - Labor union chief at Ashdod port arrested
  • Jerusalem celebrates - Cabinet meeting at Ammunition Hill, state rallies, mass march and numerous events for families
  • Justin (Timberlake)'s prayer (at the Wailing Wall) - Tonight performance
  • "Not everyone liked it that you played with five colored men" - Oded Tira's racist remark to Maccabbi Tel-Aviv basketball chairman
  • Rolling in fun - Yedioth reporter checked out the Rolling Stones' performance in Oslo and reports: Unique experience
  • On the back of the cheese - Tnuva dairy company employees demand "sale bonus" (for sale of company to China) and threaten to disrupt dairy product supplies on Shavuot
Maariv (Hebrew links)
  • Corruption at the port
  • Universal crime with an Israeli flavor // Amir Zohar
  • The rabbi and the superintendent affair: Condition for the state witness agreement: Success passing the polygraph
  • "You didn't deserve this" - Mira and Emmanuel (murdered at Jewish Museum in Brussels) laid to rest
  • 1 from 6 - List of candidates closed
Israel Hayom
  • Suspicion: Sea of corruption (at Ashdod Port)
  • Classic organized crime // Dan Margalit
  • Rabbi Pinto testified to police: "He can open everything"
  • "Olmert paid Shula Zaken and convinced her not to testify"
  • The list closed: From six will be the number one citizen
  • "They flew on vacation and returned in coffins"
  • 47 years to the unification of Jerusalem

News Summary:
Local corruption stories dominated today's Hebrew newspapers, which also ran articles in honor of 'Jerusalem Day,' the day when the city was physically united after the conquering of the east side forty-seven years ago today.  While right-wing ministers declared the city would never be divided again, Finance Minister Yair Lapid slammed Habayit Hayehudi party for its plan that Israel unilaterally annex parts of the West Bank. Meanwhile, the Hamas-Fatah unity government has already decided on its members and will start work tomorrow. And in a letter to a Meretz MK, a Defense Ministry official reveals why Israel does not want to sign a UN treaty against arms proliferation.
 
Housing Minister Uri Ariel said on the eve of Jerusalem Day that there won't be any more freezes on construction in Jerusalem or the West Bank. Speaking at the pro-settlement Mercaz Harav Yeshiva on Tuesday night, he said, "Jerusalem will never again be divided. Between the Jordan River and the sea, there will be only one state – the State of Israel."
 
Indeed, the Palestinian Al-Aqsa Foundation said Israel plans to build a synagogue near the Al-Aqsa site, for which the Netanyahu government had provided a budget of 50 million shekels, Maan reported.

In the last few years, Jerusalem Day has become ugly, with religious nationalist youth marching into the Arab parts of the Old City and shouting racist slogans against Arabs and against Islam. The day is celebrated mainly by religious-nationalist Jews, many of whom will also march to the Temple Mount. The police said that hundreds of officers will be involved in security measures. The Waqf Foundation in charge of the Al-Aqsa Mosque Compound was concerned.

At a conference of the Israel Bar Association, Lapid blamed Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas for derailing peace talks, but slammed the proposal of his former political ally, Economy Minister Naftali Bennett, to annex parts of the West Bank. "If there will be annexation, then there will be no government. There is no solution but the two state solution. Unilateral withdrawal and annexation will only lead to a bi-national nation. Which spells the end of Zionism and I will not have it."
Lapid also said: "You do not lead a struggle without dealing directly with the four million Palestinians connected to it."
  
Indeed, Israel will have the opportunity [although at present it rejects it - OH] starting tomorrow, when all four and a half million plus Palestinians living in the West Bank and the Gaza Strip will be under one technocratic government, seven years after fighting between the rival Hamas and Fatah parties led to separate governments. The two parties have now agreed on the members of the Palestinian national unity government, with the present Palestinian Authority Prime Minister (who once resigned), Rami Hamdullah, serving as PM for all of the occupied territories. Abbas will choose the religious affairs minister.
 
Israeli Defense Minster Moshe Yaalon said Israel could not sign an April 2013 UN arms-control treaty because it puts Israel at risk. Haaretz+ writes that "In a letter from Haim Blumenblatt, the defense minister’s chief of staff, to MK Tamar Zandberg (Meretz) this week, Blumenblatt writes, 'Most of the risks the treaty poses to Israel and the IDF will apply to Israel whether it joins the convention or not, because they are also connected to the implementation of the treaty by other countries, and not by Israel.' While Blumenblatt did not explain what the risks are, the letter hints the treaty could pose difficulties not just for Israeli arms exports, but also for its arms imports. Blumenblatt implied as much when he wrote that “signing the treaty is liable to influence various aspects connected to exports from the United States.” While the US has signed the treaty, several US senators and congressmen are pressuring US President Barack Obama not to ratify the treaty, or to try to implement it without actually ratifying it. These opponents say the treaty could 'impede our ability to sell arms to allies such as Israel and Taiwan.'"

Quick Hits:
  • Medics: Palestinian doctor dies after inhaling Israeli tear gas - Samih Wahish, a 64-year-old physician from Abu Dis, was pronounced dead early Tuesday in al-Maqasid hospital in (E.) Jerusalem. Dr. Abdullah Abu Hilal told Ma'an that Wahish was in his house on Friday when Israeli troops showered the area with tear gas during clashes with Palestinians. (Maan)
  • Palestinian girls detained for picking settlers' cherries - Police said they were required to question the four girls, aged 11-15, because they had received a complaint about theft. The girls, from the village of Tuba in the South Hebron Hills, were on their way home from school. Their route passes by a cherry orchard in the settlement of Havat Maon. (Haaretz+)
  • Palestinian beaten by settlers near Ramallah when urinating - Dozens of Israeli settlers attacked Ahmad Abbas, 41, brutally beating him with rods and plastic sticks after he left his cousin's car on the side of the road to urinate because he suffers from diabetes. He suffered a skull fracture. (Maan+PHOTO
  • Israeli forces assault elderly man taking photos in Aqsa (Temple Mount) compound - Israeli forces violently assaulted Abu Hani Sharif, 70, after asking him to stop taking pictures in the compound. His wife fainted while witnessing the assault. (Maan+PHOTOS
  • Three youth from Yitzhar settlement arrested on suspicion of nationalist crime - Police said two of the youth are suspected of 'price-tag' attacks and the third is suspected of incitement through the internet. (Maariv, p. 9)
  • Aides of ex-IDF chief Ashkenazi suspected of leaking top-secret info to journalists - Info divulged about planned army operations may have endangered lives. Sources close to the investigation say that the suspicions are far more serious than the violations committed by Anat Kamm. (Haaretz+) 
  • 40 hunger-striking Palestinian detainees hospitalized in Israel - More than 200 prisoners enter second month of hunger strike, calling to abolish the practice of 'administrative detention,' (in which Palestinians are imprisoned without charges). (Agencies, Haaretz and Ynet
  • Housing Minister's deal with JNF raises legal questions - Uri Ariel's back-door agreement to act as middleman between Jewish National Fund and government ministries is an act of 'chutzpah'. (Yedioth/Ynet)
  • As of early June, IDF will begin ceasing various activities' - "The significance of the emerging 2015 budgetary outline is that we will not be able to begin the year at all," says Defense Ministry Director-General Maj. Gen. (res.) Dan Harel. "We won't have money for the elements that produce security," he says. (Israel Hayom)
  • Israeli Reality show contestants cross racist line, get reality check - After being raked over the coals, two members of 'Big Brother' apologize for harsh remarks about Arab MKs Ahmed Tibi and Haneen Zoabi. (Haaretz
  • Likud MK Tzachi Hanegbi to become deputy foreign minister - Appointment seen as compensation for not heading Knesset Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee. (Haaretz+) 
  • Amnesty Int'l urges Palestinian Authority to drop charges against BDS activists - PA security officers and men in civilian clothes attacked and arrested four activists who made a peaceful protest in Ramallah's al-Qasaba Theatre against a dance group that had performed in Israel the previous day. (Maan)  
  • Jerusalem lost 8,750 Jewish residents last year - Also, 61% of Jewish school students are ultra-Orthodox; slight increase in religious and secular students. (Haaretz+)
  • Study: When war breaks out, count on the Jewish tourist - Tourists to Israel are more likely to brave war or terrorism to visit family or do business - or just because they are Jewish. (Haaretz+) 
  • Jerusalem mayor: Rebrand Israel's airport from TLV to JLM - Head of Israel's capital wants to change code of Ben-Gurion International Airport in order to boost tourism to his city. (Haaretz)
  • Israel rescues Ukrainian Jews stranded by fighting - Jewish Agency helps two families stranded at embattled Donetsk airport to arrive safely in Israel. (Agencies, Ynet
  • Lone IDF soldier appeals for help for jailed Ukrainian mother - Lone soldier Michael Rojkov's mother imprisoned for helping injured protestors, he says. Rojkov says Ukrainian Consulate in Israel has not been able to help. (Israel Hayom)
  • Israel welcomes results of Ukrainian presidential election - Congratulates beleaguered European nation on its presidential election, but remains silent on issue of territorial integrity. (Haaretz+)
  • Saudi press house under fire for translating Israeli book - Saudi Arabian publishing house sparks storm of protest after publishing book by Israeli researcher, with critics slamming move as 'a form of cultural normalization with the Zionist enemy.' (Ynet)
  • Israeli Arab charged with helping relatives join Syrian fighting - Negev resident maintained contacts with Islamists through Facebook and Twitter, coordinated journey through Turkey to help rebels against Assad. (Haaretz)
  • Israel cautious as Syria prepares for contentious elections - As rebel forces, some linked to al-Qaeda, settle on the Syrian side of Golan Heights, IDF watching carefully for change in situation. (Ynet
  • Chemical weapons inspectors attacked in Syria - Convoy of OPCW staff came under attack while traveling to investigate suspected chlorine gas use. (Agencies, Ynet)
  • Tit-for-tat envoy expulsions by Jordan and Syria - Jordan expels Syrian ambassador for repeatedly criticizing Jordan and its Gulf allies on social media. (Agencies, Haaretz)
  • Egypt elections enter second day - Egyptians line up to vote for new president, with former military chief Abdel-Fattah al-Sisi set to win in landslide victory. (Agencies, Ynet
  • Iranian court summons Facebook's Zuckerberg - Court wants to question Mark Zuckerberg in connection with complaints that Facebook-owned applications Instagram and WhatsApp violate privacy. (Agencies, Haaretz)
  • Iran urges West to resist outside pressure on nuclear deal - In reference to Israel, Islamic republic tells world powers to ignore third party influence. (Agencies, Ynet)  


Features:
Capturing settlers: Palestinians on guard against Israeli extremism
Despite mentions in a recent US report on terrorism, Israeli extremist attacks against Palestinians and their property continue unabated, especially in the West Bank. With little to no protection from the Israeli army that occupies their territory, Palestinians have on several occasions in 2014 taken matters into their own hands, taking a kind of neighborhood-watch approach to prevent injuries and damage to their property. (Maan)

Commentary/Analysis:
Rivlin smiles for the extreme right (Sefi Rachlevsky, Haaretz+) The election of leading presidential candidate Reuven Rivlin would grant legitimacy to the occupation.
Netanyahu is Palestinian Authority's savior (Nahum Barnea, Yedioth/Ynet) Israeli PM speaks about the Palestinian Authority's crimes day and night while bolstering it at the same time. 
A Palestinian terror government (Zalman Shoval, Israel Hayom) Hamas is seeking to gain political legitimacy while maintaining the terror option. 
A political earthquake of hatred (Boaz Bismuth, Israel Hayom) A psychological roadblock has been breached in Europe, where voters no longer sense the need to conceal their preference for the extreme Right.
The racism playoffs (Zvi Bar'el, Haaretz+) Terrible thing that happened in the European elections, but not quite as disturbing as what is happening right here in Israel. 
Your home is not in Europe (Dror Eydar, Israel Hayom)
Europe expelled its Jews and received instead tens of millions of Muslims. Come back home to Zion, before it is too late. This is the fitting response to anti-Semitism.
The lies industry - between criticism and incitement (Ben-Dror Yemini, Yedioth) A considerable portion of terrorist attacks, including apparently the attack in Brussels, stem from brainwashing that turns rivals into representatives of Satan...When Peter Beinart, one of the stars of the Jewish Left in the US, tweeted a few days ago that Israelis had carried out a pogrom – this is a blood libel. Beinart is neither a racist skinhead, nor a jihadist, but he thus gave legitimacy to countless reports about 'war crimes' because he is a Jew and even pretends to be a Zionist. Beinart tweeted a correction, but there is something frightening in the insufferable ease with which Israel has been turned into a monster...What happened in Brussels – and not just there – stems from lies and incitement, and people like Beinart are also responsible.
No to European fascism (Yossi Beilin, Israel Hayom) The center-Left and center-Right in Europe must come together to stand tall against the extremists. 
IDF budget reveals Netanyahu's defense priorities (Amos Harel, Haaretz+) Netanyahu is investing in strengthening intelligence and strategic deterrence. He ascribes less importance to the conventional needs of the long-standing army, and is using budget constraints to force it to streamline. In the premier's view, there is little chance that a ground war requiring a call-up of the reserves and deployment of large numbers of troops will break out.
The PR battle (Shlomo Cesana, Israel Hayom) The pope had planned a trip of a religious nature, but he deviated from protocol and wandered into the political arena. 
Propaganda war at pope's expense (Eitan Haber, Yedioth/Ynet) Both Israelis and Palestinians crossed nearly every line with tricks and shticks during papal visit.
Are you a foreign agent? Israel's 10 Most Unwanted Laws (Bradley Burston, Haaretz+) Pending bills: Declaring leftist NGOs Foreign Agents, dropping Arabic as an official language, annexing most of the West Bank ... maybe it's time to expand the list to 20. 
Today's Jerusalem is neither eternal, undivided nor holy (Emily L. Hauser, Haaretz+) The 21st century municipality is a political construct that is an affront to the Jerusalem to which Jewish hearts have turned for millennia.
Jewish prostitutes, Jewish thieves and Jewish supremacists (Joel Braunold, Haaretz+) Security measures barely make the grade in curbing 'price tag' attacks. To really make a difference (and prevent tags against Arabs), Israel must strike with education.
Diaspora Jews and Israel: between distance and despair (Samuel Heilman, Haaretz+) The JPPI report tell us much about the well-aired opinions of the Diaspora’s elite - but fails to engage with the expanding minority of Jews who care less and less about Israel.
Interviews: 
JDC chief: Young Jews less willing to give to Israel
Arnon Mantver, who is stepping down as director of the Joint Israel after 19 years, talks about integrating immigrants and why young Diaspora Jews don’t want to donate to Israel. (Interviewed by Tali Heruti-Sover in Haaretz+)
“Large parts of the third generation view us [Israelis] as an occupying people,” he says. “In the 1970s we were the victim. After 2000 a different view started to emerge, and it is creating a distance [between Israel] and large groups, and in particular young ones. This worries me greatly. If there is no solution to the conflict [with the Palestinians], we will have a problem. We operate all over the world, we help people who've been hurt by a tsunami or earthquake. The Joint’s message is a strong humanitarian one, and when there is a problem with Palestinians, this message is put to the test,” notes Mantver.
 
Rabbi who accompanied Pope says Jews too focused on past tragedies
Rabbi Avraham Skorka, longtime friend of Pope Francis, says Jewish leaders should look beyond the past and accept offers of closer dialogue with the Church. The rabbi noted that since the 1960s the Church has made great strides in its attitude toward the Jewish people, culminating with Pope John Paul II's request for forgiveness for the suffering inflicted upon the Jews in past centuries.
"The pope would like to have some kind of reaction from the Jews to the deeds of the Catholic Church," he said. However, Skorka says Jewish leaders have responded coldly to Francis' desire for closer ties, remaining too focused on the tragedies of the past and fearing that a deeper, theological dialogue would just be a thinly veiled attempt to encourage conversion. "He and I cannot understand this fear," Skorka said. "If you are sure of your beliefs why fear to speak about ourselves to the other?" (Interviewed by Ariel David in Haaretz+)
 

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