News Nosh 01.07.15


APN's daily news review from Israel
Wednesday January 7, 2015

Quote of the day:
 "I leave the film with the feeling that it can be better here between human beings if we would give every person the equal right to be different..."
--Former president Shimon Peres after watching the film 'Dancing Arabs,' based on the roughly autobiographical book by Sayed Kashua about being a young Arab at a Jewish boarding school in Israel.**


Front Page:
Haaretz
Yedioth Ahronoth
Maariv This Week (Hebrew links only)
  • The storm is coming
  • Netanyahu: “I was forced to appoint Lapid, he and Olmert are guilty for the high housing prices”; Lapid: “Netanyahu is panicing and leaving the country in a crisis”
  • (Hatnua MK Amram) Mitzna out for justice – “(Hatnua chief) Livni doesn’t care about anyone, she denied everything she promised me”; Livni: “It wasn’t easy for me to part from him”
Israel Hayom
  • The day of the blizzard – State in a storm: No school in Jerusalem and some areas of the north
  • The snow of my city // Gideon Allon
  • Mystery: Where did the man who was Minister Lieberman’s advisor and who is suspected of involvement in the (Yisrael Beiteinu) corruption scandal disappear to?
  • Police recommend: Put (former MK) Binyamin Eliezer on trial for receiving bribes; Eliezer: “I am clean and pure as crystal”
  • State Attorney and Attorney General decided: MK Haneen Zouebi will be put on trial for incitement to violence and insulting civil servant
  • Alert: Israel Electricity Corp deployed emergency generators in many areas
  • Where won’t there be studies because of the weather – full list
  • Snow in the north, traffic jams in the center of the country and haze in the south: Due to the winds – air pollution jumped

News Summary:
Snow was the top story of the day (despite it having yet to fall when the Hebrew newspapers went to press). Also high in the news were indictments (MK Hanin Zouebi on incitement to violence), recommendations for indictments (former MK Binyamin Ben-Eliezer on receiving bribes) and probes into MKs and people connected to them (former advisor to Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman on money-laundering). Yedioth and Maariv both stressed how Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu blamed everyone but himself for the high cost of living and the housing crisis.

Also in the news was a report that Qatar had evicted Hamas politburo chief Khaled Mashaal from Qatar and he left to Turkey, which Hamas denied. Nevertheless, Israel praised Qatar for the move, which is reportedly part of a deal to renew relations with Egypt.
 
However, there was little mention of the fact that UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon said the State of Palestine will join the International Criminal Court at The Hague on April 1 or that the Palestinians have recognized ICC jurisdiction for the recent (3rd) Gaza war allowing the ICC to scrutinize offenses allegedly committed since the kidnapping of three Israeli teens. 
 
Moreover, EU foreign policy chief Federica Mogherini said Israel was violating the Oslo Accords by freezing Palestinian tax revenues, a punitive action for the Palestinian’s petition to join the ICC. Nevertheless, she called on both sides to refrain from taking actions that could prevent “a rapid return to negotiations.”France also had a warning for the Palestinians: not to resubmit the UN Security Council statehood bid that France previously supported.

Quick Hits:
  • AG: Arab lawmaker to stand trial for incitement to violence, pending hearing - Attorney General Yehuda Weinstein decides to charge MK Haneen Zoabi, who allegedly incited to violence against Arab police officers, offended a public official, during a July court hearing; Zoabi's attorney says she is victim of discrimination. (Haaretz+ and Ynet)
  • Military Police launched investigation into the circumstances in death of Palestinian minister Ziyad Abu Ein - The army decided to launch a criminal investigation into the death of Ziyad Abu Ein, who collapsed during a confrontation with the IDF (and died). In the IDF (military) investigation, it was determined that the forces in the field working properly and did not deviate from the procedures. (Maariv)
  • Israel banned call to prayer at Ibrahimi mosque (Cave of the Patriarchs) 52 times in December - "This is an ongoing policy by the Israeli occupation authorities seeking to impose restrictions on Muslims and prevent them from performing prayers at the noble mosque," said the Palestinian Ministry of Endowment. In October, Israeli authorities prohibited the call to prayer 61 times. (Maan
  • Hamas: Palestinian Authority misusing Gaza reconstruction funds - Hamas spokesman Sami Abu Zuhri said some Palestinian national consensus gov't ministers "admitted that the money allocated for Gaza reconstruction was being added to the PA budget (proving) that the real reason behind the delay in reconstruction of Gaza is that the PA has been messing with the reconstruction money and exploiting the suffering of Gaza's people." (Maan)
  • Palestinian behind kidnap, murder of 3 Israeli teens gets 3 life sentences - Hussam Qawasmeh confessed to planning kidnapping, murder of Gil-Ad Shaer, Naftali Fraenkel and Eyal Yifrah, in the West Bank in June. (Haaretz+ and Ynet
  • Israeli forces carry out multiple dawn raids across West Bank - Israeli forces detained 15 young Palestinian men in predawn raids, including a young man at entrance to Qalqiliya, claiming he attempted to stab an Israeli soldier, said the Palestinian prisoner’s society. The detainee suffers from a psychological disorder, according to Palestinian Prisoners' organization. (Maan)
  • Israeli troops raid West Bank, shoot teenager - Israeli troops shot and injured 19-year-old Noor Muhammad Hamid Zaaqiq in front of his house during a dawn detention raid in the southern West Bank town of Beit Ummar where six men were detained including a 15-year-old and 16-year-old, a local official said. (Maan)
  • **Presidential screening - Former president Shimon Peres hosted the actors and filmmakers of 'Dancing Arabs - Borrowed Identity' for a special screening of the film at the Peres Center for Peace in Jaffa. Peres: 'Dancing Arabs' is a film without make-up, natural and wonderful. You actors revealed yourselves to us through the screen at the height of your beauty with a courageous truth, which sometimes is not easy (to hear), on the screen. I leave the film with the feeling that it can be better here between human beings if we would give every person the equal right to be different, and if we would know with faith and tolerance how to recognize the difference in every person." (Yedioth, p. 18)
  • Emu on the run - Escaped emu turns heads by bolting through traffic in Herzliya. Passerby catches the bird's run on video, says he was reminded of cartoon Road Runner. "I said to myself, in a second, a coyote will appear from behind. This was a really absurd situation." (Agencies, Israel Hayom)
  • Police recommend trial for former Labor MK Ben-Eliezer - Veteran minister alleged to have been involved in bribery, money laundering and other crimes, some aimed at furthering local businessmen's interests. (Haaretz+ and Ynet)
  • Former Lieberman, Netanyahu aide who mysteriously disappeared suspected of money laundering - Investigation launched into Michael Palkov, whose passport was found near a dead body in Ukraine. Meanwhile, Yisrael Beiteinu probe continues. (Haaretz+)
  • Bennett in spotlight over 1996 Lebanon attack - Israeli media hits Bayit Yehudi chairman, hoping to secure enough mandates to receive defense portfolio, with conflicting charges over IDF service. (Agencies, Ynet
  • Bennett gets increased security detail amid threats - Naftali Bennett receives threats after Yedioth Ahronoth publishes article claiming he functioned poorly during 1996 Operation Grapes of Wrath and gave incorrect artillery coordinates which resulted in erroneous IDF shelling that killed 102 civilians. (Israel Hayom
  • FIFA delegation visits Gaza after 12 years, pledges funds for stadiums - Sports authority's reps committed to invest $1.2 million to repair soccer-field surfaces and repair the national stadium. (Haaretz
  • Jerusalem Symphony Orchestra to perform in UNESCO headquarters - Orchestra's CEO says fact that concert is taking place in Paris is 'symbolic, in this period of rising anti-Semitism and anti-Israelism in France and Western Europe.' (Ynet)
  • Female suicide bomber hits police station in Istanbul's historic heart - One police officer killed, another wounded. Woman spoke English, but her identity and nationality currently unknown. (Agencies, Haaretz
  • Captain America enlists in the IDF - After fighting and losing his legs in Afghanistan, Brian Mast does not give up. On the contrary, he is comeing to Israel and putting on (IDF’s) khaki uniform. (Yedioth)
  • Israeli group files war crimes suit against Palestinian officials - Shurat HaDin Law Center files complaint at International Criminal Court against PLO leaders Jibril Rajoub, Majid Faraj and Palestinian PM Rami Hamdallah. Move follows Palestinian appeal to join the ICC to pursue war crime charges against Israel. (Israel Hayom)
  • Porn star from Lebanon sparks outcry in Arab World - Mia Khalifa has become the top draw on a major porn website. For her efforts she's drawn death threats on Twitter and 24,000 likes on her Facebook page. (Haaretz)
  • American Academy prevented offer a huge boycott of Israel - The American Historical Society, a prestigious organization that includes thousands of historians from universities across America, rejected by a large majority an offer by the BDS organization to stop investments and to impose sanctions on Israel. (Maariv)
  • Dershowitz files sworn statement denying that he had sex with underage girl - Attorney will seek to disbar lawyers who filed the suit on behalf of his accuser. His wife also defends him. Britain's Prince Andrew, also accused in the case, denies allegation but does not plan legal action, reports say. (Haaretz)
  • Iranian MPs try to cancel flights from Kiev, citing Israeli owner - Members of Iran's parliament fail in attempt to end Kiev-Tehran route because one owner is Israeli citizen and could import 'Israeli interests'. (Ynet
  • Middle East Updates / Dozens of Islamist fighters killed in Kobani - UNICEF: 160 children dead in Syria school attacks in 2014; Syria to UN: Western diplomats violated our sovereignty; clashes with ISIS in Iraq kill 23 troops, allied fighters; U.S. senator, former French FM and former U.S. diplomat entered Syria without visas in separate visits. (Haaretz


Features:
Eyeless in the West Bank: When Palestinian boys play cat and mouse with Israeli police
A few weeks ago, police shot a foam-tipped bullet at the face of an 11-year-old boy. 
He immediately lost one eye and now the other is in serious danger. (Gideon Levy and Alex Levac, Haaretz+) 
Dancing through the pain
Hemi Goldin was in the throes of rehearsals for a new performance when he was notified of the abduction of his soldier brother in Gaza, who was later declared fallen in action. 'Life moves on,' he says. 'I'm moving on too and taking my brother with me.' (Yedioth/Ynet
A "hilltop youth" opens a window to complex life in Samaria (northern West Bank)
The sense of mission in the name of the family which was murdered. The conflicts with the (Arab) neighbors. The clashes with security forces. Dealing with the authorities. For four years the film director Itzik Lerner documented the symbol of the outposts, the Gilad Farm outpost, and in particular, Itay Zar. (Maariv)

Commentary/Analysis:
Pressure won't thwart Military Police probe of Gaza war (Amos Harel, Haaretz+) IDF objections to criminal investigations of wartime acts have been voiced for years, but petitioners rejecting this inquiry don't get what they're up against. 
ICC bid a real threat to IDF fighters (Yoaz Hendel, Yedioth/Ynet) Instead of dealing with Bennett's performance as a young officer in Lebanon, we should ask ourselves how to prevent Palestinians from filing lawsuits against our soldiers in the near future.  
Being Jewish means sometimes having to say you're sorry (Rabbi Gideon D. Sylvester, Haaretz+) We owe no apology for our continued existence or for having a strong army to defend Israel, But unlike what Naftali Bennett would have us believe, passionate Jews and committed Zionists have no qualms about admitting our failures. 
The strategic failure of Operation Protective Edge (Alex Fishman, Yedioth/Ynet) As the Egyptians are physically disengaging from Gaza, Israel is becoming increasingly involved in the Strip and is close to returning to the pre-disengagement days.
Just not Bennett (Uri Sevir, Maariv) Every party that has wanted a peace process should commit not to sit in a coalition with the chairman of Habayit Hayehudi. It is a necessary step for any center-left  party to morally and politically repudiate those who embody a nationalist Israel.
Has Israel's antitrust watchdog blocked Mideast peace? (Guy Rolnik, Haaretz+) Centuries of conflict between Judaism and Islam could have ended if not for commissioner David Gilo, according to the latest spin. But it's just that: spin.
A stab to our security (Ran Tira, Maariv) When they call (for Jews) to go up to the Temple Mount or to settle in Silwan (E. Jerusalem neighborhood), (Habayit Hayehudi Chairman Naftali) Bennett, (Likud MK Zeev) Elkin and company turn Israel messianic, and our justified security arguments fade.  
DEBATE: Should Palestinian funds have been frozen? (Nechama Duek vs. Yifat Erlich, Yedioth/Ynet) Yifat Erlich argues Israel could not afford to remain apathetic in face of Abbas' appeal to ICC; Nechama Duek warns against punitive measure, as desperation is fertile ground for terror. 
Stop bugging Bennett over the Kafr Qana deaths (Amos Harel, Haaretz+) Enough relevant sources insist the Habayit Hayehudi chairman was not responsible for the killing of 102 Lebanese civilians during a 1996 battle.
Israel is losing the international battle also in the Jewish arena (Michal Aharoni, Maariv) We are sure that the American Jewish community stands behind us, but the real story is of a deep rift in their relationship to Israel. The day when they stop being interested in our fate will be our day of disaster.
Israel’s far-right loons look a lot like Netanyahu's pals (Zvi Bar'el, Haaretz+) Don’t believe the sophisticated definitions — it’s hard to distinguish Likud MKs Miri Regev, Danny Danon and Yariv Levin from the ‘hill-top youth’ and other racists. 
To lead Israel, diplomatic skill required (Haim Shine, Israel Hayom) The Left cannot be allowed to lead Israel at a time like this. 
Netanyahu is the problem, his ouster is the mission (Rami Livni, Haaretz+) He more than anyone else is the individual who expresses and fosters the inertia that apparently exists somewhere in all Israelis. He brings out the bad in us.
The hourglass is ticking: Who should not vote for Bibi and the right-wing? (Yitzhak Ben-Ner, Maariv) If you do not want to emigrate, but also refuse to live by the sword, or you are trying to buy an apartment (with) 3500 (shekel a month) mortgage payments, but can’t, or you live under the poverty line since birth without any chance of getting out of there, or you feel that the government invests in you, your security and your existence about a quarter what it invests in a settler and you don’t succeed to deal with the high price of living or you are furious every evening while you watch on TV about the corruption of senior officials in the government and in the economy and of their high salaries, or you are sick of the nausea of the government and its leader and you are sure that they have a better replacement. Then, ladies and gentlemen, time is running out, or as a Likud minister once warned in an Army Radio interview: “The hourglass is ticking and finishing!” How right he is.
How Israel stands to lose at the ICC, without a single trial taking place (Daniella Peled, Haaretz+) The devastating prospects of Palestine joining the International Criminal Court has less to do with the chances of prosecution of soldiers, and more to do with the impact it will have on Israel's precarious international image.
Israeli-Palestinian separation is a fool's delusion (Kobi Niv, Haaretz+) The saddest, most pitiful thing of all is that these politicians present this crazed idea of 'separating from the Palestinians' as a recipe for peace. 
Expulsion of Mashaal from Qatar is first political achievement of Operation Protective Edge (Yossi Melman, Maariv) In the months since Operation Protective Edge, Egypt and the United States put pressure on Qatar to expel Mashaal, who is staying in the Emirate with some of his aides.
Looking ahead (Amos Gilboa, Maariv) The day after the rejection of the Palestinian proposal for a resolution in the UN Security Council (to end the Israeli occupation), Abbas’ main strategy will not be negotiations, but rather a political-legal war against Israel in parallel with Palestinian popular resistance [protest marches and demonstrations with stone-throwing by youth– OH] 
An Egyptian lesson for Livni (Ruthie Blum, Israel Hayom) Tzipi Livni ought to have learned by now that what goes around comes around. 
What David Ben-Gurion could teach Dennis Ross about Israel, the Palestinians and the ICC (Peter Beinart, Haaretz+) Zionists didn’t win statehood by making their opponents comfortable. And the Palestinians won’t gain freedom on their knees.  
Dennis Ross gets it (Uri Heitner, Israel Hayom) It is a shame that due to political and electoral considerations, our own officials are making the false claim that Israel is responsible for the failed peace process.
Israel cannot allow itself another Netanyahu term (Haaretz Editorial) For three terms as PM, Netanyahu proved he has neither the ability nor the intention to solve the 47-year-old tragedy of Israel's occupation. He is unfit for the job. 
The security pose: When the prime minister markets himself as something he is not (Rami Igra, Maariv) Repeatedly Benjamin Netanyahu has proved his inability to withstand pressure and make the right decisions in times of crisis. That does not prevent him from continuing to market himself as ‘Mr. Security.’ 
For Sayed Kashua, life in the U.S. is good. But still... (Sayed Kashua, Haaretz+) What assails him every morning is that he is approaching the moment he will need to decide: Stay or go.


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