News Nosh 11.04.15

APN's daily news review from Israel
Wednesday November 4, 2015 
 
Quote of the day:
"You want to stop the terrorist – fine, but someone needs to stop and help the wounded. We have a saying – 'we do not leave the wounded behind.' But that is exactly what we have become."
--Sagit Bracha-Eizenkot says Israeli society needs to do soul searching after mob ran after her grandmother's attacker and did not attend to the stabbed elderly woman.


Front Page:
Haaretz
Yedioth Ahronoth
  • The next crisis: Canceling the law to draft ultra-Orthodox (men)
  • Achievable drafting // Yossi Yehoshua 
  • Rain and dust
  • Communication difficulties // Nahum Barnea on the conflict of interest in Netanyahu serving as Communications Minister
  • Tweeted and harmed – (Habayit Hayehudi) MK Yinon Magal on Twitter: The heroes are not the security forces, but the civilians; Police: We are putting ourselves in danger, he needs to support us
  • Lifetime achievement award to Yedioth journalist, Sima Kadmon
  • Why did we fail? 50% did not pass the bar exam this year and they accuse: They made it intentionally difficult for us
Maariv This Week (Hebrew links only)
  • Europe calming: “No boycott”
  • The present of the State: At the expense of drivers – Transportation Minister announced state will buy security systems for 2 million cars at expense of 2 billion shekels. Now it became clear that is coming from the money that was supposed to return to the public for overcharging of compulsory car insurance
  • State in dust
Israel Hayom

 
News Summary:
Today’s papers focused on the anger of the granddaughter of the stabbed elderly woman who Israelis initially ignored to run after her Palestinian attacker, the anger of a High Court justice for “slandering” the court and the EU intention to label settlement products. Barely mentioned in the news was controversial legislation giving a mandatory three-year jail sentence to stone-throwers.
 
Also in the news, the Knesset suspended an Arab lawmaker from running plenums for two weeks and “only” reprimanded the minister with whom he argued. Haaretz+ reported that Israeli Intelligence agencies say Israel’s relations with the Palestinian Authority are damaged, but Maariv writes that Israel’s security establishment insists that Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas is thwarting Palestinian attacks. And at a conference on security, two reserve generals criticize the military and the political echelons for their conduct regarding Operation Protective Edge.
 
Sagit Bracha Eisenkott said she has been threatened and cursed for telling Army Radio she was horrified by the footage showing people stepping over her stabbed 80-year-old grandmother, instead of tending to her, in order to attack the Palestinian stabber. "Watching the video of my grandmother falling to the ground, and nobody helping her is terrible. It says something about our society. What have we become? People chase after the terrorist, jumping over my grandmother, and for at least a minute and a half no one stops to help her,” she told the radio. She blamed the government for the situation saying, “If we want security we have to talk. We won't be secure if we keep ignoring the situation.” Since her interview, she has received threats and curses, she said. Sagit told Channel 2 News that Israelis need to do some soul searching. MK Yinon Magal, (who Tweeted last month calling for the murder of Palestinian attackers,) made headlines in Yedioth today for sparking a storm for two Tweets: “Do not get confused. Phase 1 is the elimination of the enemy during the war. Only in phase 2 do we treat the injured. Everything is fine. Even if the injured woman waited a few seconds." The media earlier reported that a mob ran after the 19-year-old Palestinian stabber and tried to kill him and the police stopped them from lynching him by locking him in a shop. Magal also upset the Israeli security forces when he Tweeted: “The real heroes these days are not the security forces. The real heroes are the citizens who stop with their bare hands the terrorists who run wild in the streets. Thank you.” [Note: Israel Hayom presented the issue as if it were a question between chasing the stabber or tending to the stabbed. But the reports of a large number of people running after the stabber, yelling, “Terrorist, death to Arabs,” gives the impression that some of them could have tended to her. – OH]  

In very sharp remarks, Deputy Chief Justice Elyakim Rubinstein rejected right-wing denunciations of the High Court for delaying the demolition of terrorists' homes and slammed the right-wing politicians for slandering the Court and taking out their own frustrations on it. He said it showed their 'astounding ignorance.'
 
Barely making the news was the new law that imposes a minimum prison sentence of three years on anyone convicted of throwing rocks or incendiary devices, stabbing or using other dangerous weapons. The law also revokes eligibility for state benefits [such as social security – OH] for those convicted and for their parents. The law will be revisited in three years. Attorney General Yehuda Weinstein already expressed his opposition to the minimum sentence, a highly unusual move in the penal code.  He recommended a temporary order for one year. A Haaretz editorial earlier wrote, “The problem with legislating minimum sentences is the arbitrary manner in which the Knesset operates. It does not bother legislating minimum sentences for offenses such as manslaughter, rape or bribery – but it does for stone throwers.” Jamal Zahalka, an Arab opposition MP for the Joint List, denounced the law saying it would only add oil to the fire.

Deputy Speaker of Knesset, Arab MK Ahmad Tibi, was suspended from running the Knesset plenum for two weeks while Immigration Minister Zeev Elkin was “only reprimanded” by the Ethics Committee, wrote Maariv’s Arik Bender. Elkin was reprimanded for accusing Arab parliamentarians — and Tibi in particular — of bearing responsibility for the wave of Palestinian attacks on Israeli civilians and security forces and causing their injuries and deaths. Tibi was suspended by the Ethics Committee for removing Elkin from the plenum without giving him three warnings. Tibi’s associates say the decision to suspend him is indicative of the current atmosphere and that if the situation were reversed, Elkin would not have been suspended. 
 
At a conference at the Institute for National Security Studies, two reserve generals criticized the military and the political echelons over Operation Protective Edge, Maariv reported. Gen. (res.) Yom Tov Samia, former commander of the Southern Command, said he opposed giving out 72 medals of courage to soldiers for an operation whose goals and achievements were not clear. Former Military Intelligence chief Major General Amos Yadlin, said Israel should not belittle the achievements of Hamas during that operation: "While we broke both its strategic arms - the tunnels and the long-range rockets - Hamas nevertheless had strategic achievements that can not be trifled with. It fought for 50 days against the most powerful army in the Middle East, it closed the Ben Gurion Airport, it made the southern residents leave their homes and made conditions that extended the operation, although it did not achieve them. It could have ended the operation after a week and get the same things, but it did not do that.”
 
Quick Hits:
  • Israeli arrested after death threat to Arab MK - 24-year-old from Rosh HaAyin arrested after writing to Arab MK Ahmad Tibi on Facebook: "Very soon I will kill you Ahmad…and in your grave there will be a pig's head in order to show your true face you dog… You have no place in this world, we hate you…” (Ynet and Maariv
  • Indictment: soldier fabricated stabbing to avoid military court  - An indictment was filed against a soldier with the rank of corporal who cut himself with a paper knife and fabricated an assault by a member of a minority [an Arab – OH]. His detention was extended three weeks. (Maariv
  • Hamdallah: PA demands security forces in contentious Hebron areas  - Palestinian Prime Minister Rami Hamdallah called for Palestinian security forces to be allowed to patrol in the al-Shuhada Street and Tel Rumeida areas of Hebron in order to provide "security and protection" for Palestinians against Israeli settler assaults. (Maan)
  • Hebron Archaeological Site Won't Be Leased to Settlers, Says State - Settlers intended to establish an archaeological and tourism park on the site, which has been excavated by Israel Antiquities Authority and Ariel University over past two years. (Haaretz+)
  • Video: Palestinian assaulted after refusing body search in Jerusalem - The footage shows a Palestinian man surrounded by Israeli border police being asked to lift up his shirt during a search. The video then cuts to the man on the ground, who is clearly injured and bleeding. (Maan)
  • Israeli army raids, shuts down Palestinian radio station over 'incitement to violence' - Israeli officials expect the closure could lower the rate at which attacks are being carried out in the Hebron area. (Haaretz, Ynet and Israel Hayom)
  • State: Razing terrorists' homes contingent on security situation - Asked by High Court to account for certain delays in executing demolition orders issued for terrorists' homes, state explains that "the need to generate deterrence during a wave of terrorism is not the same as the need to do so during a time of relative calm." (Israel Hayom)
  • Jerusalem asks Arab parents to keep children away from knives - In letter distributed to the parents of 20,000 students in Arab neighborhoods, parents were urged to help children understand 'the finality of death.' (Haaretz+) 
  • West Bank crossing point closed after terror attempt thwarted - Merchants in Jenin accuse Israel of collective punishment and say security necessity does not justify the closure of Jalameh crossing. Some security sources fear that the closure will cause an escalation because Palestinians see it as a collective punishment. The crossing is one of the biggest and busiest along the border. Thousands of Palestinian workers cross daily into Israel, hundreds of commercial trucks cross and thousands of Israeli cars pass for shopping and commerce in Jenin. (Haaretz+, Israel Hayom and Maariv, p. 3)
  • Jerusalem Municipality Demands Damages From Bilingual School Arsonists - November 2014 arson attack on bilingual school in the capital caused 518,000 shekels worth of direct and indirect damages, says city. (Haaretz
  • Israel hints at air force cooperation with Jordan, Egypt - Statements by Israeli officials recently revealed the growing military ties between the Jewish state and its regional allies, ties which have been under a blanket of secrecy for decades. (Ynet)
  • Israeli forces raid medical center in East Jerusalem village  - Israeli forces, who had a court order to look through patient's files, arrested a Palestinian in front of the center, and fired stun grenades and rubber-coated steel bullets, without any clashes occurring in the area. (Maan
  • Schools close in Surif due to heavy tear gas  - Schools in the town of in Surif in western Hebron were forced to close on Tuesday after Israeli forces showered their campuses with tear gas canisters during nearby clashes, locals said. (Maan
  • Most of children killed by cars are Arab - Even though Arabs are only 20% of population, 8 of 13 killed this year were Arab. Maariv investigation: Safety flaw found near schools at beginning of school year still not resolved. (Maariv, p. 11)
  • Remand of (Israeli) suspect in Netanya terrorist beating extended a day - Gag order on name of Israeli man, who allegedly tried to beat the terrorist with a plank and allegedly attacked police officers and injured one in the face. He has previous record for similar offenses. (Haaretz+) 
  • Increased U.S. aid could ease row over Israeli defense budget - Netanyahu off to Washington next week as finance, defense ministries square off over 2016 spending. (Haaretz+) 
  • Two weeks after the arson, Israeli delegation made renovations at Joseph’s Tomb (in Nablus) - Painters, carpenters, electricians, gardeners and cleaners worked for five hours under guard of two Givati Brigade companies. When they left, seven Braslev ultra-Orthodox men, who had arrived independently, stayed behind and were arrested [for being there without Israeli-Palestinian security coordination – OH] (Maariv, p. 2 and Israel Hayom)
  • Baby clinic in Bedouin village closed because of lack of electricity - Joint List MKs decry Health Ministry's failure to replace broken generator. (Haaretz+) 
  • Israel issues eviction, demolition orders to 10 families in Nablus  - Ghassan Daghlas said the area in Jaloud village has been populated by the 10 families since the 1970s, while the nearby settlement is new, adding that the decision is "racist," and aims to appease settlers at the expense of the Palestinian population. (Maan
  • Israeli forces install gate at main entrance to Ramallah-area village  - Locals told Ma'an that clashes had erupted in Ein Yabrood village late on Monday between local youths and Israeli troops, and that they believed the installation of the steel gate at the village's main entrance was a "punitive procedure." (Maan
  • Ha'aretz Twitter feed hacked: 'Our martyrs' mothers will drink your soldier's blood' - In response to the incident, the publication released a statement confirming that the account was hacked. (JPost
  • Defense Min.: Israeli run over by Palestinian truck is victim of hostile act - Although the Shin Bet has yet to finish its investigation, the ministry announced that it will compensate the Hasno family accordingly. (Haaretz+) 
  • Dimona Nuclear Reactor Gave Millions in Business to Former Senior Employee - Haaretz investigative report: After the reactor was forced to privatize part of its operations, it found new owners – a subsidiary and former employees, even though a legal opinion ruled this out. (Haaretz+) 
  • Ex-IDF chief: Israelis complained too much during last war - Lt. Gen. (res.) Benny Gantz praises Gaza-adjacent communities for "standing strong" but says many complaints about the operation were "out of proportion to the reality."  Says war against Hamas took place in the right place at the right time. (Israel Hayom
  • Senior IDF officers filmed at lecture by Rabbi Eliezer Melamed discussing refusing orders - Senior officers from IDF operational branch listened to the words of the head of the Har Bracha (settlement) Yeshiva during a seminar marking the 20th anniversary of Rabin's assassination: "When there is a conflict between the commandments of the Torah and between an order - the commandments supersedes – except when it’s about security. If it’s about security or saving lives, (the order) passes.” (Maariv
  • Sudanese Muslim attacks Israeli on Ethiopian Airlines flight - Sudanese national shouting 'Allah Akhbar' reportedly attempted to strangle the Israeli on a flight from Chad to Ethiopia. (Haaretz
  • Dubai flight makes emergency landing at Tel Aviv airport - The Royal Jordanian Airbus A320 was forced to land in TLV after declaring an emergency due to low fuel. Ben Gurion airport staff awaited the plane from Dubai with boxes of the Israeli candy Krembo. (Ynet and Times of Israel)
  • Unit of U.S. firm cleared to drill for oil for two more years in Golan Heights - Environmental group Green Course says Israel is opting to 'surrender to polluting industry and the tycoons.' (Haaretz+) 
  • 'Anousim' hold Israel solidarity marches in Texas and Brazil - Descendants of Spanish and Portuguese Jews who were forcibly converted express solidarity with their 'brethren who are currently under attack from Palestinian terrorists.' (Ynet
  • After 100-year search: The Akra, Epiphanes' lost stronghold in Jerusalem, is found - Maccabean hold over Jerusalem may have been more limited than thought if indeed the missing Seleucid fortress lay smack between the city and the Temple. (Haaretz+ and i24news)
  • US and Russia conduct joint air drills in Syria - One month into Russian strikes in Syria, American and Russian aircraft conduct drills in the country's skies, exchanging messages in Russian and English; Russia and Israel sharing information regarding Syria's airspace. (Ynet)


Features:
Palestinian Politics Takes Toll on N.Y.'s Other Israel Film Festival
The last-minute decision by Tarzan and Arab Nasser not to allow their movie to be screened at the annual event again exposes the tensions and dilemmas Jewish and Israeli festivals face whenever the conflict in the Middle East heats up. (Neta Alexander, Haaretz+)
Trouble in the headlines: how the media has become the focus of (Israelis’) rage these days?
Dozens of complaints coming to the Broadcasting Authority of Channel 2 against journalists and presenters, a host of expressions of hate against journalists on social networks and even an attack against a Channel 2 news crew covering a terrorist attack that took place last month in Afula. The masses their hit the reporter, Furat Nassar, his cameraman and his producer, and the three were hospitalized. How did the media these days become the focus of public outrage? (Carmit Sapir-Weitz, Maariv
ISIS was not enough for this U.S.-born Israeli army vet – so he went to fight Iran - Israeli-American trains Kurdish forces on the Iraq-Iran border in urban warfare and counterterrorism - and says he’s not afraid to walk around with a kippah. (Judy Maltz, Haaretz+) 

Commentary/Analysis:
A Palestinian, 19, Knifes an 80-year-old Woman: 5 Lessons (Bradley Burston, Haaretz+) There are questions that, while simple, have much to teach all of us, like 'How does stabbing a 70-year-old man and an 80-year-old woman free Palestine?'
The Execution of Hadeel al-Hashlamoun (Amira Hass, Haaretz+) Israelis mark the killing of Eitam and Naama Henkin as the beginning of the 'wave of riots' of October 2015. For the Palestinians, the killing of Hashlamoun at an army checkpoint in Hebron was the last straw.
The only way to end the violence in Hebron (Director of Breaking the Silence, Yehuda Shaul, Haaretz+) They tell us that terror and violence must be met with force, and if that doesn’t work — then even more force. But the military occupation of Hebron has not achieved security for either its Jewish or Palestinian residents. 
The doublespeak of Shimon Peres (Ruthie Blum, Israel Hayom) Orwellian doublespeak is what the Left is all about. And elder Israeli statesman Shimon Peres is masterful at it.
Hashing Out the Joy Over Rabin's Murder (Orian Morris, Haaretz+) We've seen false coexistence between the right and left — between secular Zionism and religious messianism, and between Israeli Jews' two major ethnic groups. 
Fighting boycott through cultural cooperation (British Amb. David Quarrey, Yedioth/Ynet) Achieving lasting peace through a two-state solution will be the best long-term guarantee of Israel's security, says Britain's new ambassador to Israel, but boycotts won't help achieve that goal. 
Israeli Minister's Cat Transfer Plan Is Absurd on So Many Levels (Haaretz Editorial) The Pavlovian, right-wing response is interesting because of from where it derives. Transfer is the answer to every problem, be it Jewish-Palestinian, African refugees and now cats. 
There is no reason to trust Israel's 'zero tolerance' policy (Natasha Roth, +972mag) While the government claims to take a ‘zero tolerance’ stance on terrorism — whether Palestinian or Jewish — the reality on the ground paints a very different picture.  
Restraint is key (Dan Margalit, Israel Hayom) The rage felt by Israelis over terrorist attacks is understandable, but attempts to lynch terrorists who have been subdued are unacceptable and immoral. 
The failure of campus Zionism (Leora Noor Eisenberg, Israel Hayom) Anti-Israel activities appeal to the emotions of self-righteous and self-indulgent college students, while pro-Israel events tend to preach to the converted. 
Israel's Chilled Corpses and Frozen Thinking (Zvi Bar'el, Haaretz+) The terrorists' bodies can’t be handed over to the families because the corpses' chilling cold might ignite a fire that inflames the territories. 
Say goodbye, on our terms (Lior Ackerman, Maariv) Peace and harmony will never be here, but arrangements for peace and quiet can be, and there are many solutions that would enable this without relinquishing our security.
Why the BDS campaign can’t tolerate Israeli moderates (Dan Rabinowitz, Haaretz+) For the BDS campaign’s narrative of Israel as a radically essentialized evil to work, those most amenable to nuance and dialogue – like Israeli academics and my late friend Edward Said - must be the first to be boycotted.
 
Interviews: 
'As long as we choose violence Israel will always defeat us'
Mubarak Awad, one of the main organizers of nonviolent resistance during the First Intifada until Israel exiled him, talks about why only nonviolence can defeat the occupation, how Palestinians must convince Israelis that peace is their own interest, and his fears that without a new nonviolent movement more and more Palestinian youths will be drawn to armed resistance. (Interviewed by Waleed Shahid, +972)

Rabbi Rick Jacobs: Reform Jews Committed to Israel Despite 'All the Messiness'
Despite disagreements with Israel's government and Orthodox establishment, head of Reform movement is optimistic about furthering liberal and egalitarian agenda in the Jewish state. A wide-ranging interview ahead of this week's Reform Movement Biennial in Florida. (Interviewed by Allison Kaplan Sommer in Haaretz+)
 
 
Prepared for APN by Orly Halpern, independent freelance journalist based in Jerusalem.