Senin, 08 Februari 2021

Myanmar military ruler addresses nation as protests intensify - Al Jazeera English

Myanmar’s new military ruler has said the army will hold a new election and transfer power to the winner, as protests against last week’s coup continued to grow.

Addressing the country on live television for the first time since the February 1 putsch, Senior General Min Aung Hlaing on Monday called on the public to prioritise facts and not feelings and repeated the claim that there were irregularities in November’s election that were ignored.

Min Aung Hlaing’s public remarks were his first since he removed Aung San Suu Kyi’s elected government, in a move that has sparked widespread protests and triggered international condemnation.

The army has announced a one-year state of emergency and on Monday imposed martial law in parts of Mandalay, sections of the largest city of Yangon and other townships in Myanmar, a country previously ruled by the military for 49 years after a 1962 coup.

Also on Monday, military authorities warned of action against protesters, saying there had been violations of the law and threats of force by groups “using the excuse of democracy and human rights”.

“Action must be taken according to the law with effective steps against offences which disturb, prevent and destroy the state’s stability, public safety and the rule of law,” said a statement read by an announcer on state-run MRTV.

The generals had previously tried to justify their takeover on the grounds of election fraud and had promised a new poll.

Min Aung Hlaing reiterated that position in his address on Monday, saying the military government would form a “true and disciplined democracy” different to previous eras of military rule.

Growing protests

Demonstrations against last week’s coup had intensified on Monday and spread to more towns and cities, with tens of thousands joining a third day of street protests to denounce the military’s actions including the arrest of Aung San Suu Kyi, a Nobel laureate whose National League for Democracy (NLD) party won the November polls in a landslide.

In the capital, Naypyidaw, where Myanmar’s top civilian leaders are believed to be held, videos posted on social media on Monday showed police firing brief bursts of water cannon to try and disperse peaceful protesters gathered on a highway.

Three lines of police in riot gear stood on the road as the crowd chanted anti-coup slogans and told police they should serve the people, not the military, according to media and a live feed of events.

Police placed a sign on the road saying that live ammunition could be used if demonstrators breached the third line of officers.

People demand the release of elected leader Aung San Suu Kyi in Yangon [Stringer/Reuters]
In Yangon, nurses, teachers, civil servants and monks joined anti-coup demonstrations. Some held signs denouncing the coup and calling for democracy, as others flew multicoloured Buddhist flags alongside red banners, the colour of the NLD.

Kyaw Zin Tun, an engineer protesting in Yangon, told the AFP news agency he was at the rally because he remembered the fear he felt growing up under the military rule during his childhood in the 1990s.

“In the last five years, under democracy government, our fears were removed. But now fear is back again with us, therefore, we have to throw out this military junta for the future of all of us,” the 29-year-old said.

Thousands also marched in the southern city of Dawei and in the capital of far northern Kachin state, Myitkyina – the massive crowds reflecting a rejection of military rule by diverse ethnic groups, even those who have been critical of Aung San Suu Kyi and accused her government of neglecting minorities.

Monday’s demonstrations came a day after tens of thousands of people protested against the coup in cities and towns across the country, in the biggest show of public dissent since a 2007 revolt by monks that was brutally suppressed by the military. A year later, the generals held a referendum on a newly drafted constitution, which made sure the military maintained considerable power but opened the door to a civilian government.

A quasi-civilian government took power in 2011, and four years later the NLD swept to victory at polls.

UK, EU propose UN special session

Separately on Monday, the United Kingdom and the European Union requested that the United Nations Human Rights Council hold a special session in response to the continuing political crisis in Myanmar.

“The United Kingdom would like to inform all colleagues that together with the European Union, we have submitted a request for a special session on the human rights implications of the crisis in Myanmar,” Julian Braithwaite, the UK’s ambassador in Geneva, told a council organisational meeting.

People hold up placards as they join a rally to protest in Yangon [Stringer/Reuters]
Braithwaite said the call was “in response to the state of emergency imposed in Myanmar, the arbitrary detention of democratically elected politicians and civil society by the military”, which he said had “grave implications for human rights in the country”.

“We must respond urgently to the plight of the people of Myanmar and the rapidly deteriorating human rights situation there,” he said.

Braithwaite said the backers of the special session call would inform other council members soon about the drafting of a resolution on the issue.

He said the motion had the support of an additional 19 of the council’s 47 members.

That means in principle that the request would fulfil the requirement for the backing of at least a third of the council’s members, paving the way for a special session before the next regular council session, which kicks off on February 22.

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2021-02-08 15:29:50Z
52781362295733

Myanmar military ruler addresses nation as protests intensify - Al Jazeera English

Myanmar’s new military ruler has said the army will hold a new election and transfer power to the winner, as protests against last week’s coup continued to grow.

Addressing the country on live television for the first time since the February 1 putsch, Senior General Min Aung Hlaing on Monday called on the public to prioritise facts and not feelings and repeated the claim that there were irregularities in November’s election that were ignored.

Min Aung Hlaing’s public remarks were his first since he removed Aung San Suu Kyi’s elected government, in a move that has sparked widespread protests and triggered international condemnation.

The army has announced a one-year state of emergency and on Monday imposed martial law in parts of Mandalay, sections of the largest city of Yangon and other townships in Myanmar, a country previously ruled by the military for 49 years after a 1962 coup.

Also on Monday, military authorities warned of action against protesters, saying there had been violations of the law and threats of force by groups “using the excuse of democracy and human rights”.

“Action must be taken according to the law with effective steps against offences which disturb, prevent and destroy the state’s stability, public safety and the rule of law,” said a statement read by an announcer on state-run MRTV.

The generals had previously tried to justify their takeover on the grounds of election fraud and had promised a new poll.

Min Aung Hlaing reiterated that position in his address on Monday, saying the military government would form a “true and disciplined democracy” different to previous eras of military rule.

Growing protests

Demonstrations against last week’s coup had intensified on Monday and spread to more towns and cities, with tens of thousands joining a third day of street protests to denounce the military’s actions including the arrest of Aung San Suu Kyi, a Nobel laureate whose National League for Democracy (NLD) party won the November polls in a landslide.

In the capital, Naypyidaw, where Myanmar’s top civilian leaders are believed to be held, videos posted on social media on Monday showed police firing brief bursts of water cannon to try and disperse peaceful protesters gathered on a highway.

Three lines of police in riot gear stood on the road as the crowd chanted anti-coup slogans and told police they should serve the people, not the military, according to media and a live feed of events.

Police placed a sign on the road saying that live ammunition could be used if demonstrators breached the third line of officers.

People demand the release of elected leader Aung San Suu Kyi in Yangon [Stringer/Reuters]
In Yangon, nurses, teachers, civil servants and monks joined anti-coup demonstrations. Some held signs denouncing the coup and calling for democracy, as others flew multicoloured Buddhist flags alongside red banners, the colour of the NLD.

Kyaw Zin Tun, an engineer protesting in Yangon, told the AFP news agency he was at the rally because he remembered the fear he felt growing up under the military rule during his childhood in the 1990s.

“In the last five years, under democracy government, our fears were removed. But now fear is back again with us, therefore, we have to throw out this military junta for the future of all of us,” the 29-year-old said.

Thousands also marched in the southern city of Dawei and in the capital of far northern Kachin state, Myitkyina – the massive crowds reflecting a rejection of military rule by diverse ethnic groups, even those who have been critical of Aung San Suu Kyi and accused her government of neglecting minorities.

Monday’s demonstrations came a day after tens of thousands of people protested against the coup in cities and towns across the country, in the biggest show of public dissent since a 2007 revolt by monks that was brutally suppressed by the military. A year later, the generals held a referendum on a newly drafted constitution, which made sure the military maintained considerable power but opened the door to a civilian government.

A quasi-civilian government took power in 2011, and four years later the NLD swept to victory at polls.

UK, EU propose UN special session

Separately on Monday, the United Kingdom and the European Union requested that the United Nations Human Rights Council hold a special session in response to the continuing political crisis in Myanmar.

“The United Kingdom would like to inform all colleagues that together with the European Union, we have submitted a request for a special session on the human rights implications of the crisis in Myanmar,” Julian Braithwaite, the UK’s ambassador in Geneva, told a council organisational meeting.

People hold up placards as they join a rally to protest in Yangon [Stringer/Reuters]
Braithwaite said the call was “in response to the state of emergency imposed in Myanmar, the arbitrary detention of democratically elected politicians and civil society by the military”, which he said had “grave implications for human rights in the country”.

“We must respond urgently to the plight of the people of Myanmar and the rapidly deteriorating human rights situation there,” he said.

Braithwaite said the backers of the special session call would inform other council members soon about the drafting of a resolution on the issue.

He said the motion had the support of an additional 19 of the council’s 47 members.

That means in principle that the request would fulfil the requirement for the backing of at least a third of the council’s members, paving the way for a special session before the next regular council session, which kicks off on February 22.

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2021-02-08 15:26:28Z
52781362295733

Myanmar's military ruler promises to hold an election - Sky News

Myanmar's military ruler has promised to hold an election and hand power to the winner.

Senior General Min Aung Hlaing was addressing the country on television, as nationwide protests against his coup last week intensified.

The military seized power last Monday, detaining democratically-elected leader Aung San Suu Kyi and her government, claiming there had been "huge discrepancies" in the November election.

Myanmar's military junta leader, General Min Aung Hlaing, speaks in a media broadcast in Naypyitaw, Myanmar February 8, 2021 in this still image taken from video. MRTV/Reuters TV
Image: Myanmar's military junta leader, General Min Aung Hlaing, has said there will be another election
The protesters are said to have dispersed after negotiating with police
Image: Protesters have called for the release of those detained by the military

General Hlaing did not say when the new election would be held or give any further details about it.

He made no mention of Ms Suu Kyi but said he had formed a government of "suitable ministers" and that they would create job opportunities and reopen factories, as well as prioritising prevention of the COVID-19 virus.

The junta would form a "true and disciplined democracy", he said, trying to distance the situation from previous eras of brutal military rule.

Foreign policy would remain the same and countries would be encouraged to invest in Myanmar, he added.

More from Myanmar

Siobhan Robbins, Sky's South East Asia Correspondent, said the general was "trying to calm people who we've seen on the streets in their tens of thousands".

"I'm not sure this will stop people going out on the streets but what it might do is give them a little bit of heart that we might not see such a brutal crackdown - but there's no guarantee of that."

Protests continued in the cities of Myanmar on Monday, with video from the capital, Naypyidaw, showing water cannon bursts fired at a group of protesters for about five minutes.

FILE PHOTO: Myanmar State Counsellor Aung San Suu Kyi casts an advance vote ahead of November 8th general election in Naypyitaw, Myanmar October 29, 2020. REUTERS/Thar Byaw/File Photo
Image: Aung San Suu Kyi won November's election by a landslide

Ms Suu Kyi's government was the first led by civilians in decades, though its power was limited by a military-drafted constitution - a constitution General Hlaing insisted was still respected and followed by the military.

General Hlaing said again that irregularities in the election had been ignored and that the election commission had used COVID-19 as an excuse for restricting fair campaigning.

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2021-02-08 14:49:33Z
52781362295733

Draghi moves closer to forming Italian government - Financial Times

Mario Draghi has moved closer towards becoming Italian prime minister after two formerly anti-euro parties signalled they would be willing to support him as leader of a government of national unity.

The leaders of the League and Five Star Movement, the two largest parties in the current parliament, both softened their initial positions on backing Draghi following meetings with the former president of the European Central Bank over the weekend.

Draghi, who has no history in electoral politics but is highly regarded for his handling of the European debt crisis when at the ECB, has been given the task of taking charge of the country’s fight against the Covid-19 pandemic and a brutal recession. 

On Wednesday President Sergio Mattarella asked Draghi to attempt to form a unity government after the country’s last coalition collapsed and was unable to reach a new agreement to rebuild a working parliamentary majority.

Draghi will hold a new round of consultations with Italy’s political parties on Monday and Tuesday ahead of potentially announcing the formation of a new government by the end of this week.

It remains to be seen whether he will choose to bring in both the League and the Five Star Movement into his government, But if both parties support him then Draghi would command a far larger majority than that of the previous coalition government led by Giuseppe Conte.

Matteo Salvini outside Montecitorio, in Rome, Italy, on February 6 2021
Matteo Salvini, centre, said he would be willing to sign up to a government ‘that goes to Brussels keeping its head high in the name of the national interest’ © Remo Casilli/Reuters

After meeting Draghi on Saturday, Matteo Salvini, the League leader who once toured Italy wearing a T-shirt with the slogan “no more euro”, said that he would be willing to sign up to a government “that goes to Brussels keeping its head high in the name of the national interest”.

In doing so he appeared to drop a condition he outlined just the day before to the effect that the League would not be willing to serve in any government that included his former allies in the Five Star Movement. 

“We don’t think saying no gets you anywhere,” Salvini said. “The best interests of the country must come before any personal interest.”

One senior League lawmaker told the Financial Times that there was now a unified desire across the party for Draghi to become prime minister and then to take over from Mattarella as president when his term expires next year.

“The League has been aligning itself towards supporting Draghi, even the most extreme wing,” the person said. “What we want is increasingly clear: Draghi as prime minister now and then Draghi as president of the republic in a year’s time, after he has led the country to elections.”

Vito Crimi, centre, at a press conference in Rome, Italy, on February 6 2021
Vito Crimi, centre, said the Five Star Movement was considering ‘whether the conditions are right’ to support Draghi © Roberto Monaldo/LAPRESSE/POOL/EPA-EFE/Shutterstock

Senior figures in the Five Star Movement, the largest party in the current parliament which served in the coalition government that collapsed last month, have also softened their language on the prospect of supporting a government led by Draghi.

Vito Crimi, the party’s interim leader, had last week said it could not support a technocratic government, but following a meeting with Draghi he announced that the Five Star Movement was considering “whether the conditions are right” to support him.

Beppe Grillo, the television comedian and political activist who co-founded the Five Star Movement and previously railed against Italy’s membership of the single currency, also suggested the party could be ready to support the former ECB president.

One Five Star MP said that Grillo’s standing inside the party would be likely to convince wavering lawmakers to back Draghi.

“Beppe Grillo has spoken, and when he takes the field everyone stands to attention. He has the power to completely change the line of the Five Star parliamentary group,” the MP said.

Draghi is already guaranteed the support of the centre-left Democratic party and former prime minister Matteo Renzi’s Italia Viva party, which last month brought down the Conte government after withdrawing its support.

Matteo Ricci, a former deputy leader of the Democratic party, said that the shift to supporting Draghi would be easier for the Five Star Movement than for the League, which has until recently remained far more hostile to Brussels.

“Over the years the Five Star Movement made a pro-European choice, the League has never made this choice,” he said. “Salvini’s past with Le Pen and the other European sovereigntists speaks for itself.” 

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2021-02-08 12:40:00Z
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Myanmar: Police fire water cannon as protests grow over military coup - Sky News

Police have fired a water cannon in Myanmar's capital as tens of thousands of people across the country protest over last week's military coup.

Demonstrations are growing in the southeast Asian state in a bid to get elected leader Aung San Suu Kyi and her government reinstated.

The peaceful protests swelled over the weekend and are believed to be the biggest since the Saffron Revolution in 2007.

The protesters are said to have dispersed after negotiating with police
Image: The protesters are said to have dispersed after negotiating with police

The military seized power last Monday over claims of voting fraud in November's landslide election.

Video from the capital, Naypyidaw, on Monday showed water cannon bursts fired at a group of protesters for about five minutes.

Witnesses told Sky News there were some minor injuries and that the crowd negotiated with police before dispersing.

More from Aung San Suu Kyi

Thousands have also taken to the streets in the coastal city of Dawei and in the Kachin state capital in the north.

Monks joined protesters in the biggest city of Yangon, with signs among the crowd reading "say no to dictatorship" and "save democracy".

Police stand guard in Naypyitaw - there are fears deadly force could end up being used
Image: Police stand guard in Naypyitaw - there are fears deadly force could be used
People in Yangon hold pictures of jailed leader Aung San Suu Kyi
Image: People in Yangon hold pictures of detained leader Aung San Suu Kyi

The demonstrations continued there on Monday, with people chanting, holding placards written in English, and some giving the three-finger salute from the movie The Hunger Games.

Some smaller groups headed to the Sule Pagoda, a previous rallying point for protests against the military.

There are also reports of protests in the second-largest city of Mandalay, with a convoy of motorbikes joining demonstrators on foot.

Police shot into the air to to disperse a crowd near the Thai border on Sunday - with a watchdog group claiming one woman was shot - but so far there appear to have been no serious clashes.

Deadly force was used to end previous uprisings in 1988 and 2007 and there are fears things could escalate in that direction.

Some workers, including doctors, teachers and other government workers, have also joined a campaign to go on strike.

"We request government staff from all departments not to attend work from Monday," said Min Ko Naing, a veteran activist of the 1988 uprising.

Awareness of the protests has grown after a day-long ban on internet access was lifted on Sunday.

The Myanmar military ruled directly for more than five decades, but Ms Suu Kyi's government became the first civilian-led administration in decades in 2015.

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Sunday: Protests spread in Myanmar

However, its power was limited by a military-drafted constitution.

Myamar's election commission has said it found no evidence of fraud in last year's election and the international community has condemned the coup - with America considering sanctions.

Ms Suu Kyi's party met online on Friday, after being banned from gathering at parliament, and declared themselves the legitimate representatives of the people and asked for international recognition.

Ms Suu Kyi, 75, is being held by police and her lawyer has said he has not been allowed access.

Analysis: No intention to return democracy to Myanmar anytime soon

By Siobhan Robbins, South East Asia correspondent

With the number of anti-coup protestors on Myanmar's streets swelling with every passing day, today water cannon was used for the first time.

An eyewitness told us police fired without warning on a crowd of peaceful protestors in the capital, Naypyidaw.

He said several people suffered injuries, none of which seemed serious, but that tensions eased slightly following negotiations with officers on site.

However, there are concerns that this could be a sign of things to come.

State TV today carried ominous messages that people who disturbed public stability "should be countered by effective measures and action will be taken according to the law".

This, as vans of pro-military supporters were seen driving towards downtown Yangon, prompting fears that violence could break out if the two sides met.

Despite this, the mood of pro-democracy supporters in the city was determined and positive as tens of thousands again took part in demonstrations.

Many of the protestors carried signs in English calling for an end to military dictatorship, a clear signal that they believe any return to democracy will require some type of intervention from the outside world.

Twenty-five-year-old student Aye held a banner reading: "I don't want dictatorship, I just want a boyfriend," one of a number of attention grabbing slogans aimed at the West.

"When Aung San Suu Kyi was ruling the country we had developments such as education and job opportunities. I want her leadership, not a military dictatorship," she said. "I want Aung San Suu Kyi and the president to be released as soon as possible."

It's a demand shared by many, along with a call for a return to democracy.

While both are reasonable, they also increasingly unlikely - a week after the military seized power in an illegal coup, it's clear it has no intention of returning it any time soon.

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2021-02-08 10:19:38Z
CBMiaGh0dHBzOi8vbmV3cy5za3kuY29tL3N0b3J5L215YW5tYXItcG9saWNlLWZpcmUtd2F0ZXItY2Fubm9uLWFzLXByb3Rlc3RzLWdyb3ctb3Zlci1taWxpdGFyeS1jb3VwLTEyMjEyMjY10gFsaHR0cHM6Ly9uZXdzLnNreS5jb20vc3RvcnkvYW1wL215YW5tYXItcG9saWNlLWZpcmUtd2F0ZXItY2Fubm9uLWFzLXByb3Rlc3RzLWdyb3ctb3Zlci1taWxpdGFyeS1jb3VwLTEyMjEyMjY1

Why glaciers burst and send floods downstream - Al Jazeera English

As a burst Himalayan glacier wreaks havoc in India, we look at how glaciers and glacial lakes form, and why they sometimes break.

The floods that slammed into two hydroelectric plants and damaged villages in northern India on Sunday were set off by an upstream break in a western Himalayan glacier.

The glacier is one of a large cluster in the Himalayas, which are part of India’s long northern border.

Here is how glaciers and glacial lakes form and why they sometimes break:

How glaciers and glacial lakes form

Glaciers can be found on every continent except Australia, and some are hundreds of thousands of years old.

They comprise layers of compressed snow that move or “flow” due to gravity and the softness of ice relative to rock.

A glacier’s “tongue” can extend hundreds of kilometres from its high-altitude origins, and the end, or “snout,” can advance or retreat based on snow accumulating or melting.

“Ice may flow down mountain valleys, fan out across plains, or in some locations, spread out onto the sea,” according to the National Snow and Ice Data Center.

Proglacial lakes, formed after glaciers retreat, are often bound by sediment and boulder formations.

Additional water or pressure, or structural weakness, can cause both natural and man-made dams to burst, sending a mass of floodwater surging down the rivers and streams fed by the glacier.

Why did the glacier burst?

It is not yet known what caused part of the Nanda Devi glacier to snap off on Sunday morning, sending floodwater surging downstream towards power plants and villages in India’s northern state of Uttarakhand.

Seismic activity and a buildup of water pressure can cause glaciers to burst, making climate change a particular concern.

High temperatures coupled with less snowfall can accelerate melting, which causes water to rise to potentially dangerous levels.

“Most mountain glaciers around the world were much larger in the past and have been melting and shrinking dramatically due to climate change and global warming,” said Sarah Das, an associate scientist at Woods Hole Oceanographic Institute.

The region where the glacial burst occurred is prone to landslide and flash flooding, and environmentalists have cautioned against building there.

Can such disasters be predicted?

Past deadly and destructive glacial floods have occurred in Peru and Nepal.

A number of imminent potentially deadly glacier burst and flood situations have been identified worldwide, including in the Himalayas and South American Andes.

But the remote locations of glaciers and a lack of monitoring mean we do not have a clear understanding of how often they occur and if they are increasing, Das said.

“Given the overall pattern of warming, glacier retreat, and increase in infrastructure projects, though, it seems natural to hypothesise that these events will occur more frequently and will become overall more destructive if measures are not taken to mitigate these risks,” said Das.

“There are many glaciers and glacial dammed lakes across the Himalayas, but most are unmonitored,” Das said.

“Many of these lakes are upstream of steep river valleys and have the potential to cause extreme flooding when they break. Where these floods reach inhabited regions and sensitive infrastructure, things will be catastrophic.”

A 2010 information page published by the International Centre for Integrated Mountain Development called for more glacier monitoring in the Hindu Kush Himalayas to better understand “the real degree of glacial lake instability”.

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2021-02-08 08:34:15Z
CAIiEHvEy844DP1YBMKLJq4-vpEqFAgEKgwIACoFCAowhgIwkDgw0O8B

Israel PM Netanyahu pleads not guilty as corruption trial resumes - Al Jazeera English

Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has returned to court and pleaded not guilty to corruption charges as his trial enters an intensified phase six weeks before an election.

The Monday hearing, which was pushed back multiple times because of coronavirus restrictions, is where he has to deliver his formal response to the allegations. Subsequent sessions will focus on testimony and evidence.

Netanyahu, the first Israeli prime minister to be indicted in office, was charged last year over allegations he accepted improper gifts and sought to trade regulatory favour with media moguls in exchange for positive coverage.

The combative 71-year-old leader denounced the charges as “fabricated and ludicrous” ahead of his first court appearance in May and claimed to be the victim of a witch-hunt, taking direct aim at his hand-picked attorney general, Avichai Mandelblit.

Al Jazeera’s Harry Fawcett, reporting from outside the court in Jerusalem, said dozens of anti-Netanyahu demonstrators had gathered outside.

“The object of his legal team is to respond to the charges of bribery in three separate cases. This hearing sets out the main schedule of the trial, at which Netanyahu may have to appear three times a week,” he said.

The trial schedule may force Netanyahu to appear in court multiple times a week as he campaigns ahead of Israel’s fourth election in less than two years to be held on March 23.

‘Election meddling’?

When Netanyahu last appeared in court nine months ago, he was fresh off a political victory, forming a coalition government with his election rival Benny Gantz following three inconclusive votes.

But that fraught coalition proved short-lived and collapsed in December with Gantz branding Netanyahu as “serially dishonest”.

It is unclear whether the shadow cast by the trial will hurt the prime minister’s re-election chances. But it is likely he will fight to remain leader in the upcoming elections in March and possibly for years afterwards. If he wins, he could try to secure parliamentary immunity or pass laws to exempt a serving prime minister from standing trial.

Israel’s parliament speaker and Netanyahu loyalist Yariv Levin insisted the court must “postpone” the trial’s upcoming phase.

Proceeding now “will be lending a hand to blatant meddling in the elections”, he told the right-wing Israel Hayom newspaper on Sunday.

Levin said it was unfair for the prosecution to present its case during the campaign, while the defence rebuttals are scheduled for after election day.

Several recent polls show Netanyahu’s right-wing Likud remains the strongest party by a comfortable margin, but it is not certain it will be able to form a 61-seat majority with its conservative and religious allies.

For the first time in his political career, Netanyahu is also facing a challenge from a prominent Likud defector Gideon Saar, who broke with the prime minister to form his own New Hope party.

The three cases

The charges against Netanyahu are divided into three separate cases.

The most serious – known as Case 4000, in which he is accused of bribery, fraud and breach of trust – centres on the allegation that Netanyahu negotiated with Shaul Elovitch of the telecommunications giant Bezeq to secure positive coverage on his Walla! news site in exchange for policies benefitting Bezeq.

Elovitch and his wife were also indicted.

Case 2000 concerns allegations Netanyahu sought a deal with the owner of the Yediot Aharonot newspaper that would have seen it give him more favourable coverage.

Case 1000 involves allegations Netanyahu and his family received gifts, including luxury cigars, champagne and jewellery estimated to be worth more than 700,000 shekels ($213,000), from wealthy individuals, in exchange for financial or personal favours.

Bribery charges carry a jail sentence of up to 10 years and/or a fine, while fraud and breach of trust carry a sentence of up to three years.

The prime minister denies wrongdoing. Under Israeli law, a prime minister is under no obligation to stand down unless convicted.

Weekly protests against him have rumbled on for months with demonstrators from the “Crime Minister” movement focusing on the graft allegations. Others have protested against the government’s handling of the pandemic.

A counter-protest movement in support of Netanyahu has also taken to the streets.

The prime minister on Sunday urged his followers to not demonstrate outside the court, citing the danger from coronavirus mutations.

“I know you are planning on coming to the court tomorrow. I know you want to offer me strength in the face of the crumbling and deceitful cases against me,” he said.

“For your health, I’m asking you, don’t come.”

Netanyahu has served as Israel’s prime minister since 2009, and in the past two years has managed to hang onto power through three tumultuous, deadlocked elections.

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https://news.google.com/__i/rss/rd/articles/CBMiZWh0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmFsamF6ZWVyYS5jb20vbmV3cy8yMDIxLzIvOC9pc3JhZWxpLXBtLW5ldGFueWFodS1yZXR1cm5zLXRvLWNvdXJ0LWFzLWdyYWZ0LXRyaWFsLXJhbXBzLXVw0gFpaHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuYWxqYXplZXJhLmNvbS9hbXAvbmV3cy8yMDIxLzIvOC9pc3JhZWxpLXBtLW5ldGFueWFodS1yZXR1cm5zLXRvLWNvdXJ0LWFzLWdyYWZ0LXRyaWFsLXJhbXBzLXVw?oc=5

2021-02-08 07:55:50Z
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