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Israel: Sharon, facing indictment, threatens new government
By Chris Marsden
31 March 2004
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Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon is facing a deepening corruption
scandal, together with a political challenge from his far right
coalition partners, who are opposed to his plan for unilateral
separation from the Palestinians.
The far right are seeking to utilise the corruption scandal
to force a weakened Sharon to abandon his plan, but the prime
minister has stated his intention to press on even if this means
forming a new government.
On February 28, the state prosecutor recommended that Sharon
be indicted on charges that he agreed to accept bribes indirectly
from a real estate developer seeking to build a resort in Greece
while Sharon was foreign minister.
In January David Appel, a property dealer and political fixer
in Sharons ruling Likud Party, was indicted on charges of
bribing Sharon, his son Gilad, and Industry, Trade and Employment
Minister Ehud Olmert.
Appel stands accused of paying Sharon $US100,000 and transferring
$580,000 to Sharons ranch in the Negev, which is managed
by Gilad, around the time of Sharons bid to win the Likud
leadership.
He is also alleged to have given Gilad $700,000, and promised
him $3 million as well as a monthly salary of thousands of dollars
in return for his fathers help in convincing the Greek government
to grant planning permission for a holiday complex and casino
on an Aegean island. Sharon is accused of lobbying the Greek government
on Appels behalf.
On February 29, after eight months of legal wrangling, Israels
Supreme Court also ruled that Gilad must turn over documents to
the police so that they can conclude their investigations and
decide whether Sharon can be indicted on a charge that he used
a $1.5 million foreign loan to repay illegal contributions to
his 1999 campaign.
Israels attorney general, Menachem Mazuz, will rule on
an indictment some time after the Passover holiday in late April
or May.
Leaks regarding the affair seem to be coming from sources within
the police.
Sharon has been reported as having declared to Appel in a taped
statement, The island is in our handswhich is
being used by state attorney Edna Arbel in her draft indictment
against the prime minister and his son.
Two of Sharons coalition partners, the National Religious
Party and the National Union Party, have threatened to quit if
he implements his plan for unilateral separation.
Sharons plan calls for the (probably temporary) removal
of 17-20 settlements on the Gaza Strip, housing around 5,000 Israelis,
and the possible relocation of a handful of others on the West
Bank. But this is in the context of a major landgrab, that would
seize around half of the occupied West Bank and permanently annex
it to Israel behind the so-called security fence now
under construction. Sharon is to hold talks at the White House
on April 14 in a bid to secure the backing of President George
W. Bush for his planwhich would mean finally abandoning
the US Road Map that at least formally supports an
Israeli withdrawal from the West Bank.
Even this is a step too far for the fascistic settler-based
parties and for sections of Likud, who have denounced the removal
of a single Zionist settlement as a capitulation to terrorism.
The leader of the National Religious Party and Sharons
housing minister, Effi Eitam, used Sharons difficulties
to declare, A prime minister under suspicion of a police
warning cannot be allowed to go to America to commit to a programme
with fateful consequences for the future of the state.
NRP MK Shaul Yahalom said Sharon was violating basic
democratic principles by presenting President Bush with a revolutionary
policy without any prior government decision.
Tourism minister Benny Elon, from the National Union Party,
added that Sharon can lead the government but he cannot
negotiate a plan that has not been adopted by his cabinet.
Sharon has refused to back down. Instead, speaking to the Knesset
Foreign Affairs and Defence Committee, he threatened that if the
two parties quit, he would form a new government the same
day rather than call fresh elections.
Sharon has stressed that his is the plan that will be accepted
by Washington and that this should satisfy the territorial ambitions
of his hardline supporters-cum-detractorsat least for the
time being.
He told the Foreign Affairs and Defence Committee that he will
discuss the quid pro quos he wants from Washington with the three
US officials who are dealing with the disengagement plandeputy
national security adviser Steve Hadley, the NSCs Elliott
Abrams, and State Department Middle East expert William Burnsbefore
coming to final understandings with Bush.
Sharon has not specified the make-up of his threatened new
government, but there are clear indications that he may rely on
the opposition Labour Party to save his skin and give a left cover
for his seizure of West Bank lands.
Israeli newspapers have reported that there is a secret agreement
for the formation of a national unity government including Labour.
According to the Maariv newspaper, after discussions with
Sharon Labour will receive six ministerial portfolios, with party
leader and former premier Shimon Peres becoming foreign ministera
post currently headed by Likud member Silvan Shalom. Labour will
also receive the transportation ministry now headed by National
Union leader Avigdor Leiberman, and construction and housing ministry
now led by Effi Eitam of the National Religious Party. Labour
will also take the environment and science ministries currently
held by the economic liberal Shinui party.
Some Labour spokesman have denied that such a deal has been
agreed and attributed talk of a coalition with Likud to Sharon
manoeuvring for advantage over the NRP, National Union and dissident
factions of Likud, rather than a genuine possibility of him breaking
with the far right.
But there is every possibility that such talks have indeed
been held. In any event if the need arises, Labour will no doubt
consider backing Sharon as it did until October 2002. Labours
Dalia Itzik, one of the three labour ministers who quit Sharons
government at that time, said that her party would not make a
decision on joining a coalition until the attorney general has
decided whether to indict him.
See Also:
Israel: Sharon government creates ever
widening social inequality
[29 March 2004]
Israeli assassination of Hamas leader:
a provocation, incitement and prelude to stepped-up aggression
[23 March 2004]
Israel: Sharon reiterates
threat to annex West Bank territory
[10 January 2004]
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