Netanyahu Weighs Including Israeli Spy on Electoral List

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu with Israeli spy Jonathan Pollard at the airport. (Israeli Prime Minister's Office)
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu with Israeli spy Jonathan Pollard at the airport. (Israeli Prime Minister's Office)
TT

Netanyahu Weighs Including Israeli Spy on Electoral List

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu with Israeli spy Jonathan Pollard at the airport. (Israeli Prime Minister's Office)
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu with Israeli spy Jonathan Pollard at the airport. (Israeli Prime Minister's Office)

Members of the Likud Constitutional Committee approved a plan by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to alter the existing balance of power and win the upcoming election by agreeing to skip holding internal primaries and jump to adopting the electoral list.

The unprecedented fourth elections in two years are set for March.

Political sources said that Netanyahu is mulling adding Israeli spy, Jonathan Pollard, to his electoral list. Pollard arrived in Israel on Wednesday.

The US Justice Department ended Pollard's parole last month, following his 1985 arrest for spying while working as a US Navy analyst.

Meanwhile, Netanyahu informed fellow party leaders that he had carried out a study with experts that showed that recent weekly opinion polls released by the media were inaccurate.

The polls, conducted by the three Israeli television channels, showed that the New Hope party, led by former Likud member, Gideon Saar, would win 17 or 18 seats in the elections while the Likud would win 28 or 29.

Netanyahu said his study refuted the polls and showed that could win as much as 40 seats.

However, Saar has better chances to form a government than Netanyahu, as he can secure 61-62 seats from secular Jewish parties, without the vote of Arab or religious Jews.

Such a coalition would include Yesh Atid, headed by Yair Lapid, the Israelis party led by Tel Aviv mayor Ron Huldai, Yisrael Beiteinu led by Avigdor Lieberman, and the union of extreme right-wing parties, headed by Naftali Bennett.

In a new development, signs of a rift appeared in the United Torah Judaism, threatening to end the right-wing alliance with Netanyahu.

MPs Meir Porush and Yisrael Eichler announced their support to Saar, prompting the PM to rush to negotiate with them so that they would remain in the bloc.

Meanwhile, former Israeli Chief of Staff, Gadi Eisenkot, published an op-ed in Yedioth Aharonoth, explaining his current decision to move away from politics.

Eisenkot warned that Israel's greatest threat is not Hamas or Iran, but political infighting

Times are tough for Israel because it has to deal not only with enemies abroad but with a debilitating political crisis accompanied by extreme and violent public discourse and a lack of faith in its institutions and leaders, he wrote.

Israel needs leadership that would push for its national values that lead by example, works to strengthen the public's trust in its institutions, bolster the public sector and reassure a balance between the judiciary, executive and legislative branches, while being acceptant of constructive and bold criticism, according to Eiskenot.

“Along with strengthening our position at home, we must continue to prepare against security threats. Our strategic stance has improved, thanks to the normalization agreements Israel signed in the passing months with a number of Arab states.”

The former chief asserted that Israelis must work toward full separation from the Palestinians, preferably through a comprehensive agreement, with strict security provisions, keeping the population centers in the West Bank and the important Jordan Valley region.

Regarding the Gaza Strip, Eisenkot wrote that it is an independent and failing entity threatening Israel, stressing that a long-term ceasefire should be reached, including a provision for the return of Israeli hostages, the economic development of the region and total disarmament of the “terror” factions in the coastal enclave.



Rights Groups Condemn Iran’s ‘Abhorrent’ Execution of Protester

A noose is seen as people hold Iranian flags during a protest on the day of the Munich Security Conference, in Munich, Germany February 17, 2023. (Reuters)
A noose is seen as people hold Iranian flags during a protest on the day of the Munich Security Conference, in Munich, Germany February 17, 2023. (Reuters)
TT

Rights Groups Condemn Iran’s ‘Abhorrent’ Execution of Protester

A noose is seen as people hold Iranian flags during a protest on the day of the Munich Security Conference, in Munich, Germany February 17, 2023. (Reuters)
A noose is seen as people hold Iranian flags during a protest on the day of the Munich Security Conference, in Munich, Germany February 17, 2023. (Reuters)

Iran faced condemnation from human rights groups Wednesday over its execution of a man convicted of killing a Revolutionary Guard in 2022 protests, with activists saying his confession had been obtained by torture.

Gholamreza Rasaei, in his mid-thirties, is the 10th man executed by Iran in connection with the months-long protests that erupted in September 2022 after the death in custody of Mahsa Amini. The Iranian Kurd had been arrested for an alleged breach of the country's strict dress code for women.

Rasaei was executed in prison in the western city of Kermanshah on Tuesday after being convicted of killing the Guards colonel, according to the Mizan Online website of the Iranian judiciary.

Human rights groups have repeatedly accused Iran, which they say executes more people annually than any nation other than China, of using the death penalty against protesters without due legal process in a bid to intimidate their sympathizers.

Rasaei, a member of the Kurdish ethnic minority and follower of the Yarsan faith, was executed in secret with neither his family nor his lawyer given prior notice and his family then forced to bury his body in a remote area far from his home, Amnesty International said.

"Iranian authorities have carried out the abhorrent arbitrary execution in secret of a young man who was subjected to torture and other ill-treatment in detention, including sexual violence, and then sentenced to death after a sham trial," said Amnesty's deputy director for the Middle East and North Africa, Diana Eltahawy.

She said the execution was another instance of Iran using the death penalty as a "tool of political repression to instill fear among the population".

Amnesty said his death sentence was handed out in October 2023 "after a grossly unfair trial that relied on his forced 'confessions' obtained under torture and other ill-treatment, including beatings, electric shocks, suffocation and sexual violence".

- 'Inhumane and outdated' -

Norway-based NGO Iran Human Rights said Rasaei had stated in court that the confessions had been obtained under torture, but this was ignored by the judge who also dismissed two expert testimonies, including a forensics report, that argued he could not have been behind the killing.

The "death sentence was issued and implemented based on his torture-tainted confessions and with the aim of intimidating the public," said IHR director Mahmood Amiry-Moghaddam.

IHR said Iran has now executed at least 313 people this year alone.

More than 20 convicts sentenced to death on drug and murder charges have meanwhile been transferred to death row cells in Ghezelhesar prison in the Tehran satellite city of Karaj ahead of their expected execution, it said.

Rights groups said the execution showed there was no let-up in Iran's use of the death penalty since reformist President Masoud Pezeshkian was sworn in last week.