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Antaea Darom

Israeli women's art

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Torah as music

Ben Heine

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Mohammad Said Kalash, "Offering Reconciliation" exhibit (photo: Ilan Amihai)

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Punch and Judy/Pinchas and Jamila

Avi Katz

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David Grossman

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Eldrige Street shul

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Dove

Ben Heine

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Hoda Jamal

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Israeli and Palestinian boys

from documentary, Promises

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Cat in the Hat

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Banksy: graffiti art on Separation Wall

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Maurice Sendak's Brundibar set

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Daniel Barenboim, West-Eastern Divan Orchestra

Palestinian-Israeli musical ensemble (photo: Kerstin Joensson/AP)

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Great Day on Eldrige Street

N.Y.'s klezmer greats celebrate shul rededication (photo: Leo Sorel)

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Joint Appeal for Peace

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Ketubah, Ancona, Italy (1772)

(Jewish Theological Seminary library)

Ancona ketubah

Posts Tagged ‘press freedom’

Knesset Bill Would Criminalize Speech

Friday, November 25th, 2011
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Hebrew summary of provisions of draconian new libel bill which passed first reading in Knesset (Ynet)

Among a raft of new authoritarian bills and legislation proposed or passed by the current Knesset is one that will essentially criminalize speech. Under a proposed new libel law, plaintiffs would no long even have to prove damages to win tens of thousands from defendants. Penalties in some categories will be increased six times and the highest damage award will rise to $500,000.

The bill, which handily passed it’s first reading, would harm all Israeli, but hit bloggers especially hard (Hebrew). I know this from my own personal experience since Rachel Neuwirth did sue me unsuccessfully and Aussie Dave and David Yerushalmi threatened to do so, but never followed through with their threats. There are few NGOs prepared to defend bloggers in such circumstances and how many of us have personal means to do so? A Los Angeles law firm took my case pro bono and spent four years defending me, and the plaintiff is still appealing her loss! If you don’t have a friend who’s a senior partner in a major law firm where do you stand?

There are even fewer such resources for Israeli bloggers. Plus the obstacles in the path of their reporting are even higher than those facing me. They have gag orders and censorship. They have powerful oligarchs with deep pockets and lawyers willing to use the law for the purpose of harassment. They have a draconian security establishment which is a law unto itself. They face a quiescent judicial system designed to favor corporate and state interests at the expense of the individual.

Bloggers in Israel are the canaries in the coal mine of Israeli democracy. The first blogger thrown in prison or bankrupted by such court action under this law will close down a curtain of freedom of the press in the country.

Itzik Sporta of HaOketz said it well when he derided the Knesset for wasting it’s time addressing “problems” that don’t exist rather than ones raised by the social justice movement which cry out for resolution. Israel has the fifth greatest income disparity between rich and poor among OCED nations. One quarter of Israelis live in poverty. Among children, the number is closer to half. There are huge reservoirs of hate and injustice among ethnic groups. Not to mention serious conflicts with its neighbors to be resolved. Instead they’re fixated on helping celebrities, politicians, and oligarchs getting their pound of flesh from the hard working journalists of their country, who labor on behalf of the common person, giving them enough information to make sense out of the mess their country is in.

We might want to start things off after this monstrosity is passed by bringing the first prosecution against the law itself for libeling free speech and press in Israel. One wag quoted in The Marker article says he’s going to exploit the new racist law declaring Israel a Jewish state by suing every Israeli Palestinian who denies it. Then he plans to take the $75,000 he wins from Israeli Palestinian social satitist Sayed Kashua (no doubt a personal friend, I hope) and hire the highest priced psychiatrist he can find to tell the world, he and his country are not insane.

Whether this schandeh of a bill ever passes or not, the damage is done. Merely proposing it has set loose the jackals who circle round Israeli democracy seeking to pick off the weak and vulnerable. First the bloggers, then the journalists, then the NGOs. By the time they come for the average citizen it will already be too late, as Pastor Niemoller so famously wrote. Even Bibi’s own mouthpiece, Yisrael HaYom, warns of the dangers of the law; which is quite ironic since the competition, once it can no longer report anything interesting, will fold and leave the field to Bibiton. The triumph of authoritarianism in Israeli life will only benefit Bibi’s media properties, which will not be challenged under these new measures.

If I were more selfish I’d see this development as a boon to someone like me not subject to Israeli law. After all, when Israel’s democracy dies there only be greater need for blogs like mine. But I’d much rather see Israeli democracy and free speech triumph. Until it does, I will continue doing what I do. And if things turn worse, Israelis who value a free press and who deride secrecy and government impunity may see this blog as their resource and in a way, their insurance policy. I will do whatever I can to protect Israeli sources and bloggers from their work being criminalized. I hope it doesn’t come to Israeli bloggers turning their websites into samizdat, underground knowledge whose sources and web servers must be hidden from the prying eyes of the intelligence agents and wrongdoers who seek to root out the good guys.

Likud and the Rise of the Permanent Far-Right Majority

Tuesday, November 22nd, 2011

What we’re seeing in Israeli politics and have seen since 2000, when the last Labor government ruled Israel, is the rise of a permanent far-right majority. Not a majority within the populace, but a ruling majority cobbled together from various right and farther right strands of Israeli nationalist discourse.

If we’re honest we realize that there is no electoral left or even center in Israeli politics. There is only right and farther right. The Israeli nationalists have so dominated the discourse with their national security mantra that no alternative can develop until there is a peace treaty. That is one of the reasons, whether consciously or unconsciously, the Israeli right can never allow peace. It would sound the death knell to their political hegemony.

Many might argue that this is the will of the people and therefore a legitimate political expression.  I don’t think so.  The Israeli situation reminds me of similar nationalist domination of Milosevic era Serbia, pre-1972 Northern Ireland, or Sinhalese dominated Sri Lanka.  In these countries there was/is a nominal democracy.  People have a choice.  But no matter what the choice everyone, even voters of the left, know the outcome will be a right-wing Tweedle Dee or Tweedle Dum.

This, is catastrophic for Israel in the short to medium term, though most Israelis may not recognize this.  But in the long run, and you’ll have to try to follow my somewhat perverse thinking here, this may actually be good for Israel.  During the last election, Jerry Haber of Magnes Zionist argued that the best candidate was Bibi Netanyahu.  He reasoned that if the most extreme politician won it would more profoundly expose the dysfunction and racism at the heart of Israeli society.  If the least-worst candidate won (Tzipi Livni), Israel would continue limping along on the road to nowhere.  Similarly, this is why I argue that a permanent Likudist government will hasten the day when the world will come to know that if it doesn’t intervene, then Israel will bring the entire region to the brink of Armageddon.

If you take my logic to the extreme, one might argue that one should support an Israeli attack on Iran since this too will prove catastrophic to all concerned.  The outcome of the catastrophe may be a realization, just as happened after the Serbian massacre of Srebrenica or during the Serbian assault on pre-independence Kosovo, that allowing the status quo meant genocide.  But I can’t go that far.  I don’t wish to see thousands of Iranian and Israeli dead just for the sake of bringing closer the day when Israel will be restrained and compelled to make the compromises it should’ve made decades ago for the sake of regional peace and stability.

But know that if there is an Israeli attack, this will be the long-term consequence.

I write all this by way of bringing us to the current Israeli political moment.  Though for many decades I was a liberal Zionist supporter of the left-wing of Labor, Meretz and all their various political permutations, I’ve come to believe over the past year or so, that Israeli politics is a sinkhole.  The Knesset is a bunch of windbags droning on endlessly about matters having little or nothing to do with governing a modern state.  Decisions of real import are made in élite ministerial committees and not subject to review or oversight by the larger body.  That is, when decision of any real import are made, which appears to be exceedingly rare.

protest against anti democratic laws outside likud headquarters

Israeli activists protest outside Likud Party headquarters against rising authoritarianism (Oren Niv/ Activestills)

No, Israeli politics now consists solely of debating and passing legislation that would turn Israel into the sort of fake democracy that was Serbia or currently is Iran.  Take the bills du jour under consideration or recently passed by the Knesset: the anti-BDS law which allows any Israeli to sue anyone for publicly supporting BDS and to secure a hefty monetary judgment against them; or the bill that would’ve prohibited Israeli NGOs (read activist human rights and peace groups) from receiving any more than nominal funding from foreign governments (recently derailed by Bibi after fierce opposition was expressed by the EU and U.S.); and the bill that would allow Israeli politicians and oligarchs to sue any media outlet for libel without having to prove that the so-called libelous story caused any damages to the plaintiff.

The bill could be especially pernicious for Israeli bloggers since none have the deep pockets of media conglomerates enabling them to withstand the legal onslaught of which a Leonid Nevzlin or Sheldon Adelson is capable.  In fact, an Israeli blogger contacted me recently asking my advice about ways in which they could protect themselves in the light of the media Dark Ages which she foresaw.  A word Dena Shunra used got me thinking even further about this: samizdat.  Israel is rapidly moving into territory inhabited by the former Soviet Union in the days of the dissidents (yes, Virginia, there was a day when Natan Sharansky stood for freedom and liberty against state oppression), when they organized in small underground cells and passed around secret samizdat containing ideas deemed subversive by the government.  The difference being today we have the internet and don’t need to print samizdat on mimeograph machines like in the old days.

But Israeli bloggers will still have to protect themselves by moving their blogs to offshore hosts not under Israeli jurisdiction.  They’ll have to incorporate their blogs as companies or non-profits so they won’t be personally liable for any judgments against them.  They’ll have to create mirror sites in case the government takes theirs down.  They may have to protect their sources by taking special care possibly by using encrypted e-mail services.  They will need to develop a network of attorneys to defend them from civil or criminal prosecution.

In short, Israeli bloggers fear their country is turning into Mubarak-era Egypt or Bahrain or Saudi Arabia in which dissident bloggers can be thrown into prison or bankrupted according to the whim of the rich and powerful.  Bloggers are the canaries in the coal mine which warn a society when it losing the oxygen of democracy it needs to survive.  This is especially true in an Israel rife with gag orders, military censorship, and intelligence services permitted to run rampant over individual rights.  Israel needs its bloggers as much or more than it needs its mainstream media.

This is not an academic exercise, dear readers.  This is not Chicken Little warning that the sky is falling.  Israeli authoritarianism is here.  The plague is among us.

This is what Putin did in steamrollering Russia’s independent media way back in the heady days when there was such a thing.  These are precisely the sorts of prosecutions allowed in authoritarian regimes like Russia, Iran, Moldova, etc. where the governing élite simply use the judicial process to bankrupt their opponents.  This allows the powerful to place a mantle of respectability over their machinations.  It is naked political power concealed in a velvet glove.

Besides the bills and laws I referenced above, Bibi is also using regulatory power to silence his enemies among the press.  I’ve noted here the closing of Radio All for Peace last week, and the done-deal dictating the closure of Channel 10, which has broadcast unflattering exposes of both Bibi and his chief bagman Sheldon Adelson.  Further, today’s Hebrew edition of Ynet carries reports of a plan hatched by Netanyahu to take control of yet another TV station, this time the educational channel.  Yesterday, Israeli journalists held an unprecedented emergency meeting to address the wholesale onslaught on the press.  Make no mistake, these acts are not merely a series of discreet, disconnected undemocratic decisions.  They are of a piece with a government and nation well on its way to a permanent right-wing majority whose control is ensured by rising authoritarianism.

Jeffrey Goldberg’s claim in his NY Times review of Gershom Gorenberg’s new book that the Israeli electorate is somehow powerless in the face of the onslaught of settler political power, though certainly consoling to liberal Zionists, in no way corresponds to political reality.  Israelis (though not all) allow themselves to be willingly co-opted by their leaders.  To argue that Israelis don’t want press freedom curtailed, or that they don’t want the government to control what they see and hear on TV, radio or in print, is disingenuous.  Unlike the three monkeys, they see the evil, they hear the evil, and they do the evil.  And do little or nothing to stop it.

I lived in Israel just before the first Lebanon war and remember Peace Now demonstrations which warned that former general Ariel Sharon, then a rising star of Israeli politics, was likely to stage a putsch to gain power.  Today’s right doesn’t need a coup.  It runs the joint.  And will run it for the foreseeable future.

Lee Atwater, George Bush Sr’s Karl Rove, formulated a Republican political game plan that called for invoking wedge issues like homosexuality, abortion and immigration in order to gain support for implementing the Party’s real agenda.  In Israeli politics there are now ONLY wedge issues.  There is no overarching political agenda for the ruling coalition except permanent rule.  Likud doesn’t stand for any big ideas.  There is no debate about national health care or how to engineer an economic recovery as there has been in this country.  There is only Arab-bashing, left bashing, settlements, and muzzling the media.  This is what passes for a political platform.

I should make clear what I am NOT arguing.  I do not support nihilism or giving up on Israel until change comes.  Of course, the opposition, whatever is left of it, should never give up.  It must make its voice heard.  Not to do so would be a betrayal of Israel.  But in doing so, the Israeli left must realize that it is simply hopeless to bring change purely internally.  Change must come from the outside.  It can be supported from within as happened in Serbia after Milosevic’s downfall.  But the key catalyst must be outside intervention.

Of course, the world is not prepared to intervene in the Israeli-Arab conflict.  It is either too preoccupied or too morally conflicted to do so.  It seems there must be thousands of dead and blood running in the streets before the world’s conscience can be pricked.  Of one thing you may be sure: with a permanent ruling right-wing majority in Israel, there will be blood, much blood.  The only question is how much before the world will be called upon to act.

In this circumstance, I see Barack Obama as in the same position as Bill Clinton during the Rwanda and Serbian genocides.  He declined to act because he knew he would have to summon domestic political resolve to do so.  That meant expending his capital to get Republicans on board a policy of intervention, an approach Republicans are generally loathe to adopt.  So Clinton allowed things to spin out of control not once (Rwanda), but twice (Serbia).  The result was 800,000 dead in the first instance and 250,000 dead in the second.  A million dead altogether.  Those are a lot of bodies to burden one’s conscience.  If Bill Clinton were a more contemplative fellow he could make a brilliant Shakespearean tragic hero a la King Lear or Hamlet.  But I doubt his moral failures weigh heavily on his conscience.

I hope to God that a similar charnel house will not be required before Barack Obama realizes that he and the rest of the world must act regarding Israel-Palestine.

All of the above explains why I disagree so profoundly with the Gershom Gorenbergs and Haaretz’s of Israel who believe that liberal Zionism and a moderate left is still possible in Israel.  These folks want to nibble around the edges of what’s wrong.  They want to tinker with the machinery instead of overhauling it.  We’re far past tinkering.  And the well-intentioned liberals of Meretz, who may hate Bibi but will support him when he gets Israel into the next war, don’t have any answers that will work.

Israeli Police Silence Peace Radio Station

Saturday, November 19th, 2011
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All for Peace Radio's comment on its silencing by the Israeli police

Israeli police have just succeeding in murdering peace (Hebrew)–or at least the voice of peace that Israelis and Palestinians can hear on the radio.   Police summoned the Radio Kol HaShalom (“All for Peace” Radio, which is a play on Kol HaShalom, Abie Natan’s radio station which was called “Voice of Peace”) station director to a three-hour interrogation under warning (anything he said could be used to build a criminal case against him), during which they demanded that he sign a statement agreeing to cease broadcasts to Israel (not I presume to Palestinians, though it would be hard to beam a signal that reached one but not the other).  They also demanded that he call the station and direct the radio engineer to take the station off the air.  If he refused, he was told that police would raid the station and do it themselves.  Presumably, they’d confiscate the radio equipment which had taken months and months to arrive from abroad due to delays imposed by, you guessed it, the Israeli police, who didn’t want the station to go on air to begin with.

The blog post I linked to notes that staff of the station met a number of times during the seven years it was on air with officials of the ministry of communication, including the minister Eli Attias.  Not once did any civilian official complain about the station or threaten to take it off the air.  Now, all of a sudden, the ministry has decided that the “law” must be upheld.  It should be noted that the station has sought a license from Israel for years to broadcast and the government has never approved one.  This conveniently has allowed the authorities to do precisely what they did.  This is freedom of expression and a free press, Israel-style.

The station has been off-air since November 17th.  It had broadcast a mix of talk shows, interviews, and pop music.  I’ve listened to and been interviewed by the station and it wasn’t incendiary or politically radical at all.   It had a feel-good self-help orientation and attempted to promote fairly innocuous values of brotherhood and tolerance without engaging in political advocacy.  It did, however, explicitly endorse a two-state solution.  Apparently, that isn’t a political program endorsed by the Israeli police.

The station also endorsed freedom of speech and democratic values for both societies.  Apparently free speech and democracy are also threatening to the government censors otherwise known as the police.

Among the issues the station addressed was women’s rights and sexual violence, a criticism the pro-Israel crowd loves to point up as a “deficiency” of “Arab culture.”  The police never stopped to think that All for Peace might actually encourage Palestinians to believe that Israelis want peace.  Or perhaps that’s what threatened them because the police don’t believe in peace, but rather prefer constant tension and conflict.  After all, this would mean a career of full employment and high budgets for them.

In Palestine, All for Peace broadcasts legally and the PA has never had a problem with its programming.  One can presume though that if an East Jerusalem kindergarten can be shuttered by the police because its founders are alleged terrorists, that pop music that could be heard by both Israelis and Palestinians would be considered equally subversive.

The Israeli blog reporting this story closed with this passage:

It seems that during these days in which the Israeli Knesset is beset by a wave of anti-democratic legislation, the authorities saw fit to stop the broadcast of the sole station which enabled, in an open studio, deliberations on behalf of democracy.

All for Peace Radio was a small media fry in the Israeli pond.  It was no Channel 10 or Haaretz.  But it was the canary in the coal mine.  As went All for Peace so will go Channel 10.  Bibi Netanyahu prefers to control the media to the extent he can.  That is why all he may need to do is silence these media outlets for the others to get the message if they cross they line they’ll be punished as well.

The station will continue to fight for its right to broadcast and appeal the decision.  The next time you hear Abe Foxman and Alan Dershowitz crowing about Israeli democracy, remember posts like this.  On a related matter, I’m also tickled by Gershon Gorenberg’s new book which also touts Israeli democracy, according to this Amazon blurb:

Refuting…strident attacks [against Israel], Gorenberg shows that the Jewish state is, in fact, unique among countries born in the postcolonial era: It began as a parliamentary democracy and has remained one. An activist judiciary has established civil rights. Despite discrimination against its Arab minority, Israel has given a political voice to everyone within its borders.

To be fair, something Gorenberg wasn’t to me when he lied in calling me an anti-Zionist, Gorenberg does criticize Israel and its democracy.  But clearly he’s a liberal throwing a sop to all those classical Zionists who can’t bear the thought that they’ve lost the cherished Zionist dream of an exclusivist Jewish state.  He allows liberal Zionists to clear their conscience by conceding there are things wrong with Israel, while desperately clinging to the concept that Israel, as expressed in contemporary terms, remains fundamentally sound.

For those in the hasbara crowd who go through this blog with a fine tooth, these comments are not meant to be construed as a denunciation of Israel as a nation, but rather a criticism of the current undemocratic ways in which it is governed.  Contrary to Gorenberg (at least as represented in this blurb), Israel does not give a political voice to “everyone” within its borders.  It gives full voice to Jewish citizens and a muffled voice at best to Palestinian citizens.  That is why Gorenberg, Ethan Bronner, and the liberal Zionists do such a disservice to Israeli political reality and their readers beyond its borders.

Declining Israeli Press Freedom: If Reporter Had Story Leading to Bibi’s Ouster, Ben Caspit Fears He Might Not Report It

Friday, November 18th, 2011

While there are myriad stories recounting the assault against democracy in Israel, none is more important evident than the emasculation of the Israeli press.  While it has always been subject to censorship on matters related to national security, the pressure against honest, courageous reporting has mounted to alarming proportions.  In this light, one of Israel’s best known reporters with a decidedly right-wing (but anti-Bibi) slant, Ben Caspit, wrote this in today’s column:

If someone today brought credible, troubling information which could cause the fall of the prime minister, and which would seek a reporter or media outlet to publish it, would he find one?  Answer: I’m not certain.  Very few such outlets would agree to publish such a story.  There are, here and there, a few last shreds of opposition [to the government's attempt to silence the press], but they are growing less and less.

Another question: say such a source only brings the thread of a story, which requires doing further exhaustive research in order to confirm the information which was likely to result in the fall of the prime minister.  Is there a journalist who would raise the gauntlet and do the work?  Answer: I fear not.  Yes, it’s that bad.  The government media outlets are in a bad way.  They’re [the government] trying to close Channel 10.  They’ve already sentenced it to death.  The print media is fast weakening and the flame has already gone out there.  Galey Tzahal [Armed Forces Radio] has already been decimated by the defense minister.  What’s left?  Not much.  Hard to believe, but it’s a fact.

For some time already the media in Israel has abrogated its responsibility to tell the public what’s really happening between the walls of the prime minister’s home and office.  Even I, who’s attempted to assume the burden, am not what I once was.

If this isn’t an abject confession of personal and institutional failure I don’t know what is.  But at least Caspit is being candid, unlike the majority of reporters who go their merry way as if nothing was wrong, reporting what their masters (er, sources) feed them.

I remind you that I reported two days ago that Netanyahu threatened revocation of the license of any media outlets that reported the Forbes Israel story ranking the wealth of Knesset members.  The only one to report the story as far as I know has been Channel 10, the very one given a death sentence by Bibi.  Mako and Globes both took down their stories from their websites.  Many, including liberal readers and media types, have doubted my source on this.  All I can say, is that Ben Caspit further reinforces the credibility of this report.

Only in an authoritarian nation or one fast moving down this road, can the media be so intimidated and emasculated.

Bibi Threatens Licenses of Israeli Media Which Publish List of Wealthiest Israeli Politicians

Wednesday, November 16th, 2011
Silvan Shalom Judy Nir Mozes

Silvan Shalom who, thanks to his wife, Judy Nir Mozes, is Israel's wealthiest pol at over$40-million

forbes wealthiest israeli politicians

Banned Forbes article on Israel's wealthiest politicians

UPDATE: Apologies to Dvorit Shargel, who broke this story yesterday.  She deserves credit for it and kol hakovod la.  I’ve updated my post to include references to her excellent research.  She’s also helped me correct some errors that crept into previous versions of the post.

Tonight another major breaking story fresh from the Land of Milk, Honey and the Filthy Rich as reported by a confidential authoritative Israeli source.  A few days ago, Forbes Israel published a list of the wealthiest members of the Knesset.  No sooner was the article published than it picked up mentions at the Mako and Globes financial websites.  But those reports quickly disappeared from the web though thanks to the wonder of Google it still lives on here (Shhh!).  I’ll unravel this mystery further on.

The wealthiest on the list was deputy prime minister Silvan Shalom, whose wife, Judy Nir Mozes, is a part-owner (12%) of Yediot Achronot.   He’s worth over $40-million which, on the scale of your average Knesset member, is gargantuan wealth.  Most of his lucre comes from his wife’s family.  Her brother manages Yediot and her sister is controlling shareholder in El Al.  Others at the top of the list include Justice Minister Yaakov Neeman ($25-million), Defense Minister Ehud Barak (nearly $20-million), Meir Sheetrit ($14-million), and the man himself, Bibi Netanyahu (coming in at a paltry $9-million).

Coming from the U.S. these numbers sound like peanuts, but you’ll have to trust me that this is simply unfathomable riches for an Israeli politician.  And of course, it makes you wonder what sorts of deals and under the table arrangements they might’ve made when they were ministers in order to amass such riches, given that Ehud Olmert amassed much of his fortune from similar deals when he was minister of industry.

There are no public disclosure laws in Israel compelling politicians to disclose their personal wealth and list their specific assets so that the public can determine whether they have conflicts of interest in their voting.  Hence, Israeli media rarely if ever report this data.  That’s what makes the list such political dynamite.

Shalom and his wife went ballistic and immediately called Bibi and threatened that if the prime minister didn’t stop publication, Shalom would vote against an Iran attack in the security cabinet, of which he’s a member and which must approve any proposed attack on Iran.  The supreme irony here is that Shalom was willing to sell the souls of the thousands of Iranians who would die from an Israeli attack on behalf of protecting his wealth and privilege from the prying eyes of the Israeli electorate.

In light of the J14 social justice movement‘s popularity in Israel, and its success in bringing issues of income disparity to the fore, Shalom’s back-room maneuvering appears obscene.  Israel has one of the widest gaps between rich and poor in the world (fifth largest among developed nations).  Shalom is the 1% but he doesn’t want the other 99% to know.  For shame.

If this story had a national security angle, Shalom could’ve expected the military censor would suppress it.  But given that it doesn’t, he had to resort to naked extortion to get his way.  To help conceal the far more damaging story that Bibi had threatened to pull the broadcast licenses of an media outlet that published the story, Shalom told his lawyer to draft a letter to the media outlets threatening them with libel suits up the yazoo if they didn’t cease and desist coverage of the story.  That makes it a far more devious conspiracy by which the government allowed the media to say they couldn’t publish because of threat of a lawsuit, when the real reason they couldn’t do so was threat of revocation of their licenses.

Here’s some of the hot-air of Shalom’s lawyer:

Lies without foundation.  falsehoods, perversions of truth at the very least, and libel against my client and his spouse, contrary to the law and the prohibition against slander.

The threat clearly was full of sound and fury and signifying nothing.  The article could in no way be construed as slander and the fact that the numbers are true was a perfect defense against the libel charge.  If there had only been this legal threat, some of the media might have been willing to defy it and publish.  But along with the regulatory threat, no one was willing to brave Shalom’s fury (and that of the others named, who cannot have been very happy either).

A small diversion: according to Dvorit, Judy Nir Mozes told a real sob story to the Israeli financial paper, The Marker, claiming that she really wasn’t rich at all and that her wealth was solely on paper.  Sounds like a story she uses frequently to downplay her power and status.  She further amplified her husband’s concern for the poor and downtrodden youth of Israel in this self-serving tweet (subsequently deleted):

Four years ago, Silvan founded the Israeli Youth Gathering.  As someone who worked four jobs, completed four university degrees, lived in rental apartments until he took to wife a well-established bride.  For this reason, he has never ceased trying to improve the living conditions of Israeli youth regarding housing, jobs and military service.

This, by the way, is the same Nir Mozes who tried to get Danny Ayalon’s personal secretary fired when he was ambassador to the U.S., because the woman hadn’t arranged a meeting for the imperious Israeli with Madonna when she traveled to Israel for one of her Kabbalah retreats.  Then she had Ayalon’s wife investigated because she spent state funds to re-decorate her home.  All this from a woman worth nearly $40 million according to Forbes Israel.  I don’t know if that will bring me under suspicion as well for the crime of slander.  But if publishing the wealth of a public figure is libel, then what kind of country is Israel, where the law is used by the rich and powerful to suppress knowledge and public debate among the populace?

Bibi got Shalom’s message too.  He’d been lobbying hard recently among his cabinet for approval for such an attack.  He needed Shalom’s vote.  Hence, word went forth from the prime minister’s office to the Israeli media that anyone who dared to publish the list would “end up like Channel 10.”  That’s a TV station which owes the government millions in licensing fees, which it can’t pay.  Bibi has been supremely unhappy with some investigative reports of the channel’s news staff, including one that exposed 30 instances of serious violations of Knesset ethics laws in Bibi’s foreign travels.  Unless Channel 10 fired the reporter responsible for the report, Bibi let it be known that the debts would not be forgiven and it would lose its license in months.  If it fired Drucker, the government would go easy and the debts would miraculously disappear.

An Israeli reporter told me a few hours ago that in fact, Bibi has already decided to cancel Channel 10′s license.  Everyone in the Israeli media knows this.  Therefore, a threat by Bibi to do them what he did to Channel 10 would resonate strongly.  Some readers have criticized this theory on the grounds that there would be no legal basis to deny a license.  But given the history of Channel 10 and its imminent demise, Bibi wouldn’t need a real legal basis to attack a broadcast license.  Merely the threat to do might be enough to make a media outlet cave.  This reminds me more of the Godfather or naked loansharking than a democratic government.  But in Bibiworld, that’s how things are done.

I’m sorry to say that so far no Israeli media outlet has been willing to jeopardize itself and report the full story.  Which is yet another reason why Tikun Olam exists (remember that Paypal button, folks).  We go where few Israeli reporters can, or dare to tread.  I say this more out of sorrow than criticism, because there are many honorable journalists there.  I know this because some of them have published remarkably fair profiles of my work.

But I also understand that when a Mafiosi character like Bibi has you by the balls, what can you do?  You have to weigh what is more important–retaining your ability to exist as a viable media property, or standing up for press freedom and democracy by doing the bold thing and in the process losing your newspaper or TV station.  There are few, if any, Uri Avnerys (who was almost beaten to death by veterans of the Kibya massacre, which he’d exposed) or Hadashots in Israeli journalism today, who are willing to stake their newspaper on a principle.  I suppose the investments are simply too big to risk on such high ethical standards.

Those who call Israel a democracy need to know that it is in name only.  Press freedom is only skin deep.  This is the case not because reporters aren’t doing their jobs, but because the people don’t demand accountability from their politicians, because editors cave in to such extortionate demands from them, and because the courts do not rein in such violations, and because there is no Bill of Rights nor constitution to inscribe such rights into law.

You even have the exceedingly odd case of one media outlet, Channel 10, partly owned by Ronald Lauder, exposing the sins of the owner of another, Sheldon Adelson of Yisrael HaYom.  Adleson, with the connivance of Lauder, dictated Channel 10′s apology which was read on air by a station staff member, thus causing the resignation of the station’s chief executive and producer of the show which aired the expose.  In this day and age, there simply couldn’t be an Israeli version of the Pentagon Papers.  Things are too cozy among owners and pols, and principles like freedom of the press are too porous.

Bibitours Scandal: Offer to Save Israel’s Channel 10 if it Fires Political Reporter

Sunday, November 6th, 2011
raviv drucker

Mafia don, Bibi Netanyahu, makes Channel 10 offer it cannot refuse to fire Raviv Drucker (Ohad Romano)

Channel 10′s political reporter, Raviv Drucker, has been a major thorn in the side of Bibi Netanyahu, with his reporting that between his prime ministerships he took multiple foreign trips on the dime of major corporate donors in violation of government ethics guidelines.  Bibi was so enraged by the reports that he sued the reporter and Channel 10 for libel.  So far, all well and good.  Drucker and his employer were only doing what good political reporters are supposed to do: afflict the comfortable.

But there’s a major wrinkle, in that Channel 10, which recently offered an abject apology to Sheldon Adelson for a documentary the station aired that recounted all the sleazy ways in which he operates, owes the state $10 million in royalties and fees.  That puts Channel 10 between a rock and a hard place.  If it can’t repay the debt by December it is in danger of going under.

That’s where Bibi comes in: the station received word that the State would work with the station to ease the repayment schedule and work out the debt if it fired Drucker or put him on unpaid leave.  Bibi’s boys also demanded that the State Controller replace the chief investigator (Hebrew) probing this brewing scandal, which has come to be known as “Bibitours” (in an echo of Ehud Olmert’s travel scandal (Hebrew) that was focussed on his travel agency, Rishon Tours).  Though he’s a tough guy, Bibi isn’t yet a tyrant with the ability to muscle anyone out of his way.

The prime minister’s urgent need to punish and dismiss anyone involved with uncovering details of this case indicates Bibi thinks it could be damaging to him.  This in turn should make it even more attractive a story to any good investigative journalist left in Israel.

In any other democratic nation, such news would result in a major scandal, heads rolled and possibly a prime minister losing his job.  After all, this is outright extortion, the way the mafia works rather than a democratic government.  But in Israel, I’m afraid, business as usual.  Freedom of the press is a principle honored in the breach, if at all.

Last June, Drucker received Israel’s Sokolov Prize for Journalism (awarded by the city of Tel Aviv) for the excellence of his reporting.  This is what mafia chieftains like Bibi do to the best and brightest.  They cut them down to size when they are a threat.  I suppose Drucker is lucky he doesn’t get run over by a car or murdered by a bomb as they do in some countries.

Here is Drucker’s report:

I should point out that I have an interest in seeing Channel 10 survive, since its show Tzinor Layla features my stories irregularly and not many Israeli media outlets are beating down my doors to include my reporting in their coverage.

Adelson, Lauder Compel Israel’s Channel 10 to Apologize for Unflattering Profile of Gambling Tycoon

Thursday, September 8th, 2011


Israel’s Channel 10 is considered one of the most bold and independent among the nation’s TV channels.  It’s the one which airs Tzinor Layla, where I’ve appeared several times.  As part of its reporting, it aired an extremely unflattering profile (segment begins at 20:30 of video) of gambling tycoon and Likud Party sugar daddy Sheldon Adelson.  Libel laws in Israel are less protective of free speech than in this country and Adelson threatened to sue.  Lawyers for both parties sat down to negotiate a settlement.  When they presented a draft to Adelson he tore it up and wrote his own.

I’ve watched the report and while it’s extremely unflattering, if he threatened a lawsuit in the U.S. in my unlawyerly opinion he’d be laughed out of court.

None of that mattered to Adelson. He had an ace in the hole.  The station’s main shareholder is Ronald Lauder, a fellow right-wing pro-Israel Republican and Likud supporter.  Lauder told station management they had to air the apology.  It is scheduled for airing Friday night at 8PM.

The TV channel’s cave-in has caused a mass protest among station personnel.  The news director resigned.  The editor of program also resigned.  The program presenter is considering following suit.  One wonders whether Channel 10′s brand can survive after losing such key personnel.

I’d like to support Channel 10 in whatever way we can.  If readers can dig up any e mail address or corporate phone numbers of companies owned by Lauder either in the U.S. or Israel, I’d be grateful.  Let’s innundate him with support for his brave employees, upholding values of a free press and free speech:

Estée Lauder Inc.
Corporate Headquarters
767 Fifth Avenue
New York, NY 10153
212-572-4200

I’d also like you to send messages of support to Channel 10 CEO Yossi Warshavsky (here’s the station’s Facebook profile). It’s possible the money-bags may yet relent when faced both with an employee revolt and mass public support for station personnel and journalistic integrity.

Sheldon Adelson is one of the most imperious, controlling and extremist of American Jews.  He is prepared to buy speech in Israel not just to support his causes, but to overwhelm any political opposition to his views.  He is Bibi Netanyahu’s biggest donor and supporter.  He is his patron. He is so right-wing he can’t stand Aipac and that tells you something.  Don’t let Adelson bully Channel 10 into submission.

If anyone can edit and preserve the segment in a suitable video file format in case legal proceedings force Channel 10 to remove it, that’d be great.

After watching the video, I found one portion especially interesting. At one point the Israeli lottery, Mifal HaPayis, intended to build a casino in Mitzpeh Ramon, whose proceeds would benefit the State. Adelson had a competing plan to develop a casino (which was never built) as a private venture in Eilat. The developer of the Mifal HaPayis project recounts how Adelson approached him, asking him to abandon his project in favor of Adelson’s. When he refused, Adelson approached then the Treasury Minister, Bibi Netanyahu. In that one meeting, Bibi changed his view 180 degrees from supporting Mifal HaPayis to supporting Adelson.

The interviewer asked the developer whether he believes that today Adelson could still get Bibi to do something based on a single meeting. Laughing derisively, the man says you wouldn’t even need a meeting: “He could get Bibi to do something by fax, even by SMS!”

About his investment in Yisrael HaYom, he has the chutzpah to say with a straight face:

Our goal is to become the most credible source of information in Israel…I started Israel HaYom to get a fair and balanced view. Competitors complain that it’s a front for Bibi. That’s not true at all.

Yisrael HaYom is even less credible in an Israeli context than Rupert Murdoch is in Britain or New York.

Netanyahu’s Security Agents Disrobe Female Foreign Journalists

Thursday, July 21st, 2011

You know, here in the U.S. they often talk about how much certain presidents detested the press and how the press office had a confrontational or hostile relationship with journalists.  They’ve got nothing on Israel, where Prime Minister Netanyahu’s Shabak-appointed security detail routinely disrobes female journalists for doing little more than their jobs in covering his press events.  In fact, I wrote a post about this months ago and apparently nothing’s changed.

The Foreign Press Association…sent a sharp letter to the Prime Minister’s Office…complaining of multiple humiliating incidents, which the organization claims both impedes foreign reporters’ work, as well as erodes their professional standing.

The FPA denounced what it called “the continued harassment” of foreign reporters…adding that unless policies change, they may stop covering the PMO altogether…

“In the past two days, three female reporters in separate incidents were forced to undress, remove their bras and have them placed through an X-ray machine in front of a group of colleagues. In addition, pocketbooks were emptied in public, with personal items also put on display and X-rayed for everyone to see.

“This type of treatment is unnecessary, humiliating and counterproductive. After repeated appeals and promises by security officials it appears that the Prime Minister’s Office does not have the desire to stop this happening and so the FPA will begin consulting its members over whether the foreign media should no longer cover events at the PM’s Office, as this is the only occasion where this type of incident occurs,” the letter concluded.

What’s laughable is the prime minister’s press flack’s consternation: how could this sort of thing possibly happen?  We must stop this right now.  You have my word we will.  Either he’s playing that old kid’s trick of crossing his fingers behind his back as he promises, or he’s a very poor liar:

Government Press Office Director Oren Helman said that the incidents described in the letter were “disturbing and damaging to Israel’s image,” adding that “this was an embarrassing mishap, which we will try our best never to have happen again. We apologize for any anguish caused to the reporters. This is most certainly not our policy.”

Since taking office in September, Helman added, “The GPO has been taking a series of steps meant to improve the position of the foreign press in Israel. We are trying to implement that to the issue of security checks as well.”

Of course it’s YOUR policy.  Who’s policy is it, if not yours?  Unless you want to claim that the Shabak agents are acting independently of you.  But then again, if that’s so, then who’s the Shabak’s boss?  In my naiveté I thought Bibi was the boss and could command the security detail to perform according to his standards.  But I guess maybe the Shabak is Bibi’s boss in this matter at least, if not others.

This is yet another indication that Israel does not honor either the press or freedom of the press.  Journalists, especially the foreign press who are clearly up to no good and always trying to point out Israel faults (especially the Arab press), are a burden to be suffered.  That’s the only way Bibi’s goons could get away with this.  And the average Israeli could care less since they rarely read the foreign press except as refracted through an Israeli media source.

I’ve got one suggestion that could nip this problem in the bud.  Force the Shabak agents to shed their clothing and empty their pockets before they enter the event itself.  Out into the sunlight would come the girlie magazines, condoms, mash notes to their girl friends.  That would stop this nonsense cold.