Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu formally notified Israeli President Shimon Peres on Saturday that after 40 days of tortuous negotiations with potential coalition partners, he had formed a new government and ensured himself a third term as prime minister.
“As you know, I was able to form a government,” Peres’ office quoted Netanyahu as saying at a meeting in Jerusalem. “You gave me the task and I carried it out.”
Netanyahu had a legal deadline of Saturday evening to form a government or admit defeat.
Completion of the new lineup comes just days before a milestone visit by US President Barack Obama to Israel.
“You suffered severe labor pains in the process of forming the government and I congratulate for succeeding in time,” Peres was quoted as telling the prime minister in a statement. “Good luck and my blessings to you and the new government.”
The US was quick to welcome the new Israeli administration.
“The president congratulates the Israeli people, Prime Minister Netanyahu and the new members of the prime minister’s governing coalition on the successful formation of Israel’s new government,” White House spokesman Jay Carney said in a statement.
“President Obama looks forward to working closely with the prime minister and the new government to address the many challenges we face and advance our shared interest in peace and security,” he added.
Obama is set to start a three-day visit to Jerusalem and the West Bank on Wednesday, his first since taking office more than four years ago.
Eleventh-hour agreements were signed on Friday with the centrist Yesh Atid and far-right Jewish Home parties, which held the key to building a government with a majority in the 120-seat parliament.
Netanyahu last month signed a coalition deal with the centrist Hatnuah Party of former foreign minister Tzipi Livni, who is to be the Israeli minister of justice and Israel’s negotiator in talks with the Palestinians.
The new coalition, which will command 68 seats in parliament, is expected to be sworn in on today.
At the insistence of Yesh Atid, it will be the first in 29 years to exclude ultra-Orthodox Jewish parties.
Copies of the coalition agreements published by Netanyahu’s Likud Party said Yesh Atid leader Yair Lapid would be Israeli minister of finance and that his party, which has 19 seats in parliament, would also take the education, social services, health, and science and technology portfolios.
Jewish Home, which won 12 seats, receives a newly named economy and trade portfolio, along with housing and pensioners’ affairs.
Its leader, Naftali Bennett, becomes a member of the powerful Security Cabinet.
The party, which is close to the Jewish settlement movement, also gets two seats on the ministerial committee dealing with settler affairs.
Yesh Atid, which campaigned for a more just society, gets a place on the committee for the advancement of the status of women.
The agreement also leaves the door open for other parties to join the coalition in the future. The allocation of ministries within the alliance of the Likud Party and former Israeli foreign minister Avigdor Lieberman’s hardline Yisrael Beitenu Party has not been announced.
With more outgoing Likud ministers than seats he can offer them in the new, slimmer administration Yesh Atid insisted upon, Netanyahu may still have some tough maneuvering to do within his own camp.
Netanyahu is expected to handle foreign affairs temporarily, pending the conclusion of Lieberman’s trial on charges of fraud and breach of trust.
The Likud is also to take charge of the defense and interior ministries, press reports said.
DEADLOCK: Putin has vowed to continue fighting unless Ukraine cedes more land, while talks have been paused with no immediate results expected, the Kremlin said Russia on Friday said that peace talks with Kyiv were on “pause” as Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy warned that Russian President Vladimir Putin still wanted to capture the whole of Ukraine. Meanwhile, US President Donald Trump said that he was running out of patience with Putin, and the NATO alliance said it would bolster its eastern front after Russian drones were shot down in Polish airspace this week. The latest blow to faltering diplomacy came as Russia’s army staged major military drills with its key ally Belarus. Despite Trump forcing the warring sides to hold direct talks and hosting Putin in Alaska, there
North Korea has executed people for watching or distributing foreign television shows, including popular South Korean dramas, as part of an intensifying crackdown on personal freedoms, a UN human rights report said on Friday. Surveillance has grown more pervasive since 2014 with the help of new technologies, while punishments have become harsher — including the introduction of the death penalty for offences such as sharing foreign TV dramas, the report said. The curbs make North Korea the most restrictive country in the world, said the 14-page UN report, which was based on interviews with more than 300 witnesses and victims who had
COMFORT WOMEN CLASH: Japan has strongly rejected South Korean court rulings ordering the government to provide reparations to Korean victims of sexual slavery The Japanese government yesterday defended its stance on wartime sexual slavery and described South Korean court rulings ordering Japanese compensation as violations of international law, after UN investigators criticized Tokyo for failing to ensure truth-finding and reparations for the victims. In its own response to UN human rights rapporteurs, South Korea called on Japan to “squarely face up to our painful history” and cited how Tokyo’s refusal to comply with court orders have denied the victims payment. The statements underscored how the two Asian US allies still hold key differences on the issue, even as they pause their on-and-off disputes over historical
BEIJING FORUM: ‘So-called freedom of navigation advocated by certain countries outside the region challenges the norms of international relations,’ the minister said Chinese Minister of National Defense Dong Jun (董軍) yesterday denounced “hegemonic logic and acts of bullying” during remarks at a Beijing forum that were full of thinly veiled references to the US. Organizers said that about 1,800 representatives from 100 countries, including political, military and academic leaders, were in Beijing for the Xiangshan Forum. The three-day event comes as China presents itself as a mediator of fraught global issues including the wars in Ukraine and Gaza. Addressing attendees at the opening ceremony, Dong warned of “new threats and challenges” now facing world peace. “While the themes of the times — peace and development —