The Jerusalem Post

Former Netanyahu rival Tzipi Livni testifies in PM’s Case 2000

- • Jerusalem Post Staff

Former Justice Minister Tzipi Livni testified on Wednesday in Case 2000, in which Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is accused of fraud with Yediot Aharonot publisher Arnon Mozes.

In her testimony, Livni stated, “Between the two of us [her and Netanyahu], there was maybe one word of the “Israel Hayom Law.” Just before the session to pass the law, he called me to his office and informed me that the Knesset had agreed to bring the law to a free vote. As far as I am concerned, this was a complete surprise.”

The “Israel Hayom Law,” otherwise known by its legal name, the “Law for the Advancemen­t and Protection of Print Journalism

in Israel,” would make it illegal to distribute a newspaper free of charge if it is a fullsized paper published six days a week. It received the more common name, “The Israel Hayom Law,” because Israel Hayom is the only Hebrew daily paper that meets this specific requiremen­t.

In 2017, the National Fraud Investigat­ion Unit of the Israel Police began an investigat­ion into claims that Netanyahu was passing this legislatio­n to cripple Israel Hayom in return for favorable coverage in Yediot Aharonot. In November 2019, then-Attorney-General Avichai Mandelblit filed an official indictment against Netanyahu for fraud and breach of trust. An additional indictment was filed against Mozes for attempted bribery.

“As far as I was aware, Netanyahu was against the proposal of this law, and I assumed that he would propose an appeal even if it did pass,” Livni said. “By allowing the law proposal to go to a free vote, he gave it the green light to go to a vote in the Knesset without the Prime Minister being able to intervene.”

Livni discussed the circumstan­ces of her firing from Netanyahu’s cabinet, which she claimed was also unrelated to the “Israel Hayom Law.”

“I was invited to the Prime Minister’s Office, we sat for around an hour, and the topic of firing never came up. We traveled to a ceremony at the president’s house, and after I left, I received a phone call from him [Netanyahu] saying that I’m fired,” she said. “I remember that one of the reasons for this was because I met with Mahmoud Abbas a few times without his permission. I don’t recall that the topic of the ‘Israel Hayom Law’ came up once as a reason for my firing.”

 ?? TZIPI LIVNI (Avshalom Sassoni/Maariv) ??
TZIPI LIVNI (Avshalom Sassoni/Maariv)

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