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Politics : Formerly About Advanced Micro Devices -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Alighieri who wrote (157698)1/9/2003 3:06:21 PM
From: tejek  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1583613
 
Al, does the intuitive opinions of C. Rice count as evidence?

More incubator babies on the hospital floor please.


Al, that's not nice........Ms Rice has a reliable source.......the Psychic Hotline!

ted



To: Alighieri who wrote (157698)1/9/2003 3:31:41 PM
From: tejek  Respond to of 1583613
 
Al, this one blew me right out of the water. Its about time.

Two years and counting.........


ted

______________________________________________________

Court Overturns Israeli Rule to Ban Arab Lawmakers From Office

January 9, 2003
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS



JERUSALEM (AP) -- Prime Minister Ariel Sharon on Thursday
hotly denied charges of corruption that have hurt his
re-election chances in Jan. 28 elections.

Also Thursday, Israel's Supreme Court restored the
candidacy of two Arab legislators in a landmark ruling that
is likely to bolster the strength of anti-Sharon factions
in parliament.

At a hastily-called news conference, Sharon accused his
main opponent, Amram Mitzna and Mitzna's Labor Party, of
trying to bring down his government with ``contemptible
libel.''

At issue is a Justice Ministry document, made public by the
Haaretz daily, outlining a police investigation into a $1.5
million loan Sharon's sons received from a South
Africa-based businessman to cover payback of improper
campaign funds from a previous election.

Israel's attorney general, Elyakim Rubinstein, confirmed
Wednesday that a police investigation is under way
involving the transfer of the money a year ago to bank
accounts in the names of Sharon's sons, and that Israel had
asked for South African assistance.

Visibly angry, Sharon insisted that nothing improper was
done. Instead, he said, Labor was acting ``irresponsibly,''
responding to its own inability to gain public support by
orchestrating an escalating scandal implicating Sharon and
his sons.

Sharon said he would be willing to face police
interrogation. ``Let them come and ask their questions,''
he said. ``I have nothing to hide.''

The loan allegations followed charges of bribery, payoffs
and shakedowns in Likud's internal elections to choose its
candidates for parliament. Sharon dismissed a deputy
minister who refused to answer police questions about the
affair, which had already cost the party some support.

Polls published in newspapers Thursday indicated that
backing for Sharon's Likud Party has dropped dramatically,
to the point that Sharon's re-election, once considered
automatic, is no longer assured.

Israeli voters pick a party, and the party leader able to
stitch together a majority coalition becomes premier. The
drop in support for the Likud and its allies would make
Sharon's task much more difficult.

Thursday's Supreme Court ruling, meanwhile, was expected to
help dam a tidal wave of resentment by Israel's 1.2 million
Arab citizens -- more than a sixth of the population --
against the Jewish state.

A panel of 11 justices overturned a decision two weeks ago
by the Central Election Commission to disqualify Arab
legislators Azmi Bishara and Ahmed Tibi on grounds they
sided with Israel's enemies.

The high court ruled unanimously on Tibi and 7-4 on
Bishara, issuing the decision in writing. The judges'
arguments were not immediately released.

Bishara hailed the decision as a victory for Israeli
democracy and said it would help reassure the country's
Arab citizens. ``Arabs in Israel will have a feeling they
are not orphans of Israeli democracy, they are citizens of
Israel,'' Bishara said.

The legislator said he expected a high turnout by Arab
voters in the upcoming election, and said this could reduce
Sharon's chances to be re-elected. A strong showing by Arab
parties could deprive Israel's right wing of a majority in
parliament.

Many of Israel's Arab citizens saw the case as a watershed
in their already deeply troubled relations with the Jewish
majority. Israeli Arabs have long complained of
discrimination by Israeli governments, and the
disqualification of Bishara and Tibi was seen as an attempt
to curb the Arab voice.

The Central Election Commission had accused Bishara of
inciting violence against Israel, including during a trip
to Syria where he seemed to praise Lebanese Hezbollah
guerrillas, while Tibi allegedly sided with Yasser Arafat
and his Palestinian Authority against the Jewish state.
Both legislators denied the allegations, saying they oppose
violence, and were simply criticizing Israeli government
policy.

In other decisions, the high court upheld the candidacy of
Baruch Marzel, a well-known Jewish ultranationalist who was
once a leading figure in Kach, a movement founded by
U.S.-born Rabbi Meir Kahane and later outlawed as racist.

A survey in the Haaretz daily showed Likud winning 27
seats, down from about 40 in November. Labor was up from 22
to 24. According to the Haaretz poll, Likud and its allies
would win only 61 seats, a bare majority, down from 67 in
November, while Labor and its partners would receive 40
seats, up from 27. Centrist parties -- Shinui and Am Echad
-- get 19, the poll predicted. The Haaretz-Dialogue poll
questioned 521 eligible voters and quoted a margin of error
of 4.3 percentage points.

nytimes.com