OCCUPIED
JERUSALEM, December 17 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) - Officers of
the Israeli national police fraud division arrested two key members of
the Likud Central Committee late Monday, December 16, for attempted
bribery in connection with the scandal-shadowed Likud primaries, in
which the committee ranked the party's candidates for January 28 general
elections.
Details
of the suspicions against the two were initially sketchy, but the Likud
has been rocked by a spate of accusations that candidates for the
Knesset list offered bribes to members of the party's central committee
in return for their votes in the primary election, the Israeli Ha’aretz
newspaper reported Tuesday, December 17.
The
two suspects were the first to be arrested in connection with the
widening investigation.
In
many cases, fewer than 10 votes could decide whether a candidate had a
realistic chance of taking a Knesset seat following the elections, in
which polls show the Likud could win as many as 41 seats.
Senior
Likud officials, seeking to head off possible electoral damage from
charges of widespread corruption, have praised efforts to probe the
instances of bribery, which include reports that central committee local
bosses, acting as "vote contractors" offered to
"deliver" votes for as much as $1,000 each.
In
a parallel investigation, Israeli Army Radio reported Tuesday that
leader of the Ben-Gurion University students association Gila Gamliel -
ranked number 11 on the Likud list for January 28 elections -
blackmailed and bribed a fellow student leader to help her prevent her
from losing her position.
"There
is a suspicion that in the past, Gila Gamliel kept herself from losing
the chairmanship of the students association in Be'er Sheva, and was
subsequently re-elected for another term, after she threatened student
council member Amir Halila that she would reveal information about his
past if he did not help her," the radio said.
At
the same time, Gamliel promised Halila that if he backed her, she would
name him a director of the student associations' financial arm, "a
body that he had already forced to leave under suspicions of
theft," the radio said, adding that through Gamliel's intercession,
Halila was later promoted to chairman of the financial unit.
Gamliel's
heading the Ben-Gurion student association was to prove crucial to her
subsequent political success, first as chair of the national students'
association and later within the Likud. "The part of Amir Halila
not only helped, but was critical to her success," the radio said.
"According to statements by both Halila and Gamliel to student
association figures who spoke to us, Amir Halila prevented the collapse
of the student council in 2001 and prevented Gamliel's ouster, then in
2002 he enabled her to be re-elected. Both votes were decided by
one-vote margins."
Gamliel,
who is reportedly under investigation for other suspicions as well,
denies all wrongdoing in the matter.
The
radio further reported that a month before the primaries, a Likud
lawmaker invited a group of Likud Central Committee members to spend the
weekend at a Dead Sea resort hotel, receiving one night of free lodging
and a discounted rate on the remainder of the weekend. More than 40
Central Committee members accepted the offer.
One
of the committee men who took part in the weekend, Shlomo Madmon of Kfar
Sava, later told the radio that MK Avraham Hischson had been the
"guest of honor" at the weekend.
He
said he had been told that the offer of free lodging had been made at
the behest of the hotel, which was dedicating its newly renovated
facilities.
On
Saturday, December 15, Israeli Attorney General Elyakim Rubinstein
instructed Police Commissioner Shlomo Aharonisky to start a criminal
investigation after various contenders, including MK Nehama Ronen,
reported vote-paying.
Rubinstein
stressed there was no time to waste and everything must be done to
conclude the investigation before the January 28 election.
In
an interview on "Meet the Press" on Channel Two Saturday,
December 15, Rubinstein said the Likud elections seem to reflect a
serious deterioration of Israel's democracy.
Several
people, mainly from occupied Jerusalem, have offered bribes in return
for support at the ballots.
The
police will also investigate how organized crime played a part in these
elections and will check the connections between Likud candidates and
the Gavrieli and Alperon families - which are known to have ties in the
underworld.
Police
will check whether known criminals have tried, and maybe succeeded, in
getting their people on the Likud slate.
One
of the contenders who will probably make it into the Knesset is Inbal
Gavrieli, whose family has been followed by the police for many years.
Labor
MK Haim Ramon said Saturday that the committee led by Justice Minister
Meir Sheetrit, set up by Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon to look
into the possibilities to change the way that the Likud elects its
Knesset slate, "is a cover-up committee."