JERUSALEM: Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu dismissed a senior cabinet member with a criminal record on Sunday, complying with a Supreme Court ruling even as he pursues contested judicial reforms that would curb its powers.
Pledging to find “every legal means” of keeping Aryeh Deri in public office in future, Netanyahu told him during a weekly cabinet session he was being removed from the interior and health ministries, according to an official transcript.
A Deri confidant, Barak Seri, told Army Radio earlier on Sunday that the portfolios would be kept by other members of the ultra-Orthodox Jewish party Shas as it remains in the coalition.
The Supreme Court last week ordered Netanyahu to dismiss Deri, citing his 2022 plea-bargain conviction for tax fraud.
That ruling stoked a stormy debate in Israel — accompanied by nationwide protests — over reform proposals that Netanyahu says will restore balance between the branches of government but that critics say will undermine judicial independence.
A poll in Israel Hayom newspaper found 35 percent support for Netanyahu’s bid to shake up the system for bench appointments, with 45 percent of respondents opposed. There was just 26 percent support for his government’s bid to enable parliament, with a one-vote majority, to override some Supreme Court decisions.
In his cabinet statement, Netanyahu described the Deri ruling as “regrettable” and “indifferent to the public will.”
Settler outpost
The less than month-old religious-nationalist coalition creaked elsewhere as a far-right partner boycotted the cabinet session in protest at the demolition on Friday of a small settler outpost that had been erected in the occupied West Bank.
Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Galant, a member of Netanyahu’s conservative Likud party, ordered the outpost to be razed as it had no building permit — over the objections of the Religious Zionist party, which had sought to delay the decision.
The incident pitted Galant against Religious Zionism leader Bezalel Smotrich, who wields some cabinet responsibilities for West Bank settlements under a coalition deal with Netanyahu.
A group of settlers tried on Sunday to rebuild the outpost but they were blocked by Israeli security forces. Seven people were detained, said a border police spokesman.
“This (settlements) is a capstone issue for our participation in the government,” National Missions Minister Orit Strock of Religious Zionism told Israel’s Kan radio. She declined to elaborate on what steps the party might take next.
In solidarity with Religious Zionism, fellow far-right coalition party Jewish Power said it would demand that Israel implement a long-delayed evacuation of Khan Al-Ahmar, a Bedouin Palestinian encampment in a key West Bank area near Jerusalem.
World powers have urged Israel not to demolish Khan Al-Ahmar, worrying about another potential blow to efforts to negotiate the creation of Palestinian state alongside Israel. Most countries deem Israel’s West Bank settlements illegal.
Israel PM Netanyahu fires minister in compliance with Supreme Court order
https://arab.news/bn4q9
Israel PM Netanyahu fires minister in compliance with Supreme Court order
- The Supreme Court last week ordered Netanyahu to dismiss Deri, citing his 2022 plea-bargain conviction for tax fraud
- World powers have urged Israel not to demolish Khan Al-Ahmar, worrying about another potential blow to efforts to negotiate the creation of Palestinian state alongside Israel
Libya to sign 25-year oil deal with TotalEnergies and ConocoPhillips
- Signed through Waha Oil Company, the deal is aimed at boosting production capacity
- The company’s daily output typically ranges between 340,000 and 400,000 bpd
TRIPOLI: Libya will sign a 25-year oil development agreement on Saturday with France’s TotalEnergies and US-based ConocoPhillips, involving more than $20 billion in foreign-financed investment, Prime Minister Abdulhamid Al-Dbeibah said.
Signed through Waha Oil Company, the deal is aimed at boosting production capacity by up to 850,000 barrels per day (bpd) and is expected to generate net revenues of more than $376 billion, Dbeibah said in a post on X.
A Waha source said the company’s daily output typically ranges between 340,000 and 400,000 bpd under normal operations.
Waha, a subsidiary of Libya’s state-run National Oil Corporation, operates five main oil and gas fields as well as several producing subfields, connected by pipeline networks that transport crude to the Sidra oil terminal and gas to processing facilities.
Dbeibah said Libya will also sign a memorandum of understanding with US oil major Chevron and a cooperation agreement with Egypt’s oil ministry.
The deals are set to be signed during the Libya Energy and Economy Summit being held in Tripoli.
The agreements reflect “the strengthening of Libya’s relations with its largest and most influential international partners in the global energy sector,” Dbeibah said.
Libya is one of Africa’s biggest oil producers, but output has been disrupted repeatedly in the chaotic decade since 2014, when the country split between rival authorities in the east and west following an uprising that toppled Muammar Qaddafi.










