Israel’s Benjamin Netanyahu suffers dehydration after holiday in heatwave

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Israeli PM Benjamin Netanyahu is not undergoing sedation and no procedures are under way to declare him incapacitated.

Israeli PM Benjamin Netanyahu is not undergoing sedation and no procedures are under way to declare him incapacitated.

PHOTO: REUTERS

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JERUSALEM - Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu entered hospital on Saturday with apparent dehydration after a coastal break during a heatwave, delaying the weekly Cabinet meeting even though he declared himself well.

Mr Netanyahu’s office said the 73-year-old was admitted to Sheba Hospital, close to his private residence, after experiencing dizziness, and would stay there overnight.

In a video from hospital, a smiling Mr Netanyahu said he had taken holiday on Friday at the Sea of Galilee in temperatures hitting 38 deg C.

“Thank God, I feel really well,” he said.

“I ask you all, spend less time in the sun, drink more water, and may we all have a good new week.”

Israel’s longest-serving leader is in the midst of a domestic crisis with

protests against his religious-nationalist coalition’s push for judicial reform

before parliament disperses for the summer on July 30.

That furore has contributed to strains in relations with the United States, as have surging Israeli-Palestinian violence and progress in Iran’s nuclear programme.

Mr Netanyahu’s office said Sunday’s scheduled Cabinet meeting would instead be held on Monday.

‘Light dizziness’

Israeli media said he was fully conscious en route to Sheba and that he walked into the emergency room. No procedures were enacted to declare him incapacitated or determine who might replace him, the reports added.

When then-prime minister Ariel Sharon was felled by a stroke in 2006, he was succeeded by his deputy, Mr Ehud Olmert. Justice Minister Yariv Levin has stood in for Mr Netanyahu during foreign trips.

Mr Avner Netanyahu arrives at the Sheba Medical Centre to visit his father.

PHOTO: AFP

Mr Netanyahu’s office said he was admitted on his physician’s recommendation after complaining of “light dizziness”.

“The preliminary diagnosis is dehydration,” it said, adding further routine tests were under way.

First elected to top office in 1996, Mr Netanyahu has been both dynamic and polarising. He spearheaded a free-market revolution in Israel while showing distrust of internationally-backed peacemaking with the Palestinians and world powers’ negotiations to cap Iran’s nuclear programme.

With hundreds of military reservists threatening not to heed call-up orders in protest at the government reforms, Israel’s Channel 13 on Wednesday aired audio of Mr Netanyahu shouting in a Cabinet session that such insubordination was “inconceivable”.

Critics fear

the judicial overhaul plan

aims to curb court independence by Mr Netanyahu, who is

on trial for corruption charges

that he denies. He says the reforms would balance out branches of government.

People demonstrate on the “Day of Disruption” in Jerusalem, against the nationalist coalition government’s judicial overhaul.

PHOTO: REUTERS

“I wish the prime minister a full recovery and good health,” tweeted Mr Yair Lapid, the centrist leader of the opposition.

In Washington, a spokesman for the White House National Security Council said: “We wish him a speedy recovery.”

In early October, Mr Netanyahu was taken ill during the Jewish fast of Yom Kippur and was also briefly hospitalised. REUTERS

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