Mass protests against Israeli judicial overhaul enter 10th week

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People hold Israeli flags during a demonstration against the judicial reforms in Tel Aviv, on March 11, 2023.

People holding Israeli flags during a demonstration against judicial reforms in Tel Aviv on March 11, 2023.

PHOTO: REUTERS

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TEL AVIV Israelis packed city streets on Saturday in nationwide demonstrations now in their 10th week against

plans by the hard-right government to curb the Supreme Court’s powers,

which critics see as a threat to judicial independence.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who says his aim is to balance out branches of government, wields a parliamentary majority along with his religious-nationalist coalition allies.

As the reforms head towards ratification, the protests have escalated. The shekel has slipped. Some military reservists have threatened not to heed call-up orders.

President Isaac Herzog has

appealed for the overhaul to be postponed

and dialogue held.

“It’s not a judicial reform. It’s a revolution that (is) making Israel go to full dictatorship and I want Israel to stay a democracy for my kids,” said Mr Tamir Guytsabri, 58, among tens of thousands of demonstrators who gathered in central Tel Aviv.

The protests were mostly peaceful, though Reuters witnessed some injuries and arrests among protesters when police moved in against attempts to block traffic.

Inspector-General Yaacov Shabtai, the national police chief, made a rare televised announcement in which he backed off from plans to reassign the head of Tel Aviv’s police, which some feared presaged plans to crack down harder on protests.

The now-deferred reassignment was part of a scheduled rotation, Insp-Gen Shabtai said, adding that police would continue safeguarding demonstrations kept within legal boundaries and “will not yield to any political pressure on the matter”.

Mr Netanyahu, who returned to office for a sixth term in late December, says the demonstrations are aimed at toppling him.

He is on trial in three corruption cases and denies all wrongdoing.

“I am here to protest against the reform in the law, and to protest against our prime minister, who we call ‘Crime Minister’,” said demonstrator Miri Lahat, 63. REUTERS

Mr Netanyahu, who returned to office for a sixth term in late December, says the demonstrations are aimed at toppling him.

PHOTO: REUTERS

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