Netanyahu assails media as he testifies for first time in his corruption trial
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Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu will testify three times a week, the court said, despite the Gaza war and possible new threats.
PHOTO: EPA-EFE
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TEL AVIV – Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu took the witness stand for the first time on Dec 10 in his long-running corruption trial, saying he was being hounded for his hawkish security policies.
Mr Netanyahu, 75, is Israel’s first sitting prime minister to be charged with a crime. He is testifying while Israel is engaged in a war in Gaza and facing possible new threats posed by regional turmoil, including in Syria.
Judges last week ruled that Mr Netanyahu, indicted in 2019, must testify three times a week, forcing him to shuttle between the courtroom and the war room at the Defence Ministry, minutes away from the courthouse.
The leader of the right-wing Likud party, Mr Netanyahu, assailed the Israeli media for its “leftist” stance and accused journalists of having hounded him for years because his policies did not align with a push for a Palestinian state.
“I have been waiting for eight years for this moment to tell the truth,” Mr Netanyahu told the three-judge court. “But I am also a prime minister... I am leading the country through a seven-front war. And I think the two can be done in parallel.”
Prosecutors accuse Mr Netanyahu of granting regulatory favours worth around 1.8 billion shekels (S$675 million) to Bezeq Telecom Israel in return for positive coverage of himself and his wife Sara Netanyahu on a news website controlled by the company’s former chairman.
He is also accused of negotiating a deal with the owner of Israel’s Yedioth Ahronoth newspaper for better coverage in return for laws to slow the growth of a rival paper. Mr Netanyahu denies the charges against him and has pleaded not guilty. He stood rather than sat in the witness box during his morning testimony.
“Had I wanted good coverage, all I would have had to have done would be to signal towards a two-state solution... Had I moved two steps to the left, I would have been hailed,” he said.
In lengthy replies, he portrayed himself as a staunch defender of Israel’s security, withstanding pressures from international powers and a hostile domestic media.
Trial in underground courtroom
Mr Netanyahu smiled confidently when he entered the Tel Aviv District Court at around 10am local time. The trial was moved from Jerusalem for undisclosed security reasons and convened in an underground courtroom.
Before Mr Netanyahu took the stand, his lawyer Amit Hadad laid out for the judges what the defence maintains are fundamental flaws in the investigation.
Prosecutors, Mr Hadad said, “weren’t investigating a crime, they were going after a person”.
A few dozen protesters gathered outside the courthouse, some of them supporters and others demanding he do more to negotiate the release of about 100 hostages still held by Hamas in Gaza.
Israel has been waging war in Gaza against the Palestinian militant group for more than a year, during which Mr Netanyahu had been granted a delay over the start of his court appearances. But on Dec 5, the judges ruled that he must start testifying.
Charged with bribery, fraud and breach of trust, Mr Netanyahu will testify three times a week, the court said, despite the Gaza war and possible new threats posed by wider Middle East turmoil.
Mr Netanyahu was indicted in three cases
In the run-up to his court date, Mr Netanyahu revived familiar pre-war rhetoric against law enforcement, describing investigations against him as a witch hunt. He denies the charges and has pleaded not guilty.
Divisions among the Israeli public
Before the war, Mr Netanyahu’s legal troubles bitterly divided Israelis and shook Israeli politics through five rounds of elections. His government’s bid in 2023 to curb the powers of the judiciary further polarised Israelis.
The shock Hamas attack on Israel on Oct 7, 2023, and the ensuing Gaza war swept Mr Netanyahu’s trial off the public agenda as Israelis came together in grief and trauma. But as the war dragged on, political unity crumbled.
In recent weeks, while fighting abated on one front after Israel reached a ceasefire with Hamas’ Lebanese ally Hezbollah, members of Mr Netanyahu’s Cabinet, including his justice and police ministers, have clashed with the judiciary.
His domestic legal woes were compounded in November when the International Criminal Court issued an arrest warrant for him and his former defence chief Yoav Gallant,

