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JERUSALEM -- In a move likely to further inflame tensions
with Israel's Arab citizens, the Israeli Cabinet on Sunday approved a
bill to legally define the country as the nation-state of the Jewish
people.
The decision, which set off a stormy
debate that could bring down Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's brittle
coalition government, followed weeks of deadly Arab-Jewish violence and
was denounced by critics as damaging to the country's democratic
character and poorly timed at such a combustible moment.
It now heads toward a full parliamentary vote on Wednesday.
Israel
has always defined itself as the "Jewish state" - a term that was
contained in the country's declaration of independence in 1948. The new
law seeks to codify that status as a "Basic Law," Israel's de facto
constitution.
While many critics derided the
measure as unnecessary, Netanyahu told his Cabinet the bill is a
response to Israel's Arab critics both inside and outside Israel who
question the country's right to exist.
Netanyahu
has long demanded that the Palestinians recognize Israel as the Jewish
homeland as a condition of any peace deal. Both the Palestinians and
their Arab Israeli brethren say such acceptance would harm the rights of
Israel's more than 1.5 million Arab citizens.
The
bill calls not only for recognizing Israel's Jewish character but for
institutionalizing Jewish law as an inspiration for legislation and
dropping Arabic as an official language.
Netanyahu insisted that Israel would be both Jewish and democratic.
"There
are those who would like the democratic to prevail over the Jewish and
there are those who would like the Jewish to prevail over the
democratic," he said. "And in the principles of the law that I will
submit today both of these values are equal and both must be considered
to the same degree."
Israel is in the midst of
its worst sustained bout of violence in nearly a decade. Eleven
Israelis have been killed in Palestinian attacks over the past month,
including five people who were killed with guns and meat cleavers in a
bloody assault on a Jerusalem synagogue last week.
Jewish
nationalists in Netanyahu's coalition had pushed hard for the bill. The
two centrist parties in the Cabinet, Yesh Atid and Hatnua, provided the
only opposition in the 14-6 vote.
Finance
Minister Yair Lapid, head of Yesh Atid, called it a "terrible" piece of
legislation meant to appease hard-liners ahead of primaries in
Netanyahu's hawkish Likud Party.
Health
Minister Yael German, another Yesh Atid member, said the party would
support a law only if it emphasized Israel's Jewish and democratic
nature equally.
"This bill does not preserve that value. It will be a mark of shame for the parliament to pass such a law," she said.
A
vote against the bill in parliament by the party could break up the
coalition and even trigger new elections. Yesh Atid is the
second-largest faction in parliament and could rob Netanyahu of his
majority.
In a statement, Israel's attorney
general, Yehuda Weinstein, said he had serious doubts about the legality
of the bill's language because it impinges on Israel's democratic
character.
The measure could still be delayed or watered down before it is put to a vote in parliament.
Ahmad
Tibi, a leading Arab lawmaker, denounced the bill as an attack on Arab
natives of the country and called on the world to offer them protection.
Dov Khenin, leader of the mixed Jewish-Arab Hadash party, accused
Netanyahu of "pouring fuel into the bonfire of hate."
Israeli Arabs, who make up about 20 percent of the population, have long complained of discrimination and second-class status.
Last
week, the mayor of the southern city of Ashkelon sparked an uproar by
banning Arab construction laborers from working in Israeli preschools on
security grounds. The mayor, Itamar Shimoni, reversed his decision on
Sunday but said the children would be moved to other locations while
construction proceeded.
Though citizens of
Israel, the country's Arabs often identify with Palestinians in the West
Bank, and their loyalty to the state if often questioned by Jews.
On
Sunday, Israel's Shin Bet security service said it arrested a
22-year-old Israeli Arab who had returned from Syria after trying to
join the Islamic State extremist group. Israel believes that several
dozen Arabs have left the country to join IS in Syria.
The
deadly unrest in recent weeks has centered on Jerusalem's most
sensitive holy site, a hilltop compound revered by Jews and Muslims.
Israeli restrictions on Muslim access to the site, which Israel says are
a necessary security measure, have heightened tensions.
The
spate of attacks has left many people on both sides on edge. Early
Sunday, a Palestinian family in the West Bank said its home had been
torched in an attack blamed on Jewish settlers. The fire damaged one
room, and Hebrew slogans were scrawled on the house.
In
the Gaza Strip, the Israeli army shot and killed a 32-year-old man who
approached the border with Israel. Palestinians said the man had been
hunting birds, a hobby common among Palestinians.
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