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Israel's Netanyahu pauses judicial reform that split nation
Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Monday night paused a judicial overhaul which triggered a general strike, political division and mass protests in the country's most severe domestic crisis in years.
After nearly three months of increasing tensions, Netanyahu said in a broadcast: "Out of a sense of national responsibility, out of a will to prevent a rupture among our people, I have decided to pause the second and third readings of the bill" to allow time for dialogue.
The proposed reforms would curtail the authorities of the Supreme Court and give politicians greater powers over the selection of judges.
The legislation will now be considered further in the next session of parliament which begins in the second half of April, the prime minister said.
His comments came a day after he sacked his defence minister, Yoav Gallant, who had called for a halt to the legislative process citing national security concerns.
Earlier Monday President Isaac Herzog, who holds a largely ceremonial role, made a similar demand, and tens of thousands of protesters had rallied near parliament in Jerusalem after the strike declaration.
Flights had been disrupted, hospitals stopped non-emergency services, and even diplomats walked off the job.
But immediately after Netanyahu announced the pause, Arnon Bar-David, chairman of the Histadrut trade union confederation, called off the strike.
About 80,000 demonstrators joined the Jerusalem rally against the reform package, the latest such protest to draw tens of thousands, Israeli media estimated.
A nearby counter-demonstration attracted thousands of right-wing backers of the overhaul, an AFP journalist said, after Israel's National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir urged their attendance.
Demonstrators have for months decried the reform plans as a threat to Israel's democracy.
The Israel Medical Association had joined the strike call, which affected public hospitals, though it said life-saving treatments continued.
The strike also affected flights at Ben Gurion International Airport near Tel Aviv, where an AFP journalist saw multiple delayed departures.
Diplomatic staff were among those walking out, with Washington embassy spokesman Elad Strohmayer tweeting the Israeli mission "will be closed... until further notice".
- 'Tangible threat' -
The government plans have sparked concern from Israel's allies including the United States, and Washington welcomed Netanyahu's pause "as an opportunity to create additional time and space for compromise", Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said.
Israeli opposition leader Yair Lapid said he is conditionally ready to engage in dialogue over the proposed changes, "if the legislation truly and totally stops," and the government is not bluffing.
Former defence minister Benny Gantz, a leading opposition figure, said he was immediately ready for talks mediated by Herzog.
"Better late than never," Gantz said of Netanyahu's pause.
The government, a coalition between Netanyahu's Likud party and extreme-right and ultra-Orthodox Jewish allies, argues the changes are needed to rebalance powers between lawmakers and the judiciary.
Moments after Netanyahu fired Gallant, demonstrators converged on a central highway in Tel Aviv, blocking traffic and burning tyres. Some threw metal barricades at mounted officers while police deployed water cannon.
Herzog recalled the "difficult scenes" and said: "The entire nation is rapt with deep worry," with security, the economy and society all "under threat".
Herzog had previously raised the spectre of civil conflict.
"We can't allow a civil war," Netanyahu said in his address.
Yoav Gallant, the outgoing defence minister who had been a staunch ally of Netanyahu, on Saturday cited a "tangible threat to Israel's security".
Referring to threats by reserve military personnel not to report for duty, he said: "The growing social rift has made its way into the (army) and security agencies."
- 'Mad reform' -
At the Jerusalem protest on Monday, Keren Mimran, a 57-year-old tech worker, told AFP, "We are calling on the government to stop this mad reform."
Figures from Israel's economically important hi-tech sector have played a key role in the protests and some analysts have said uncertainties related to the reforms had already triggered economic decline.
Israeli media reported the extreme-right minister Ben-Gvir was threatening to quit if the overhaul was put on hold.
Lapid said the government "has undergone a hostile takeover by a messianic, nationalist and anti-democratic group".
Lawmakers were scheduled to vote this week on a central part of the proposals, which would change the way judges are appointed. That has now been put off.
A parliamentary committee has already amended the draft law to make it more acceptable to opponents, but the opposition ruled out backing any part of the reform package until a pause in all legislative steps.
In response, Attorney General Gali Baharav-Miara on Friday accused him of "illegal" public intervention on the process, citing potential conflict of interests due to his ongoing trial.
The premier faces charges of bribery, fraud and breach of trust, which he denies.
Y.Baker--AT