Israeli PM reverses course on firing defence minister amid security tensions
Thousands of Israelis march to evacuated West Bank settlement
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said on Monday he would leave Defence Minister Yoav Gallant in place given an escalating security crisis, reversing a decision to fire the minister that triggered protests and raised alarm abroad.
He said the two had resolved their disagreement over Gallant's public call last month for a halt to the government's bitterly divisive judicial overhaul plan, which Gallant said had become a threat to Israel's security.
Last week,Netanyahu announced he would delay the dismissal.
"I've decided to put our differences behind us," Netanyahu said at a Monday newsconference. He said the two had worked closely together duringthe last two weeks.
Netanyahu announced late last month that Gallant was fired. The decision set off a wave of spontaneous mass protests and a general strike that threatened to paralyze the country, forcing the Israelileader to suspend his divisive plan to overhaul the judicial system.
In a more recent development that raised new concerns over security, an Italian tourist was killed and five people were wounded in a car ramming in Tel Aviv lastFriday, hours after two Israeli sisters and their mother were killed in a shooting attack in the occupied West Bank.
The attacks, after a night of cross-border strikes in Gaza and Lebanon, added to heightened Israeli-Palestinian tensions following Israeli police raids in Jerusalem's Al-AqsaMosque this week. The tensions threatened to widen when Israel responded to a barrage of rockets by hitting targets linked to the Islamist group Hamas in Gaza and southern Lebanon, but the fighting entered a lull on Friday.
Israelis push for outpost recognition
On Monday in the northern West Bank, thousands of Israelis,including a number of cabinet ministers,marched to an evacuated Jewish outpost to show support forsettlements viewed asillegal under international law.
People from across the country travelled to the outpost ofEviatarwhile waving Israeli flags and chanting religious songsand slogans during the holiday week of Passover.
Visits to Eviatar have been officially banned by the military since its evacuation in 2021, but that prohibition has been loosely enforced in recent months. Israeli army spokespersonLt.-Col. Richard Hecht said the military approved Monday's march, saying it would be "highly monitored and highly protected."
Israeli soldiersfired rubber bullets and tear gas atstone-throwing Palestinian protesters in the nearby village of Beita, injuring17 people with rubber bullets and two with gas canisters to the head, the Palestinian Red Crescent said.
On Sunday, anopinion pollfrom Israel's Channel 13 Newsshowed Netanyahu's Likud party would lose more than a third of its seats if an election were held now, and hewould fail to gain a majority with his hard-right coalition partners.
"I'm not disturbed by the poll," Netanyahu told reporters.
The prime minister said relations with the United States, which appeared strained over the government's planned judicial overhaul, remained "tight" and the two countries enjoyed security and intelligence co-operation.
Netanyahu's government paused legislation on the overhaul to allow for discussions and a compromise with opposition parties following weeks of nationwide protests.
With files from The Associated Press