-Caveat Lector-

Euphorian spotted this on the Guardian Unlimited site and thought you should see it.

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Note from Euphorian:

"I seeee noththinngg!"
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To see this story with its related links on the Guardian Unlimited site, go to 
http://www.guardian.co.uk

TV humiliation as Sharon fails to stem voter exodus
Chris McGreal in Jerusalem
Thursday January 09 2003
The Guardian


An Israeli judge pulled the plug on his prime minister Ariel Sharon mid-way through an 
angry and rambling television address last night which was meant to deny corruption 
allegations and win back voters who are fleeing his party in droves.

With opinion polls showing a rapid collapse in public trust and his rightwing bloc 
perilously close to losing its majority in this month's general election, Mr Sharon 
was forced to make a public statement about $1.5m given to his family last year by a 
British businessman.

Before the address, commentators agreed that Mr Sharon is "no longer the Teflon prime 
minister" and that he needed a masterful performance to regain public trust.

But after about 20 minutes of avoiding specifics in favour of vitriolic denunciations 
of his opponents whom he accused of "despicable slander... with one purpose, to bring 
down the government of Israel", he was abruptly taken off the air for violating 
another law.

Israel's election commission obtained a court order because Mr Sharon's speech 
amounted to "electioneering" which is illegal on television. Mr Sharon failed to 
explain convincingly the circumstances of the $1.5m (£934,000) loan.

The broadcast may even have fuelled the decline of Likud which has lost about 
one-third of its backing over the past month, according to the latest polls. In 
addition, 31% of voters said they no longer believe Mr Sharon is fit to be prime 
minister.

Supporters of the prime minister's arch-rival for the Likud leadership, the foreign 
minister, Binyamin Netanyahu, are already beginning to agitate for his resignation.

The fraud squad is investigating whether the loan to one of Mr Sharon's sons from 
Cyril Kern, a wealthy former textile manufacturer in Cape Town, was indirectly used to 
repay illegal campaign funds.

If so, Mr Sharon could face charges of deception, fraud and lying to the police over 
the source of the funds. There is no suggestion that Mr Kern did anything illegal.

Last night the prime minister told the Israeli public he had been "horrified" to learn 
of the original illegal campaign funds even though the front company used to launder 
the funds was set up by his then lawyer, Dov Weisglass, who now heads the prime 
minister's office.

He said he did not know where the money came from to repay the campaign funds after 
the state comptroller concluded they were illegal. The fraud squad alleges that the 
prime minister told the police and state comptroller that the money came from a 
mortgage on his ranch. But his bank had turned down the mortgage because Mr Sharon 
does not own the ranch.

To win back the voters, they will have to believe that Mr Sharon knew nothing of the 
loan to his son.

Last night, the prime minister tried to say that recent revelations of vote buying and 
organised crime infiltration of his Likud party were groundless and the work of his 
Labour opponent, Amram Mitzna, who was in London to meet Tony Blair. But that is 
unlikely to satisfy sceptical voters given that the police have already made several 
arrests and Mr Sharon was forced to fire one of his deputy ministers implicated in the 
scandal.

The prime minister's friend and special envoy to the White House, Aryeh Ganger, 
refused to answer questions from fraud squad detectives last week about his role in 
funnelling illegal funds to Mr Sharon's 1999 campaign.

To add to the prime minister's woes, the supreme court yesterday overturned a ban on 
two leading Arab-Israeli politicians from seeking re-election to the knesset.

Likud is haemorrhaging support not only to its allies on the right but, crucially, to 
a centrist party, Shinui, that looks likely to triple its seats and emerge as the 
third largest party in the knesset.

Shinui is led by a populist rabble rouser, Yosef Lapid, who has won support by 
virulently opposing religious parties and demanding a secular state.

Copyright Guardian Newspapers Limited

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