by Edna Adato, Yori Yalon and Israel Hayom Staff
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu convenes special meeting on Islamic State group's potential threat to Israel • Justice Minister Tzipi Livni to introduce legislation aggravating counterterrorism measures taken by Israel's law enforcement agencies.
"We will do what needs to be
done to protect ourselves against terrorism," says Justice Minister
Tzipi Livni
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Photo credit: AP |
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu convened a
special session on Wednesday to discuss the growing threat to Israel by
radical terror organizations, such as Islamic State group (ISIS), which
are operating in the Middle East.
Justice Minister Tzipi Livni, Public Security
Minister Yitzhak Aharonovitch, Shin Bet security agency Director Yoram
Cohen, Police Commissioner Yohanan Danino and Attorney-General Yehuda
Weinstein participated in the meeting, which focused on the need to
intensify the counterterrorism measures taken by Israel's law
enforcement agencies.
Livni is expected to release a legal brief on
Thursday, outlining a new bill that would bar Israeli citizens and
residents from participating in any activity related to organizations
that have been designated by that state as terrorist groups.
As part of the bill, the defense minister will
release an administrative order listing designated terrorist
organizations, as well as the areas and countries in which they are
known to operate. Israelis would be barred from having any contact with
these groups -- in or outside Israel.
Israeli citizens or residents found to be affiliated with such groups may face up to three years in jail.
The government's legislation efforts are the
result of information gathered by Israel's intelligence agencies,
indicating that several Arab Israelis have recently joined rebel forces in Syria.
Several rebel groups fighting Syrian President
Bashar Assad have known affiliations with radical jihadist groups, such
as al-Qaida and the Islamic State group, which provide them with
weapons and training.
The Justice Ministry also plans to introduce
legislation meant to combat various expressions of support for
organizations the likes of ISIS, including waving their flags in public, or the posting of pro-terrorism statements on social media platforms.
Israel's intelligence agencies, for their
part, have already begun increasing their efforts to locate and
apprehend ISIS operatives in Israel, as well as thwarting any attempt by
the Islamic State group to form local terror cells.
"We will do what needs to be done to protect
ourselves against terrorism. This is what every Western nation is doing.
We won't allow [ISIS] to get a foothold [in Israel]," Livni said after
the meeting.
"The new situation requires we create the
mechanism necessary to deal with it without delay. For example, we need
to adapt Israeli law to the developments we see in the international
arena."
The justice minister further said that "solid
legislation and strong statements against ISIS are all well and good,
but they are not enough," adding that Israel has to "reignite the
negotiations with the Palestinian Authority to create a strong
collaboration with Arab countries that view [ISIS] as a common enemy.
"The peace process will help us fight this
mutual threat. Those who don't want to resolve the Israeli-Palestinian
conflict are the ones who will eventually drive us to a bloody conflict
with decapitators."
Edna Adato, Yori Yalon and Israel Hayom Staff
Source: http://www.israelhayom.com/site/newsletter_article.php?id=20033
Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors.
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