BFF-51 Netanyahu party criticised over cameras in polling stations

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ISRAEL-VOTE-NETANYAHU-MINORITIES

Netanyahu party criticised over cameras in polling stations

JERUSALEM, April 9, 2019 (BSS/AFP) – Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu faced election day criticism Tuesday after activists from his
right-wing Likud party brought cameras into polling stations in Arab-majority
neighbourhoods.

The main Arab party filed an urgent complaint to the elections committee
after videos emerged appearing to show Likud observers being caught with
small cameras while working in polling stations.

The party alleged it was illegal to have cameras in the polling stations
and was an attempt to intimidate and reduce turnout among voters from
Israel’s Arabs minority.

Netanyahu said cameras would ensure there was no voter fraud.

A spokesman for the elections committee said it was looking into the
allegations, including whether such practices were legal.

Videos posted online appeared to show Likud activists being confronted
by other observers and the police over small cameras concealed on their
person.

Police spokesman Micky Rosenfeld said there had been “a number of
suspected irregularities in polling stations in the northern region.”

He said they were working to prevent further issues.

The Arab-majority Hadash-Taal alliance confirmed it had presented an
urgent complaint to the elections committee demanding the “illegal” cameras
be immediately removed.

One of the alliance’s leaders, Ahmed Tibi, said Likud was resorting to
covert means to try to influence the polling day outcome.

“Netanyahu wants to lower the percentage of Arabs arriving at the
polls,” he said.

Netanyahu brushed off the criticism, saying it “ensures clean voting.”

“There should be non-overt cameras everywhere,” he told journalists at a
polling station in Jerusalem.

Kobi Massar, Likud representative to the Central Elections Committee,
told public radio there was “suspicion of widespread voter fraud in the Arab
sector.”

“The cameras are meant to keep the elections clean.”

Voting began at 0400 GMT, with polls suggesting a close race between
right-winger Netanyahu and centrist Benny Gantz.

In the last election in 2015, Netanyahu was heavily criticised for
saying on polling day that Israeli Arabs were voting in “droves”, a comment
he later apologised for.

Israeli Arabs, who make up around 17.5 percent of the population, are
Palestinians who remained on their land after the 1948 creation of Israel.
They are largely supportive of the Palestinian cause.

BSS/AFP/RY/1818 hrs