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Israeli ex-PM Netanyahu announces bid for Likud leader |
| | www.chinaview.cn 2005-08-30 21:55:19 |
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| This file photo taken on November 29, 2002 shows then Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon (L) and Foreign Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. Netanyahu announced his bid for challenging Ariel Sharon for leadership of the ruling Likud Party and replacing him as Prime Minister August 30, 2005. (Xinhua Photo) | JERUSALEM, Aug. 30 (Xinhuanet) -- Former Israeli
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu announced his bid for ruling Likud party's
leadership to replace current Prime Minister Ariel Sharon on
Tuesday.
"The Likud today needs a leader who can unify
the ranks, rehabilitate the ruins, and lead the Likud to victory, and who will
then lead the state in the spirit of our principles, and I believe that I can do
that," Netanyahu told a news conference.
"Therefore, I
today announce my candidacy for the leadership of the Likud, and for the
premiership."
Netanyahu, 55, served as Israeli prime
minister during 1996-1999. He resigned as financial minister of Sharon's
government right before Israel's Gaza pullout to show his protest against the
government move.
His announcement on Tuesday was a
direct challenge to Prime Minister Sharon and could set in motion an eventual
split in the Likud party, with Sharon bolting it and starting a splinter
factionof his own.
On Monday, the party's court paved
the way for the Netanyahu announcement when it ruled that the Likud Central
Committee would vote on Sept. 26 on a proposal to advance the party's leadership
primaries, thereby effectively beginning the process of ousting Sharon as the
party's head.
The expected primaries vote represents
the first time that any party has tried to oust a serving prime minister as its
chairman.
It also represents a significant defeat for
Sharon, who tried hard to prevent the central committee from convening for this
purpose, as early primaries will force him to make decisions about his political
future long before he had planned to do so.
Should the
committee, as currently seems likely, adopt the proposal submitted by his
opponents, the primaries will take place in late November, within 60 days of the
committee's vote. Thus Sharon will have to decide by then whether to run against
Netanyahu, who is currently leading in polls of party members, or quit the Likud
and start a new party.
Monday's decision is also
liable to cause the Knesset (Israeli parliament) to dissolve shortly after its
winter session begins in late October, as it will encourage the Labor Party to
quit the coalition.
Sharon's supporters responded to
the decision by accusing Netanyahu and other Sharon opponents of wanting to oust
the prime minister even at the price of sending the party into the opposition.
They added that Sharon has not yet made any decisions
about his political future.
However, Sharon himself
said in a Channel 10 TV interview that he would definitely run in the primaries,
but would not agree to be Netanyahu's number two if he lost.
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