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The file photo taken on September 15, 2008 shows Israeli Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni smiling during a meeting with her Spanish counterpart Miguel Angel Moratinos in Tel Aviv, Israel. Final results released by Israel's ruling Kadima party early Thursay showed that Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni won the party's primary, local news service Ynet reported. (Xinhua/Yin Bogu) Photo Gallery>>> |
by Qi Xianghui
JERUSALEM, Sept. 18 (Xinhua) -- Final results
released Thursday by Isarel's ruling Kadima party showed that Foreign Minister
TzipiLivni won the party's primary and would become its new leader.
Should she manage to form a new government in the coming weeks, she will become the second female premier in Israel after Golda Meir in the 1970s.
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The file photo taken on September 15, 2008 shows Israeli Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni smiling during a meeting with her Spanish counterpart Miguel Angel Moratinos in Tel Aviv, Israel. Final results released by Israel's ruling Kadima party early Thursay showed that Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni won the party's primary, local news service Ynet reported. (Xinhua/Yin Bogu) Photo Gallery>>> |
Livni was born in 1958 in Tel Aviv to a family of
prominent members of Irgun, a radical Jewish underground movement during the
British mandate period. After her two-year military service in theIsrael Defence
Forces (IDF), Livni worked for Mossad (the Israeli intelligence agency) for two
years in Paris before returning to Israel. After that, she get married and
started her career as a lawyer.
As a graduate of Bar Ilan University's Faculty of
Law, she has 10 years of experience as a practicing lawyer, specializing in
public and commercial law.
She was first elected to the Knesset (Israeli
parliment) in 1999 as a member of the right-wing Likud party. Two years later,
she was appointed the minister of regional cooperation by then-Premier Ariel
Sharon and thereafter held various Cabinet positions. In 2005, she followed
Sharon out of Likud when the latter established the Kadima party.
Following Kadima's victory in the 2006 general
elections, Livnitook the post of foreign minister and vice premier. After the
U.S.-sponsored Annapolis conference, which was held in November 2007, Livni was
charged with the task of leading Israel's negotiating teams in talks with
Palestinians on ending decades of conflicts between the two sides.
Last week, she pledged to work on forging a
final-status agreement with the Palestinian National Authority (PNA) if she wins
the primary.
Livni, a mother of two, is the second women in Israel
to hold the post of foreign minister after Golda Meir and was described as "the
second most powerful politician in Israel."
In 2007, she was included in the Time 100 Most
Influential People in the World, and Forbes ranked her the 52nd most powerful
woman in the world.
Although Livni was criticized by some male
politicians as lack of security and military experience, the new party leader
has never commented about the gender issue and even didn't agree to be
interviewed on the subject.
Comparing to her predecessor, scandal-ridden Ehud
Olmert, Livniis also widely acknowledged by the public on her clean-hand image.
Her reputation for honesty is an outstanding merit to attract the public.
She has enjoyed her lead in most of the polls
conducted throughout the leadership race and was considered by many Israelis to
be the only candidate who can put together a coalition government and spare the
Israeli public from early elections.