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For Netanyahu, the problem with his coalition is it’s just too cohesive

The majority won by the Likud and like-minded parties meant that the partners maximised their demands and the PM was forced to accept most of them

March 2, 2023 13:56
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Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu (R) sits next to Interior and Health Minister Aryeh Deri during a weekly cabinet meeting at the Prime Minister's office in Jerusalem, on January 8, 2023. (Photo by RONEN ZVULUN / POOL / AFP) (Photo by RONEN ZVULUN/POOL/AFP via Getty Images)
5 min read

The entire front of a building on the northern edge of Huwara was pitch-black from the fire that had been set alight outside its door the previous night by Israelis living in the nearby settlements.

The arsonists had gathered pallets from outside the neighbouring shop and used them as a bonfire. The fire would have been much stronger if some of the pallets hadn’t been laden with plastic bottles which, on melting, emptied their water onto the flames. 

“The fire didn’t come into the building,” said home owner Mamdouh Admadi, whose daughter and grandchildren were inside last Sunday night when the rampage began. “But it was filled with smoke. Luckily the paramedics got there and evacuated them in time before anyone suffocated.”

One of the paramedics who had stopped by on the Monday morning to help Mr Admadi remove some personal papers from the house said: “The Israeli soldiers helped us evacuate the family but it would have been better if they had stopped the settlers from setting the house alight.” 

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