Yahoo – AFP,
20 December 2015
Jerusalem (AFP) - Israel's interior minister and vice-premier, Silvan Shalom, said Sunday he was quitting his posts and leaving politics over media reports of sexual harassment and indecent assault.
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| Silvan Shalom, pictured on December 11, 2015, is Quitting his posts as interior minister and vice-premier and leavin politics (AFP Photo/Alberto Pizzoli) |
Jerusalem (AFP) - Israel's interior minister and vice-premier, Silvan Shalom, said Sunday he was quitting his posts and leaving politics over media reports of sexual harassment and indecent assault.
"Under
these circumstances I have decided to resign from my position as minister and
member of parliament," he said in a statement.
"My
family is giving me full support but there is no justification for the price
being exacted from it."
Israel's
attorney-general instructed police to investigate the reports, said a justice
ministry report issued after Shalom's announcement.
Israeli
media, led by the left-leaning Haaretz, have reported multiple allegations by
former members of Shalom's staff of sexual misconduct.
Last week,
the paper reported that an ex-staffer accused the minister but did not lodge an
official police complaint.
"The
woman said that more than a decade ago, Shalom asked her to perform oral sex,
abusing his authority over her. However, that case cannot be prosecuted because
of the statute of limitations," the paper reported.
That same
allegation surfaced last year as Shalom, of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's
rightwing Likud party, was tipped as a presidential candidate to succeed Shimon
Peres.
Its
resurrection has brought other complaints in its wake.
"Following
the report," Haaretz wrote on Sunday, "several other women also
alleged that the minister sexually assaulted them".
The
Jerusalem Post reported that 11 women had alleged "inappropriate sexual
advances toward them".
The
English-language daily added that his seat in parliament would pass to Amir
Ohana, whom it said would become the first "openly gay" Likud MP.
Israel has
been plagued by many high-level sex cases, notably the December 2010 conviction
of president Moshe Katsav for rape and sexual assault.
He started
a seven-year prison sentence the following year.
In January
2015, attorney general Yehuda Weinstein urged the public not to lose faith in
Israel's police force despite sex and sexual harassment scandals reaching as
high as the deputy national commissioner, the chief of police in the occupied
West Bank and the Jerusalem police chief.
Similar
cases have blighted the army.

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