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Charges Against Deri
Are Announced

Jerusalem (JTA) — In a de-
velopment that could touch
off a new political crisis
here, Attorney General
Yosef Harish has announced
that he intends to press
charges of financial corrup-
tion against Interior Min-
ister Aryeh Deri.
After almost three years of
investigation, Mr. Harish
notified Deri of his decision
to press charges against him
on five counts: fraud, breach
of trust, accepting bribes, ac-
cepting benefits through
fraud and false registration
of documents.
Mr. Deri, who heads the
fervently Orthodox Shas
party, is suspected of im-
properly channeling public
funds to organizations af-
filiated with his party as
well as misappropriating
public monies for his own
private use.
Mr. Harish told Mr. Deri
that within three weeks he
would have the opportunity
of a special hearing in front
of the attorney general,
before an actual indictment
is presented in court.
Even so, the hearing would
be limited in time and scope.
In his initial reaction to
the news, Mr. Deri said he
felt "relieved" after reading
the draft indictment, since
the charges were much less
• serious than expected.
Mr. Deri declared he in-
tends to honor a prior com-
mitment he gave to step
down from his ministerial
post once an indictment is
handed down.
He repeated his view that
Shas should not quit the
Labor-led coalition once he
leaves his post and said he
would do his utmost to pre-
vent a coalition crisis.
A similar view was voiced
by Shas Knesset member
Rafael Pinhasi.
Earlier in the day, Mr.
Harish met with Prime Min-
ister Yitzhak Rabin to show
him the charge sheet drawn
up against the Shas party
leader.
Justice Minister David
Libai, reacting to the news,
insisted that Mr. Deri step
down from his ministerial
post "within a matter of
weeks."
Mr. Harish's meeting with
Mr. Rabin was arranged to
discuss what position the
government should take
regarding a petition to the

High Court of Justice
demanding that Mr. Deri be
suspended from office im-
mediately.
The appeal was presented
to the court by the Move-
ment for Quality Govern-
ment in Israel, headed by
lawyer Eliad Shraga, prior
to Mr. Deri's reappointment
as interior minister at the
end of the recent coalition
crisis.
Mr. Shraga had argued
that Mr. Deri should not be
reappointed while an in-
vestigation into his alleged
wrongdoings was entering
its final stages.
The court did not block Mr.
Deri's reappointment, but
gave the government 45
days to respond to the ap-
peal.
Since Mr. Deri heads the
Shas party, a junior partner
in the governing coalition, it
is feared that his indictment
could throw the government
back into a political crisis.
The Israeli daily Ha' aretz
reported that according to
the charge sheet, Mr. Deri
used public funds of up to
$500,000 for private pur-
poses.
Mr. Libai insisted that if
Mr. Deri were given the spe-
cial hearing before the at-
torney-general, the pro-
ceedings should be limited in
time so that the Knesset
would be able to remove Mr.
Deri's parliamentary im-
munity before its summer
recess begins Aug_ 7.
Mr. Deri told reporters
that, judging from the in-
formation in the press, the
prosecution has very little
against him and he does not
have much to worry about.

Minor Quake
Hits Israel

Tel Aviv (JTA) — A minor
earthquake shook the nor-
thern Israeli city of Safed
and parts of Galilee and
southern Lebanon this past
weekend, but caused no
casualties or damage.
The quake's epicenter was
the seabed off the Lebanon
coast.
The hilltop city of Safed
and the nearby town of
Tiberias, on the shores of the
Sea of Galilee, also known as
Lake Kinneret, were
destroyed by a powerful ear-
thquake in 1832.

