Israel's Sharon May Face Bribery Charges
- Author: News Agencies
- Publish date:22/01/2004
- Section:WORLD HEADLINES
Israeli prosecutors are considering whether to indict Prime Minister Ariel Sharon after a court charged a businessman with trying to bribe him in the 1990s.
Prosecutors will decide within months whether to charge Sharon, said a justice ministry source on Wednesday.
A charge against the premier would almost certainly force him from office. Sharon's spokesman had no immediate comment.
An Israeli court indicted property developer David Appel earlier on Wednesday on charges of trying to bribe Sharon when he was foreign minister in the late 1990s, sparking opposition calls for his resignation.
Sharon, 75, has denied any wrongdoing in a string of corruption scandals that have failed to seriously dent his popularity.
But mounting legal troubles could threaten his support in Israel and weaken his hand in seeking an end to the Palestinian-Israeli conflict. Sharon, if indicted, would likely be charged along with his son, Gilad, and Deputy Prime Minister Ehud Olmert, a close ally in the ruling Likud party.
"The state attorney's office will take from a few weeks to a few months to decide whether or not charges will be brought against Sharon, Olmert and Gilad on the Greek island affair," the justice ministry source said, referring to a real estate deal.
**Greek affair***
The bribery-episode that has come to be known as the "Greek Island affair" took place in the late 1990s when Sharon was the foreign minister in the right-wing government of Benjamin Netanyahu.
Property developer Appel was planning a tourism project on a Greek island for which he needed the necessary authorisation from the Greek authorities.
The indictment said Appel sought Sharon and Olmert's help in securing the Greek go-ahead by trying to bankroll their campaigns for the Likud party's leadership.
Appel has been charged with offering 3 million US dollar to Gilad in payment for consultancy services on the Greek island project, though it was not certain whether the money was accepted.
Analysts said that while the indictment against Appel would tarnish Sharon's image, it posed no direct threat to his power because prosecutors had not presented any evidence showing he knowingly accepted money for political favours.
**PHOTO CAPTION***
Ariel Sharon looks back from his seat at the Knesset, Israel's parliament, during a session Wednesday Jan. 21, 2004. (AP Photo/Alex Kolomoiski)