The Israeli government has approved an Open Skies deal with European carriers, as local airline workers went on strike with hundreds burning tires outside the prime minister's office in protest against the plan.
"We will continue to advance reforms to reduce the cost of living and increase the efficiency of services to Israelis," he said.
Netanyahu said the finance and tourism ministers would have 45 days to address questions raised during the discussion which took place before the deal was approved by the cabinet.
Severe ramifications
Staff of El Al and charter firms Arkia and Israir stopped work at 5:00am local time (02:00 GMT) on Sunday but did not say how long the stoppage would last.
"Implementing the Open Skies agreement in its current format will have severe ramifications which would fatally and irreversibly harm civilian aviation in Israel," Histadrut trade union chairman Ofer Eini said in a letter to Netanyahu
As ministers arrived for the weekly cabinet meeting, more than 500 demonstrators burst through the security barriers and tried to block their way into Netanyahu's office, police and a correspondent for the AFP news agency said.
"Demonstrators broke down barriers and headed to a closed area near the prime minister's office," police spokesman Micky Rosenfeld told AFP, saying eight people had been arrested.
Several tires were set alight, sparking heated scuffles with the police and riot police who were called to the scene, the correspondent said.
Waving Israeli flags and banners demanding "Aerial justice," they handed out flyers saying: "Israel's skies are shutting out Israeli airlines."
"International airlines that don't add Israel to their [airline] alliances because of the Arab boycott are about to take over Israeli skies," it said, warning the deal "does not allow Israeli airlines to compete equally with European airlines".
El Al, Israel's national carrier, has been under private ownership since 2005.
In March 2012, Israel and the EU signed an Open Skies aviation agreement aimed at opening up and integrating their markets.
In line with the deal, EU airlines will be able to operate direct flights to Israel without current limitations, and Israeli carriers will also have more freedom to fly to airports across the EU, in a move aimed at reducing costs for travellers.
PHOTO CAPTION
Employees of Israeli airline companies, including El Al, Israir and Arkia burn tires in a protest outside the Jerusalem offices of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, 21 April 2013.
Aljazeera