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Top cop, AG slam Ben Gvir for blocking promotion of officer involved in PM’s graft trial

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The Times of Israel is liveblogging Wednesday’s events as they happen.

The G7 condemns surging violence in Sudan, saying the conflict between the African nation’s army and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces has triggered “the world’s largest humanitarian crisis.”

“We strongly condemned the recent escalation of violence,” Group of Seven foreign ministers say in a joint statement as they conclude a meeting in Canada, raising specific concern about acts of sexual violence in war-ravaged Sudan.

Police chief Danny Levy is expected to name Assistant Commissioner Eli Macmel to temporarily replace a high-ranking officer under probe for breach of trust and abuse of authority, Hebrew outlets report.

Macmel is currently the head of the National Fraud Investigation Unit at Lahav 433, the police’s major crimes unit headquartered in Lod.

The suspected officer, whose name is barred from publication under a gag order, holds a highly sensitive position within the force. He was detained for interrogation earlier today by investigators over allegations that he interfered in investigations to help an associate.

The number of police investigations into Jewish nationalist violence in the West Bank has sharply declined over the past three years, according to a Channel 12 report, even as settler attacks on Palestinians have reached all-time highs.

There has been a 73% decline in the number of investigations opened since 2023, according to the outlet, under far-right National Security Minister Itamar Ben Gvir. Police have opened only 60 investigations into settler violence this year, compared to 150 cases in 2024 and 235 cases in 2023, despite reports of attacks going up over that period, not down.

The report says just 10% of investigations led to indictments in 2023. It says this number was even lower the next year, though it does not specify the exact percentage and simply notes that the majority of probes have stalled or were closed with no charges filed.

Ben Gvir himself resides in a West Bank settlement, and before entering politics worked as a lawyer representing mostly far-right Jewish Israelis accused of extremist violence.

The decline in the number of investigations goes hand-in-hand with a marked rise in settler violence, with over 704 incidents of “nationalistic crime” recorded by the IDF since the start of the year. In all of 2024, the IDF recorded 675 incidents of nationalistic crime.

Earlier this week, dozens of Israeli settlers launched a major arson attack on Palestinian factories and farmland in the northern West Bank, injuring four Palestinians and causing widespread property damage. Later on, masked Israeli assailants gathered at the Baron Industrial Zone, where they confronted soldiers and vandalized an IDF vehicle.

Four suspects were arrested in relation to the incident, marking a rare instance in which law enforcement has acted against settler violence. Nevertheless, three of the suspects went free within a day, leaving only one still in custody.

IDF chief Lt. Gen. Eyal Zamir said yesterday he “strongly condemns” the recent attacks by settlers, which “cross a red line,” and said the IDF “will not tolerate phenomena of a criminal minority that stains a law-abiding public.”

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu posts a lengthy statement to X in which he defends his wife Sara and son Yair from what he says are relentless media attacks.

“Sara is a woman of valor… She is a true heroine,” Netanyahu writes, saying US President Donald Trump has dubbed her “my secret weapon.”

Netanyahu also defends his son, Yair, saying he “acts vigorously, with great talent and........

© The Times of Israel