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Israeli leader?s son must yield graft probe
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Israeli leader?s son must yield graft probe
The Supreme Court yesterday ordered Prime Minister Ariel Sharon?s son to hand over documents crucial to probing corruption scandals that could topple the Israeli leader and sideline his Gaza Strip withdrawal plan.
Israel?s attorney general on Sunday received the chief prosecutor?s recommendation to put Sharon, 76, on trial for alleged taking of bribes from a businessman who was pursuing a Greek island development scheme that ultimately flopped.
Sharon has denied wrongdoing. But the legal storm enveloping him has hurt him in opinion polls and could hinder his plan to unilaterally withdraw Jewish settlers from Gaza and a few from the West Bank to break a peacemaking deadlock with Palestinians.
Micha Fettma, the lawyer for Sharon?s son Gilad, said he would comply with the high court decision which followed months of lower court battles over the documents in the Greek case and another suspected of involving a South African businessman.
?The investigation is stuck in certain places. They (the police) need our help to make progress and we will give it to them,? Fettma told reporters at the Supreme Court.
Prosecutors contended the son was in control of key papers but Fettma disputed this.
?We?ve been ordered to give documents we don?t have and that means we have to make every effort to obtain them. (But) we will fulfil the instructions of the court,? the lawyer said.
The timing of the affairs could not be worse for Sharon and his relationship with Israel?s closest ally, Washington.
Sharon hopes to win President George W. Bush?s approval for his plan at a critical US meeting on April 14. Sharon?s intention to cement Israel?s grip on major West Bank settlement blocs in the bargain has angered the Palestinians.
Some cabinet ministers said Sharon should quit if Attorney General Menachem Mazuz decided to indict him. Others said Sharon should suspend himself.
Under Israeli law Sharon would not have to resign until exhausting his final court appeal against any conviction. But recent opinion polls have shown he would be under huge public pressure to quit if charged.
In the other case, prosecutors believe Sharon?s two sons used a $1.5 million loan from a South African businessman as collateral to repay alleged illicit contributions to a Sharon election campaign. Foreign funding of political campaigns is illegal in Israel.
Mazuz will have the final say on whether to indict Sharon. Justice Ministry sources said on Sunday it could take up to two months for him to rule in the Greek island affair.
Jeffrey Heller
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