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Opinion | There is no substitute for the state justice system Israel today

2022-01-07T06:56:38.202Z


Truth is about to be revealed. The suicide of the ultra-Orthodox children's author Haim Velder has taken many demons out of the bottle, and so far it has not been known if anyone can bring them back. Mordechai Alon, who was convicted of two counts of indecent assault on a teenager - excites the religious world with a storm of internal jurisdiction by Velder, who has been charged by an informal cou


Truth is about to be revealed.

The suicide of the ultra-Orthodox children's author Haim Velder has taken many demons out of the bottle, and so far it has not been known if anyone can bring them back. Mordechai Alon, who was convicted of two counts of indecent assault on a teenager - excites the religious world with a storm of internal jurisdiction by Velder, who has been charged by an informal court with sexually assaulting innocent women.

On the one hand, it turns out that hiding these cases, in a world where everything is transparent, is impossible - just as the Catholic Church has had to admit in severe cases of sexual offenses.

Because there is limited trust in law enforcement institutions in this sector, he tries to deal with the exposed phenomena himself, and then the difficult controversies arise regarding the informal treatment method.

Rabbi Shmuel Eliyahu ruled on Velder, which led to his suicide.

Rabbi Zvi Tao, the spiritual leader of the far-right Noam movement, brought out the controversy between them.

Tao claims that Elijah is not a Dayan, and that he acted without authority.

He is convinced that Elijah was influenced by the left to "invent" the Moshe Katsav affair because Katsav, as president, refused to meet a delegation of Reform rabbis.

He claims that the suspicions against Velder stem from the fact that he dared to criticize former Supreme Court President Aharon Barak.

It is worth mentioning to the flock of the shepherds of these rabbis that for almost 74 years there has been a state here, and it has some of the most esteemed systems in the world when it comes to doing justice.

There are judges and prosecutors here, defense attorneys and police officers, who act - for the vast majority - according to rules that take into account both the rights of the accused and the rights of his victims.

It is better for those who seek justice for themselves to turn to state systems, and to turn their backs on legal amateurs who seek to solve criminal problems within the walls of the sector.

With eyes to Hungary.

EU leaders are looking for ways to move away from countries that have lost many democratic characteristics. The most prominent candidate for a change in status is Hungary. Prominent leaders in the union define Prime Minister Victor Urban as an existential threat to the EU, which sees itself as an example of respect for human rights and the rule of law. The sanction under consideration is the cessation of the transfer of budgets, in various fields, from Brussels to Hungary, which has benefited in recent years from infrastructure rehabilitation with the help of the Union.


Donald Trump, on the other hand, has clung to his friendship with Urban and announced that he sees him as the right man to lead Hungary, ahead of the parliamentary elections this spring. A coalition of six parties from the right and left, seeking to restore the country to its democratic character, is organizing to replace Urban, similar to what has been done recently in the Czech Republic. This is also the hope of most European countries.

Notice Bosnia and Herzegovina.

The winds of the Balkans do not calm down.

The Dayton Accords brought peace to the girls in 1995 following the difficult war between the former Yugoslav peoples, but these did not calm down.

Serbian nationalist President Milorad Dodik recently announced that he intends to tear from Bosnia (whose population does not exceed three and a quarter million people) the Serbian territory, the military and budgetary significance of the move.


Some argue that the return of the winds of war stems from suspicions that Dodik is involved in corruption scandals, and his desire to divert attention.

It is a country with three presidents and two national entities, and it will not be difficult to restore the national tension of the 1990s, when the Bosnians fought the Croats and both the Serbs.

Only this is missing now for Europe. 

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Source: israelhayom

All news articles on 2022-01-07

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