Tuesday, July 01, 2008

Fraud Unit to Investigate Membership Rolls of Olmert's Party


Nissan Ratzlav-Katz

The Movement for Quality Government in Israel has succeeded in convincing the police department to investigate allegations that many Israeli citizens were unwittingly registered as Kadima party members. The National Fraud Unit chief wrote to Movement directors on Monday that his department will be looking into the claims. The Kadima party comptroller will also initiate an independent investigation. The allegations, first broadcast on Israel TV's Channel 10 on Friday, come at the end of an intensive Kadima membership drive and just ahead of party primaries. Later this month, the Kadima leadership is slated to select a date for primaries.

In response to the Channel 10 report, Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni told a meeting of Kadima's Knesset representatives, "The party's integrity has to be important to everyone here." She called for the party to initiate its own investigation into the claims aired by Channel 10.

In its letter to the Attorney General, the State Comptroller, the Party Registrar and Kadima officials, the Movement for Quality Government demanded that Kadima be prevented from using its membership lists for any purpose until the results of the investigation are known, "even at the cost of postponing the primaries." Failing to do so, the Movement said, would risk doing damage to the democratic process as a whole.

The Channel 10 report purported to show that Kadima membership registration forms were forged, including the registration of people with no connection to the party whatsoever, as well as other irregularities. In conversations with registered Kadima members, Channel 10 correspondents found that dozens of people were not even aware that they appear on the party rolls, while others had membership dues paid on their behalf without their consent. In some cases, there had been mass registration of employee union members, especially in those large unions under the authority of the Transportation Ministry, which is headed by Minister Sha'ul Mofaz. Mofaz is one of the leading contenders for the Kadima party chairmanship.

On June 22, the Movement for Quality Government wrote a letter to the Attorney General demanding a criminal investigation of Minister Mofaz over the allegations. According to the June 22 letter, Mofaz used the influence of his position as Transportation Minister for personal political gain.

The latest report regarding forged Kadima membership rolls "is another link in a series of recent revelations concerning allegedly problematic behavior that may even constitute a violation of... the Parties Law and... the Elections in State Companies Law," the Movement for Quality Government said in a statement. The seriousness of the allegations, according to the Movement, stems from the fact that Kadima members "will have the power to determine not only who will head the Kadima party, but who will head the government. In such a situation, if the allegations turn out to be correct, it will be devastatingly destructive to the democratic process and to the principle of [political] representation in the State of Israel."

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