Tel Aviv University
Tel Aviv University - PM
Olmert: No funding for bodies that refuse to employ officers
http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/1060787.html
By Barak
Ravid
2/2/2009
Prime
Minister Ehud Olmert yesterday excoriated opposition to the
appointment of Col. Pnina Sharvit-Baruch as a lecturer for Tel Aviv
University's Law Faculty because she allegedly gave the legal
go-ahead for the Israel Defense Forces to perpetrate "war crimes"
during the recent operation in Gaza. Olmert responded to such
criticism by saying that Israel would not support state-funded
institutions that discriminate against IDF officers because of their
military service.
"In my
opinion, any university that disqualifies lecturers on such grounds,
before an examination [of their service] has been concluded, is not
suitable to receive funding from the Israeli government," Olmert
said.
The
outgoing prime minister dismissed the protesters who opposed Sharvit-Baruch's
appointment as "a number of self-righteous, sanctimonious, arrogant
hypocrites who chose to make an exception out of the military
service of the IDF Advocacy General without determining if she is
guilty [of crimes]."
The
objections to Sharvit-Baruch followed a recent Haaretz article about
the current head of the IDF's international law division. The
article said that under Sharvit-Baruch's command, IDF legal experts
legitimized strikes liable to harm Gaza civilians, including the
bombardment of the graduation ceremony of the Gaza police force.
Leading
the protest against Sharvit-Baruch's appointment is Prof. Chaim Ganz,
of the University's Minerva Center for Human Rights. Haaretz also
published an editorial in which it expressed its opposition to
Sharvit-Baruch's appointment.
Attorney
General Menachem Mazuz yesterday said the editorial piece "did not
present the facts correctly." He added: "I don't understand how such
things can be written without being properly checked." Tel Aviv
University President Zvi Galil called Cabinet Secretary Oved
Yehezkel yesterday and said Prof. Ganz's opinions in no way
represented those of the university. "Many faculty members have come
out against him," Galil said. "Do not project [his opinions] onto
Tel Aviv University as a whole. The officer will teach at the
university as planned."
Galil
added: "It's strange that our immediate and determined decision not
to rescind Sharvit-Baruch's appointment to teach at Tel Aviv
University has been used to question our university's mores."
During
yesterday's cabinet meeting the ministers also discussed war crimes
charges filed against Israeli security officials in a Spanish court.
"Any indictment [against Israeli officials] will have a direct
impact on diplomatic relations with Israel," Foreign Minister Tzipi
Livni said.
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