PM cuts short criminal trial session, returns to Jerusalem

Netanyahu testifies in Qatargate probe after police summons, as top aides arrested

Premier not named as suspect in ongoing investigation regarding alleged Qatari payments to advisers Jonatan Urich and Eli Feldstein; journalist also grilled in case

From left: Jonatan Urich, Eli Feldstein, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu (Composite: Flash90)
From left: Jonatan Urich, Eli Feldstein, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu (Composite: Flash90)

Police arrested Jonatan Urich and Eli Feldstein, top aides to Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, as suspects in the so-called Qatargate scandal on Monday, just as the attorney general ordered the police to summon the premier for testimony in the ongoing probe.

The prime minister’s motorcade arrived at his office early Monday evening, where he was questioned by investigators in the police’s Lahav 433 major crimes unit.

Netanyahu left the Tel Aviv District Court Monday morning, cutting short his criminal trial on corruption charges, to give testimony regarding the alleged unlawful financial ties between his senior staffers and Qatar.

According to a source in Lahav 433 quoted by the Kan public broadcaster, police “gave the prime minister the option of coming to give open testimony [either] today or on another day, but he chose to come today and stop the hearing of his case in court.”

According to a Channel 12 report from before the testimony, the prime minister was to be questioned as someone with knowledge of the affair, rather than as a suspect. The decision as to whether to subsequently question Netanyahu under caution, meaning as a suspect in the case, would be made following his open testimony.

In a very brief statement to the press earlier in the day, the police said that Urich and Feldstein were arrested as suspects within the framework of the investigation.

Urich and Feldstein were taken into police custody after their interrogation, and they were set to be brought to the Rishon LeZion Magistrate’s Court on Tuesday, where police will request to extend their detentions, Hebrew media reported Monday evening.

During the course of the morning, Netanyahu’s attorney Amit Hadad left him in the Tel Aviv courthouse to assist Urich, who is also his client.

The probe was launched following revelations that Netanyahu’s former spokesman Feldstein — who has been charged with harming national security in a case involving the theft and leaking of classified IDF documents — worked for Qatar via an international firm contracted by Doha to feed Israeli journalists pro-Qatar stories, all while employed in the PMO.

Ordered by Attorney General Gali Baharav-Miara in late February, the investigation is being conducted by Lahav 433 and the Shin Bet.

Investigators also summoned a journalist Monday to give testimony, which later turned into questioning under caution, as part of the probe. Hebrew media outlets reported that police suspect the unnamed reporter of contact with a foreign agent, but law enforcement did not issue an official statement on the matter.

A police source told Haaretz that law enforcement had obtained the necessary clearance from the State Attorney’s Office to question the suspect, as required for interrogating journalists.

Earlier in March, police questioned both Feldstein and Urich on suspicion of contacting a foreign agent, fraud, money laundering, and bribery. No further details were made available for publication due to a court-imposed gag order on the case.

Eli Feldstein, a spokesman in the Prime Minister’s Office accused of leaking stolen IDF intelligence classified documents, arrives for a court hearing at the District Court in Tel Aviv, January 14, 2025. (Avshalom Sassoni/Flash90)

The investigation focuses specifically on alleged Qatari payments to Netanyahu’s close circle between May 2022 and October 2024. It has been conducted largely under Shin Bet chief Ronen Bar, who is currently in the process of being fired by Netanyahu.

Opposition figures have accused Netanyahu of seeking to stymie the Qatar probe, while Bar himself alleged that the government is ousting him to thwart Shin Bet’s investigations.

Netanyahu has slammed the investigations against his staffers as a “witch hunt,” and the aides have denied wrongdoing.

Last November, it was reported that top Netanyahu aides Urich and Yisrael Einhorn did public relations work for Qatar ahead of the 2022 World Cup as part of the latter’s PR firm Perception, corresponding to the start date of the probe’s time frame.

Police have been seeking to question Einhorn, who now resides in Serbia as an adviser to the country’s President Aleksandar Vučić, as part of the investigation but have struggled due to his living abroad.

Yisrael Einhorn (YouTube screenshot)

On Sunday, Hebrew news outlet Walla reported that Ariel Shafir, a close associate of Urich also formerly employed at Einhorn’s firm, arranged meetings between senior Israeli officials — including a government minister — Gulf-based Israeli businessman Gil Birger and pro-Qatari lobbyist Jay Footlik.

Birger and Footlik gained national attention earlier this month after the Kan public broadcaster aired a recording of the former admitting to having transferred money from Footlik to Feldstein via a private company.

Shafir, who maintains close ties with the Likud party, formerly advised the ‘Bitchonistim’ movement, composed of former senior IDF officers who agree with Netanyahu’s security positions, Walla reported.

The revelation about Shafir’s role cast doubt on a claim made by Urich’s lawyers that their client “has no idea who Gil Birger is,” denying his involvement in the affair outright.

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