Search Site

Trends banner

TSMC first-quarter net profit soars

Its net revenue for the quarter soared nearly 42%.

Tesla’s first Saudi showroom opens

The opening in Riyadh comes with Tesla sales dropping.

Mubadala Energy enters US energy market

Acquires a 24.1% interest in US firm Kimmeridge’s SoTex

Borouge to increase dividend from 2025

The company okayed $650 million final dividend for 2024.

TikTok’s US future uncertain

It must find non-Chinese owner to avoid ban.

Israel PM accuses security chief of investigating minister without his consent

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. AFP
  • "The claim that the prime minister authorised Shin Bet chief Ronen Bar to gather evidence against Minister Ben Gvir is yet another exposed lie," Netanyahu said
  • He was responding to a report that Bar's agency had spent months investigating far-right infiltration of the police and its links to Ben Gvir

Jerusalem, UndefinedPrime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Monday accused Israel’s internal security chief, whose dismissal was blocked by the supreme court, of investigating far-right National Security Minister Itamar Ben Gvir without his consent.

“The claim that the prime minister authorised Shin Bet chief Ronen Bar to gather evidence against Minister Ben Gvir is yet another exposed lie,” Netanyahu said in a statement issued by his office.

He was responding to a report that Bar’s agency had spent months investigating far-right infiltration of the police and its links to Ben Gvir.

“The published document, which contains an explicit directive from the Shin Bet chief to gather evidence against political leaders, resembles dark regimes, undermines democracy and aims to bring down a right-wing government,” the statement added.

Ben Gvir reacted on X, calling Bar a “criminal” and a “liar” who was “trying to deny his attempted conspiracy against elected officials in a democratic country, even after the documents were exposed to the public and the world”.

On Friday, Israel’s supreme court froze the government’s unprecedented decision to sack Bar, a move that deepened political divisions in the country.

It came hours after the government, one of the most right-wing in Israel’s history, backed Netanyahu’s proposal to dismiss Bar, with the prime minister saying he had lost confidence in him.