Jerusalem: Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Wednesday tapped Amir Ohana as acting justice minister, the first openly gay minister in the country’s history. The appointment of Ohana (in pic), from Netanyahu’s right-wing Likud party, comes as Jerusalem prepares for its annual Gay Pride celebrations on Thursday.
“Amir Ohana is a jurist who knows the legal system well,” the premier’s office said in a statement. He takes up the position from Netanyahu’s right-wing rival Ayelet Shaked, fired by the premier on Sunday along with education minister Naftali Bennett after the PM failed to form a government following the April election. Netanyahu opted for parliament to dissolve itself and approve new elections, preventing Israeli President Reuven Rivlin from selecting someone else to form a government.
Shaked and Bennett had left the Likud years ago, but their New Right party failed to win enough votes in April’s poll to clear the threshold to join Israel’s parliament.
Israeli ministers remain in their posts immediately after elections, until the formation of the next administration. But Netanyahu’s office confirmed their sackings at the weekend. Justice ministry hopeful Betzalel Smotrich, of the religious far-right alliance United Right, said on Monday the country should be run according to biblical laws, sparking outrage among secular Israelis.
Netanyahu responded by saying “the state of Israel will not be a halakha state”, referring to Jewish law. Thousands of people are expected to converge on Jerusalem on Thursday for its “march of pride and tolerance” to support the rights the LGBT (Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender) community, amid tight security.
‘Not here for decoration’: Thai transgender lawmakers make history in Parliament
Bangkok: Smiling broadly, Tanwarin triumphantly cast her vote for Prime Minister as the first transgender MPs enter Parliament in Thailand, where tolerance for the LGBT community is not matched by understanding or opportunity in public life.
In a sign of that enduring gap, the elderly speaker called for “Mr Tanwarin” to come forward in a vote late on Wednesday that saw former junta chief Prayut Chan-O-Cha elected as premier with the help of a bank of 250 appointed senators. Tanwarin Sukkhapisit, a lawmaker for the progressive anti-junta Future Forward Party (FFP), is one of four transgender MPs in the house — pioneers in a society where discrimination in education, employment and at home persists. “I am not here for decoration,” she told AFP. “I want to write a new political history for Thailand.”