Yossi Beilin
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| Yossi Beilin | |
|---|---|
| Date of birth | 12 June 1948 |
| Knesset(s) | 12th, 13th, 14th, 15th, 17th (current) |
| Party | Meretz-Yachad |
| Former parties | Alignment, Labour, One Israel |
| Gov't roles (current in bold) |
Minister of Economics and Planning Minister in the PM's Office Minister of Justice Minister of Religious Affairs |
Dr. Yossef ("Yossi") Beilin (Hebrew: יוסי ביילין) (born in Petah Tikva, June 12, 1948) is a leftist Israeli politician, Knesset member, and a former deputy foreign minister, justice minister within the Israeli Labour Party and the former chairman of Meretz-Yachad. He is best known for his involvement with the Oslo accords, the Geneva Initiative and the Israeli-Palestinian peace process in general. His signed expositions on Israeli political and social current events are frequently carried in the Israeli left of centre daily newspaper Haaretz.
The majority of Beilin's political career, from 1977 until 2003 is associated with the Labour party. He served as its spokesman from 1977 until 1984, at which point his career in the public service began. He was a Cabinet Secretary until 1986 and a Director General of the Foreign Ministry until 1986-1988. In 1988 he was elected to the Knesset in which he was to serve until 1999. During this period he was Deputy Finance Minister (1988-1990) and Deputy Foreign Minister (1992-1995) under Shimon Peres. Following that he served in two minor ministerial positions, Minister of Economy and Planning (1995) and Minister in the Office of the Prime Minister (1996). After Labour's loss of the election in 1996 he was an unsuccessful candidate for the party leadership in a contest won by Ehud Barak. When Barak formed a government in 1999 Beilin served as the Minister of Justice until the party lost power in 2001.
In 2003, increasingly tainted by his leftist image, he was given an unrealistically low position on the Labour party slate which offered him little chance for election as a Labour Knesset member. Together with Yael Dayan they promptly quit Labour and joined Meretz, where they were received enthusiastically, but without realistic positions either. In the primaries held in Meretz after the general elections, Beilin was elected chairman of the party. As chairman, Beilin's popularity remained low, with the party wining only 5 Knesset seats in the 2006 elections. Eventually, in late 2007 Beilin withdrew his candidacy for the party leadership, after it became clear that Haim Oron was leading in the polls. Oron went on to win the internal elections held on 18 March 2008 to become Meretz's new chairman.[1]
Beilin's association with the peace process is the most notable element in his career. Backed by Shimon Peres, he initiated secret negotiations (then illegal according to Israeli law) in 1992 which led to the Oslo accords in 1993. Together with Mahmoud Abbas, another architect of the Oslo accords, he signed in 1995 the Beilin-Abu Mazen agreement, a 'non paper' of guidelines for a permanent solution to the conflict. During 1992-1995 he headed the Israeli delegation to the Multilateral peace process working groups. In 2001 he participated in the Israeli-Palestinian Taba talks and, the initiative that he is currently most famed for, signed the Geneva Accords with Yasser Abd Rabbo.
Beilin holds a soft capitalist agenda, which did not stop him from joining forces with the mainly socialist Meretz. He rarely speaks publicly on social issues, but instead focuses his efforts on promoting negotiations with the Palestinians. In fact, his victory over Meretz's own Ran Cohen was construed as a vote of Meretz electorate of giving precedence to the conflict over socioeconomic issues.
Beilin is also one of the founders and a current employee of the Economic Cooperation Foundation.
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[edit] Public perception
His long time involvement with Shimon Peres earned him the derogatory nickname "Peres' poodle" in the early 1990s, a term coined by Peres' political rival, Yitzhak Rabin. In recent years Peres and Beilin moved apart. Nowadays Beilin is more known for his involvement with the Oslo accords and the Geneva initiative — some would say that he came to epitomize the culture, reviving them more than any other current politician.
[edit] Controversy of cremations taking place in Israel
In response to Shas's proposed legislation that would prohibit the practice of cremation in the State of Israel after the hidden location of Israel's first crematorium was uncovered and soon after set ablaze, Yossi Beilin announced he had instructed in his will that his body be cremated after he died.[2]
In addition he was quoted as saying,
"The Shas leadership is relegating the country to darker days, when citizens will be prevented even from deciding what will be done with their body after they die."[2]
As head of the Knesset's secular lobby, he vowed to fight against the Shas initiative to outlaw cremation in Israel. [2]
[edit] Notes
[edit] See also
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