
by Emmitt Barry, Worthy News Correspondent
(Worthy News) – Two senior aides to Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu were arrested Monday over alleged financial ties to the Qatari government. As part of the “Qatargate” probe, the Attorney General has requested Netanyahu submit to questioning. In a video statement, Netanyahu dismissed the investigation as politically driven, claiming his aides are “being held hostage.”
Although the case is under a gag order until April 10th, Israeli media have reported that the two Netanyahu aides arrested are Eli Feldstein and Yonatan Urich, both public relations officials in the Prime Minister’s Office.
In a brief statement, police confirmed that Urich and Feldstein were arrested as suspects in the investigation. After their interrogation, they were taken into custody and are set to appear Tuesday at the Rishon LeZion Magistrate’s Court, where police will seek to extend their detention, according to Hebrew media.
Earlier in March, Feldstein and Urich were questioned on suspicions of bribery, fraud, money laundering, and contact with a foreign agent. Due to a court-imposed gag order, no further details have been released.
After being questioned by police in the Qatargate scandal, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu released a video dismissing the investigation as politically driven, claiming his two arrested aides “are being held hostage.”
In the Telegram video, Netanyahu says he immediately cleared his schedule when asked to testify. “The police said they needed four hours, but after an hour, they ran out of questions,” he says.
He adds, “I said ‘Show me something,’ and they did not have anything,” accusing authorities of conducting “a political investigation.”
Referring to his detained aides, Jonatan Urich and Elie Feldstein, Netanyahu says, “I understood that this was a political investigation, but I did not know how much, and that they are holding [them] as hostages.”
He goes on to claim, “It’s a political witch hunt. It’s only for one purpose, to prevent the dismissal of the head of the shinbet, as if there is some affair here. There is nothing. And also to bring down the right-wing prime minister. A political investigation? A political witch hunt? That’s what this is. There is nothing else here.”
Copyright 1999-2025 Worthy News. This article was originally published on Worthy News and was reproduced with permission.
More Worthy News
An international group of influential climate activists demand a new global treaty to phase out fossil fuels to prevent the “assassination of humanity,” despite growing concerns that there aren’t yet enough alternatives available to sustain global economic growth.
A coalition of American Christian leaders gathered on the steps of the U.S. Capitol on Friday to pray and “thank President Donald J. Trump” for reportedly designating Nigeria as a “Country of Particular Concern” (CPC) over the killing of thousands of Christians by Islamic groups.
The student revival movement that has been shaking campuses across America surged again Tuesday night as more than 6,000 students packed J.S. Dorton Arena at North Carolina State University to worship Jesus Christ, hear the Gospel, and respond to the call of salvation.
The U.S. Justice Department came under mounting pressure to release all files related to deceased convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, despite strong opposition from the White House and signs that U.S. President Donald J. Trump is reluctant to make the documents fully public.
France paid an emotional tribute Thursday to the 130 people killed ten years ago during a night of coordinated attacks by Islamic State extremists who targeted cafés, restaurants, and the Bataclan concert hall in Paris.
The Trump administration on Nov. 13 finalized a sweeping rollback of Biden-era restrictions on oil and gas development in Alaska, restoring access to more than 13 million acres of the National Petroleum Reserve–Alaska (NPR-A) in a move officials say will bolster U.S. energy security and revive North Slope communities.
The United States on Thursday urged the UN Security Council to support Washington’s draft resolution establishing an International Stabilization Force (ISF) to secure postwar Gaza and guide the territory into a future “free from Hamas.” The measure — a central pillar of President Donald Trump’s broader Middle East peace framework — has been crafted with input from Qatar, Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Turkey, and the United Arab Emirates.