AFP, Jerusalem :
Thousands of Israelis took to the streets in four major cities Saturday night to protest the impending approval of a multibillion dollar gas deal with US energy giant Noble Energy.
Protesters in Haifa, Tel Aviv, Jerusalem and Beersheba held signs against the “gas theft”, waving Israeli flags and chanting “this is our gas.”
Demonstrators in Tel Aviv were pushed back by police after attempting to block the traffic on a major artery.
Police said approximately 4,000 people participated in the demonstration, which follows the Sunday resignation of Economy Minister Aryeh Deri.
Opponents say authorities would be handing Noble and its Israeli partner Delek an effective monopoly over the state’s natural gas resource.
A major deal to exploit offshore gas reserves in the eastern Mediterranean has been stuck for almost a year due to the objection of the anti-trust authority and Deri’s refusal to overrule it.
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu assumed control over the economy ministry and said he would press ahead with the deal.
Israel has been trying to extract offshore gas since the discovery of the Tamar and Leviathan fields in 2009 and 2010. While extraction has begun in Tamar, the far larger Leviathan has been hit by a series of bureaucratic delays.
Thousands of Israelis took to the streets in four major cities Saturday night to protest the impending approval of a multibillion dollar gas deal with US energy giant Noble Energy.
Protesters in Haifa, Tel Aviv, Jerusalem and Beersheba held signs against the “gas theft”, waving Israeli flags and chanting “this is our gas.”
Demonstrators in Tel Aviv were pushed back by police after attempting to block the traffic on a major artery.
Police said approximately 4,000 people participated in the demonstration, which follows the Sunday resignation of Economy Minister Aryeh Deri.
Opponents say authorities would be handing Noble and its Israeli partner Delek an effective monopoly over the state’s natural gas resource.
A major deal to exploit offshore gas reserves in the eastern Mediterranean has been stuck for almost a year due to the objection of the anti-trust authority and Deri’s refusal to overrule it.
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu assumed control over the economy ministry and said he would press ahead with the deal.
Israel has been trying to extract offshore gas since the discovery of the Tamar and Leviathan fields in 2009 and 2010. While extraction has begun in Tamar, the far larger Leviathan has been hit by a series of bureaucratic delays.