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Russia Today:



Israeli lawmakers  have voted in favor of a bill that would impose the death penalty on  “terrorists” who murder Israelis. Backed by Prime Minister Benjamin  Netanyahu and his hardline allies, the bill has been bitterly opposed by  Palestinians and foreign observers.



The death penalty bill  passed its first reading in the Israeli parliament by 55 votes to nine  on Wednesday. Most of the opposition – led by former Prime Minister Yair  Lapid – abstained from the vote in protest.



The bill was  authored by MP Limor Son Har-Melech and supported by Prime Minister  Benjamin Netanyahu and National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir. Both  Son Har-Melech and Ben-Gvir are members of the ‘Jewish Power’ party, a  radical Zionist faction that helped Netanyahu’s right-wing Likud party  back into power in last November’s elections.



Under the  legislation, anyone who “intentionally or out of indifference causes the  death of an Israeli citizen when the act is carried out from a racist  motive or hate to a certain public... and with the purpose of harming  the State of Israel and the rebirth of the Jewish people in its  homeland” shall face execution, with no chance of prison time.



The  law would apply in the West Bank, which although partially administered  by the Palestinian Authority, is subject to Israeli military law.



The  bill crosses “a clear red line as part of Israel’s slide into total  fascism,” Arab-Israeli political party Hadash Ta’al said in a statement.  "Today it is the Palestinians, tomorrow it will be the protestors on  the streets. Ben-Gvir will be easy on the trigger when it comes to  determining who is a terrorist."



The Palestinian Authority said  that the bill is “cruel, barbaric, and inhumane,” describing it as  “rooted in Jewish supremacy.” Its passage will lead to Palestinians  “arbitrarily and ceremonially being put on death row,” its statement  continued.



Thousands of Israelis gathered outside the country’s  parliament building in recent days to protest the bill, while opposition  poured in from abroad. Speaking after a meeting with Israeli Foreign  Minister Eli Cohen on Tuesday, German Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock  called the bill “particularly worrying,” given that Israel has not  executed anyone since Nazi war criminal Adolf Eichmann was hanged in  1962.