Ministry of National Security (Israel)

The Ministry of National Security (Hebrew: המשרד לביטחון לאומי, Arabic: وزارة الأمن القومي), formerly Ministry of Internal Security and Ministry of Public Security, is a government agency of Israel.

Ministry of National Security
המשרד לביטחון לאומי

Emblem of Israel
Agency overview
Formed1948
JurisdictionGovernment of Israel
Minister responsible
Websitewww.mops.gov.il

The Ministry of National Security is the statewide law enforcement agency and oversees the Israel Police, the Israel Prison Service and the Israel National Fire and Rescue Services, Israel Border Police, National Headquarters for the Protection of Children on the Internet, National Authority for Community Safety and the Authority for Witness Protection.

The current Minister of National Security is Itamar Ben-Gvir.

History edit

The Minister of National Security (Hebrew: שר לביטחון לאומי, Sar LeVitahon Leumi) is the political head of the ministry.

Until 1995 the position was known as Minister of Police (Hebrew: שר המשטרה, Sar HaMishtara). The first Minister of Police, Bechor-Shalom Sheetrit, a former policeman, held this position from May 1948 until a month before his death in January 1967. He served in fourteen governments, making him the country's longest continually serving minister.

The post was abolished after Menachem Begin became Prime Minister in 1977, but was reinstated in 1984 when Shimon Peres was elected.

In December 2022, the position was renamed again, changing from Minister of Public Security (Hebrew: שר לביטחון פנים, Sar LeVitahon Pnim) to Minister of National Security. This move has been criticized as an unnecessary expense for taxpayers.[1]

In February 2024, Ben-Gvir's appointment as minister was challenged but Israel's High Court of Justice turned down the petition to nullify this appointment.[2]

#MinisterPartyGovernmentTerm startTerm endNotes
Minister of Police
1Bechor-Shalom SheetritSephardim & Oriental Communities
Mapai
Alignment
P, 1, 2, 3, 4,
5, 6, 7, 8, 9,
10, 11, 12, 13
14 May 19482 January 1967
2Eliyahu SassonAlignment
Labor Party
Alignment
13, 142 January 196715 December 1969
3Shlomo HillelAlignment15, 16, 1715 December 196920 June 1977
4Haim Bar-LevAlignment21, 22, 2313 September 198415 March 1990
5Roni MiloLikud2411 June 199013 July 1992
6Moshe ShahalLabor Party2513 July 199222 November 1995
Minister of Internal Security
Moshe ShahalLabor Party2622 November 199518 June 1996
7Avigdor KahalaniThird Way2718 June 19966 July 1999
8Shlomo Ben-AmiOne Israel286 July 19997 March 2001
9Uzi LandauLikud297 March 200128 February 2003
10Tzachi HanegbiLikud3028 February 20036 September 2004
11Gideon EzraLikud
Kadima
306 September 20044 May 2006Initially appointed Acting Minister, with position made permanent on 29 November 2004
12Avi DichterKadima314 May 20061 April 2009
13Yitzhak AharonovichYisrael Beiteinu32, 331 April 200914 May 2015
14Yariv LevinLikud3414 May 201525 May 2015
14Gilad ErdanLikud3425 May 201517 May 2020
15Amir OhanaLikud3517 May 202013 June 2021
16Omer Bar-Lev[3]Labor Party3613 June 202129 December 2022
Minister of National Security
17Itamar Ben-GvirOtzma Yehudit3729 December 2022

Deputy ministers edit

#MinisterPartyGovernmentTerm startTerm end
1Gideon EzraLikud297 March 200128 February 2003
2Yaakov EdriLikud
Kadima
3010 March 200318 January 2006
3Gadi YevarkanLikud3517 May 202013 June 2021
4Yoav SegalovichYesh Atid3613 June 202129 December 2022


Agencies edit

Unit for Public Inquiries and Complaints edit

The Unit for Public Inquiries and Complaints operates under the aegis of the Internal Audit Division of the Ministry of Internal Security. It handles complaints from citizens against the Israel Police, Prison Service, National Fire and Rescue Authority, Authority for the War on Drugs and Alcohol and Division for Licensing and Inspection of Firearms. In accordance with the Internal Audit Law, the main duties of the division are to ensure that audited entities abide by the law and carry out their duties in an efficient, financially sound, corruption-free manner.

References edit

  1. ^ "Itamar Ben-Gvir's ministry name change cost Israelis up to NIS 3 million". The Jerusalem Post | JPost.com. 22 May 2023. Retrieved 3 March 2024.
  2. ^ "Israel's Top Court Rejects Petition to Nullify Ben-Gvir's Appointment as Minister". Haaretz. Retrieved 3 March 2024.
  3. ^ "After year of deadlock and days of delays, Knesset swears in new Israeli government". Haaretz. Retrieved 13 May 2021.

External links edit