Yosef Harish
Yosef Harish (Hebrew: יוסף חריש, born 1923) was an Israeli jurist who served as the country's Attorney General between 1986 and 1993.
Biography
Born in Jerusalem in 1923, Harish was educated in a yeshiva. He joined the Haganah, and volunteered for the British Army during World War II, before serving as an officer in the 1948 Arab-Israeli War.
He studied for Bachelor's and Master's degrees in law at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, and began working as a magistrate. He became a judge in the Tel Aviv District court in 1969, and later became its vice-president. In 1986 Harish was appointed Attorney General. His predecessor Yitzhak Zamir had resigned after refusing to abandon an investigation into the activities of the head of Israel's GSS.[1] A year later Harish set up the Landau Commission to investigate methods used by the GSS.
He left the post on 1 November 1993, and was replaced by Michael Ben-Yair. Today he lives in the Ramat Aviv area of Tel Aviv.
References
- ^ Israel replaces attorney general Anchorage Daily News, 2 June 1986