Ariel Atias | |
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אריאל אטיאס | |
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Ministerial roles | |
2006–2009 | Minister of Communications |
2009–2013 | Minister of Housing & Construction |
Faction represented in theKnesset | |
2006–2014 | Shas |
Personal details | |
Born | (1970-11-13)13 November 1970 (age 54) Tel Aviv, Israel |
Ariel Atias (Hebrew:אריאל אטיאס; born 13 November 1970) is an Israeli politician who served as a member of theKnesset forShas, and as the country'sMinister of Housing and Construction. He was also manager of Shas' kosher supervision organization,Badatz Beit Yosef. On 22 June 2014, he handed his resignation from the Parliament, citing his departure from the political scene.[1]
Born inTel Aviv to parents who were Jewish immigrants fromMorocco.
Atias was first elected to theKnesset on Shas' list in the2006 elections. In May 2006, he was promoted to the position ofMinister of Communications in the lastgovernment.
He retained his seat in the2009 elections, having been placed second on the Shas list, and was appointed Minister of Housing and Construction in the Netanyahu government.[2] In June 2009, Atias called for thesegregation of Israel's Arab population from Jewish Israelis, saying that achieving it was "a national duty ... populations that should not mix are spreading ... I don't think that it is appropriate [for them] to live together".[3][4][5]
Atias retained his seat again in the2013 Knesset elections, but Shas was not included in the coalition, resulting in Atias losing his ministerial post. He resigned from the Knesset in June 2014 in order to take a break from politics, and was replaced byYoav Ben-Tzur.
As the Minister of Communications, Atias created a major cellular reform in Israel, which led to Israel's connectivity fees being one of the lowest in the OECD.[6] He also created the number portability reform in which a user is given the rights to his cellular number, thus allowing users more freedom to move from one company to another, encouraging competition between cellular companies[7] Another one of his initiatives as Minister of Communications was opening the market forMobile virtual network operators.[8]
In 2007, he tried to get a law passed that would censor violence, sex, and gambling on the internet.[9]
Atias is married, has four children, and lives inJerusalem.[10]