Tehran, IRNA – Israeli officials have blasted the Zionist regime’s supreme court’s decision to axe the amendment to the law that abolished the so-called reasonableness clause.

The court on Monday struck down the controversial plan to limit the powers of the judiciary to declare government decisions unreasonable, amid the regime’s war on the Gaza Strip.

Israel’s so-called national security minister, Itamar Ben-Gvir, called the ruling “a dangerous and anti-democratic event” that undermines the regime’s war on Gaza. 

While the regime's fighters are killed in Gaza every day, "the high court justices decided to weaken their spirit and undermine them first and foremost," he said.

Finance minister Bezalel Smotrich called the ruling “extreme, biased, and lacking in authority,” adding that “a red flag flies over it.”

The Zionist regime waged a devastating war on Gaza on October 7, after the Palestinian Hamas resistance movement carried out a surprise attack against the regime. Despite inflicting great damage on Gaza, the Zionist regime has failed to achieve its declared goal of eradicating Hamas.

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