Difference between revisions of "Martin Schlaff"

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Martin Schlaff is an influential Austrian billionaire who has been active on the Israeli political scene. The extent of his connections are highlighted by the fact that he flew in former Isareli cabinet minister Aryeh Deri to oversee the circumcision of his newborn son Haim Yudel.<ref>Gidi Weitz, [http://www.haaretz.com/magazine/special-report-the-schlaff-saga/the-schlaff-saga-1.312804 The Schlaff saga], ''Haaretz'', 7 September 2010</ref>   
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Martin Schlaff is an influential Austrian billionaire who has been active on the Israeli political scene.  
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==Friends in High Places==
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The extent of his connections are highlighted by the fact that he flew in former Isareli cabinet minister Aryeh Deri to oversee the circumcision of his newborn son Haim Yudel. Also in attendance were Israeli Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman, Ariel Sharon’s personal physician, Boleslav Goldman, and the Schlaff family's New York business partner Shlomo Obstfeld who according to Haaretz jumped from a 19th-floor apartment in Manhattan to his death under mysterious circumstances only a few weeks later.
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<ref>Gidi Weitz, [http://www.haaretz.com/magazine/special-report-the-schlaff-saga/the-schlaff-saga-1.312804 The Schlaff saga], ''Haaretz'', 7 September 2010</ref>   
 
==Resources==
 
==Resources==
 
===External Resources===
 
===External Resources===

Revision as of 21:00, 12 September 2010

Martin Schlaff is an influential Austrian billionaire who has been active on the Israeli political scene.

Friends in High Places

The extent of his connections are highlighted by the fact that he flew in former Isareli cabinet minister Aryeh Deri to oversee the circumcision of his newborn son Haim Yudel. Also in attendance were Israeli Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman, Ariel Sharon’s personal physician, Boleslav Goldman, and the Schlaff family's New York business partner Shlomo Obstfeld who according to Haaretz jumped from a 19th-floor apartment in Manhattan to his death under mysterious circumstances only a few weeks later. [1]

Resources

External Resources

References

  1. Gidi Weitz, The Schlaff saga, Haaretz, 7 September 2010