Despite hopes, Ariel University unlikely to open ‎medical school ‎

Ariel University is unlikely to open a new medical ‎school anytime soon although it had concrete plans to do so next fall, Israel Hayom learned Monday.‎

The university had to put its plans to inaugurate a medical ‎school on hold after Deputy ‎Attorney General Dina Silber ruled that an alleged ‎conflict of interest involving a member of ‎the Council for Higher Education‎'s Planning and ‎Budgeting Committee rendered her vote in favor ‎of the school invalid.‎

Ariel University was founded in 1982 as the Ariel University ‎‎Center of Samaria, a satellite of Bar-Ilan ‎‎University. In 2004, it became an independent public ‎‎college, and in 2012, it received full university ‎‎status, a decision that sparked controversy because ‎‎of its location over the Green Line. ‎

A ‎‎2013 ruling by the High Court of Justice upheld its ‎university status, and in July 2017, the Council for Higher Education ‎approved its plans to launch what would ‎have been Israel's sixth medical school by a ‎vote of 4-2, with one abstention.‎

About 4,000 students currently study medicine at ‎Israel's five medical schools: the Hebrew ‎University of Jerusalem, Tel Aviv University, Ben-‎Gurion University of the Negev, the Technion-Israel ‎Institute of Technology in Haifa, and Bar-Ilan ‎University's Faculty of Medicine in the Galilee.‎

Silber met recently with CHE heads to discuss the problem that budget ‎committee member‎ Dr. Rivka Wadmany-Shauman voted in ‎favor of the university's request despite an ‎apparent conflict of interest. ‎

Wadmany-Shauman was reportedly slated to teach at ‎the school.‎

CHE guidelines state that ‎committee members are barred from voting on issues ‎involving institutes in which they are employed or ‎involved, to avoid conflicts of interest.

Silber ruled that given the appearance of a tainted ‎vote, the CHE's Planning and Budgeting Committee would ‎have to vote on the matter again.

However, a majority may ‎prove difficult to achieve, given the controversial ‎nature of the school.‎

The issue has been complicated further by the announcement Monday of early elections to be held April 9. The election could inject political motivations into any decision by Education ‎Minister Naftali Bennett, who chairs the Council for ‎Higher Education. ‎

A statement by Bennett's office said the minister ‎‎"will study the decision and act accordingly."‎

Ariel University said in a statement that Wadmany-Shauman is ‎not a faculty member and does ‎not teach in any academic departments.

"Her ‎status was discussed by the [university's] ‎nominations committee and she was deemed a fellow professor. This status will come into force if and ‎when Dr. Wadmany-Shauman is given an academic ‎position at the university," ‎the statement said.

The Justice Ministry confirmed that Silber met with CHE ‎officials, saying it will make its final decision on ‎whether the original vote is valid "in the near ‎future."‎