The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Netanyahu hits back at ‘Turkey’s dictator Erdogan’

-

JERUSALEM: Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu yesterday slammed Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan as a ‘dictator’ and ‘a joke’ in the latest exchange of insults between the two leaders.

Turkey on Tuesday denounced Netanyahu’s ‘blatant racism’ after he called Israel the nation-state of ‘the Jewish people’ only, not all its citizens.

Netanyahu’s initial comment had come amid an online spat sparked by Israel’s right-wing firebrand culture minister Miri Regev, ahead of April elections and subsequent­ly joined by Israeli Hollywood star Gal Gadot.

Regev, a member of Netanyahu’s right-wing Likud party, had in a TV interview warned voters not to support its main rival because it would ally with Israeli Arab parties – a highly unlikely scenario.

Israeli model and actress Rotem Sela responded on Instagram, asking: “When the hell will someone in this government convey to the public that Israel is a state of all its citizens and that all people were created equal?”

Netanyahu reacted with his own Instagram message, telling Sela: “Israel is not a state of all its citizens.”

“According to the basic nationalit­y law we passed, Israel is the nationstat­e of the Jewish people – and only it,” he said, referring to a deeply controvers­ial piece of legislatio­n passed last year.

Gadot, star of ‘Wonder Woman’, jumped to Sela’s defence.

“Love your neigh bo ur as yourself ,” Gadot wrote on Instagram late Sunday.

“This isn’t a matter of right or left. Jew or Arab. Secular or religious,” she wrote.

“It’s a matter of dialogue, of dialogue for peace and security and of our tolerance of one towards the other.”

On Tuesday, Turkish presidenti­al spokesman Ibrahim Kalin weighed in on Netanyahu’s comments.

Writing on Twitter in both Turkish and English, he said: “I strongly condemn this blatant racism and discrimina­tion.”

Netanyahu struck back in a statement from his office early yesterday.

“Turkey’s dictator Erdogan attacks Israel’s democracy while Turkish journalist­s and judges fill his prisons,” it read. “What a joke!” Turkey and Israel have tense relations and Erdogan, who regards himself as a champion of the Palestinia­n cause, is a vocal critic of Israeli policies.

The two countries in 2016 ended a six-year rift triggered by the Israeli storming of a Gaza-bound ship that left 10 Turkish activists dead and led to a downgradin­g of diplomatic ties.

Netanyahu has been accused by critics of demonising Israeli Arabs, who make up some 17.5 per cent of the population, in a bid to boost right-wing turnout for April polls.

He is facing a tough challenge from a centrist political alliance led by former military chief of staff Benny Gantz and ex-finance minister Yair Lapid.

After the polls, he will also face a hearing to defend himself against corruption allegation­s which have dogged his campaign. — AFP

 ??  ?? Benjamin Netanyahu
Benjamin Netanyahu
 ??  ?? Tayyip Erdogan
Tayyip Erdogan

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia