Gulf News

German minister appalled by Netanyahu threat

Prime minister to cancel meeting with Gabriel if he meets with Israeli rights group

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German Foreign Minister Sigmar Gabriel said yesterday it would be “regrettabl­e” if Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu called off a meeting between the two in Israel, as he threatened to do if the foreign minister met with an Israeli rights group.

Gabriel said it would be a “remarkable event, to put it mildly”, if Netanyahu cancelled their planned talks, arguing it was normal to talk to civil society representa­tives.

“Imagine if the Israeli Prime Minister ... came to Germany and wanted to meet people critical of the government and we said that is not possible ... That would be unthinkabl­e,” he told Germany’s ZDF television.

A German foreign ministry spokeswoma­n had said the minister was due to meet civil society groups but declined to identify them.

Germany sees itself as one of Israel’s closest allies, but the legacy of the Holocaust means their ties are highly charged, and in recent years Berlin has been increasing­ly critical of Israel’s colony plans.

Israeli media said Gabriel would meet with “Breaking the Silence”, a group that collects testimonie­s from Israeli veterans about the military’s treatment of Palestinia­ns in the occupied West Bank and the influence it says Israeli colonisers have on the army’s actions.

Israeli Environmen­t Minister Zeev Elkin, a confidante of Netanyahu, told Israel radio it was “unthinkabl­e” for a minister to meet groups working against the country he was visiting.

“The time has come for us to put an end to this situation in which anyone can come and meet groups that act against Israel ... you are entitled to meet whoever you want, but don’t expect that all the leaders of the state will stand in line to meet you,” he said. In February, Netanyahu ordered the reprimand of the Belgian ambassador after Belgian Prime Minister Charles Michel met with representa­tives of Breaking the Silence and B’tselem, another rights group, during his visit to the region.

Both organisati­ons have become popular targets for right-wing politician­s, who accuse them of damaging Israel’s reputation abroad and putting Israeli soldiers and officials at risk of prosecutio­n.

Gabriel, a Social Democrat who has spoken publicly about a rift with his father, a convinced Nazi, is visiting the Middle East to press for a two-state solution to end the conflict between Israelis and Palestinia­ns.

 ?? AFP ?? Sigmar Gabriel
AFP Sigmar Gabriel
 ?? AFP ?? Benjamin Netanyahu
AFP Benjamin Netanyahu

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