The delegation of European Union (EU) to the Israeli occupied lands has cancelled an event over participation of far-right minister, Itmar Ben Gvir.
EU delegation rejects event over participation of far-right Israeli minister
9 May 2023 - 13:08
The delegation of European Union (EU) to the Israeli occupied lands has cancelled an event over participation of far-right minister, Itmar Ben Gvir.
The EU delegation in Tel Aviv had been scheduled to host a reception marking Europe Day on Tuesday. However, following a meeting of EU ambassadors, it decided to cancel the event.
Top official said in a Twitter message that he decided to cancel the diplomatic reception to reject offering a platform to someone whose views contradict the values the EU stands for.
Foreign Minister Eli Cohen said Ben Gvir had been assigned to attend the event “not as a representative of the Jewish Power party … but to represent the government of Israel”.
Ben Gvir, who currently serves as Israel's minister of national security and also heads the far-right Jewish Power party, is a hardline Jewish settler in the occupied West Bank with past convictions for support for “terrorism” and incitement against Palestinians.
He was recently given the approval to form a “national guard” whose units would work alongside Israeli police and military and deal with what he called the “civil unrest” such as “disturbances” or pro-Palestinian protests.
Since last year, Ben Gvir has provoked controversy both in Israel and internationally for pushing for hardline reforms to the judiciary and security.
“It’s a shame that the EU, which pretends to represent democratic values and multiculturalism, behaves with undiplomatic gagging,” Ben Gvir said, as quoted by the Associated Press.
The act of protest by the EU’s delegation against Ben Gvir, a member of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s government, comes just days before the 75th anniversary of the Nakba - a term used to describe the forced displacement of hundreds of thousands of Palestinians in the lead-up to the establishment of Israeli regime in 1948.
The EU also made its decision just weeks after European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen was slammed for comments saying Israel makes “the desert bloom” when marking its 75th “independence” day.
The Palestinian Authority's foreign ministry said the comment is an “anti-Palestinian racist trope” that amounts to the erasure of the Palestinian people.
The cancellation of Tuesday's celebration could cause a diplomatic dispute between Israel and the EU, which have already had strained relations due to Israel's actions in the occupied West Bank.
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