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It’s not just the Israeli government, but the Israeli media as well which seems to have rolled out the red carpet for Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s official visit – the first ever by a sitting Indian PM.
Live updates, videos and lengthy opinion pieces hailing the "historic visit" featured on prominent Israeli news outlets.
The top story on the English and Hebrew newspaper Haaretz is dedicated to the Modi-Netanyahu meet with live updates. Other than that, an opinion piece on the website, titled, ‘Why India's Narendra Modi Can Afford to Ignore the Palestinians’, reads:
The Jerusalem Post features the ‘groundbreaking’ visit as a top story along with an opinion piece titled, “Welcome PM Modi”.
An opinion piece on the news portal reads:
Another piece in the paper has been headlined “Netanyahu should not build up 'impossible expectations' during modi visit”
An excerpt from the piece reads:
Through this visit, India is ‘coming out of the closet’ on its relationship with Israel, Seth Frantzman, Senior Editor at The Jerusalem Post, told BloombergQuint, “Modi in some ways as a Hindu and a right wing Prime Minister has many commonalities with the more Jewish and more centre-right in Israel.”
Israeli journalists are also watching out for any statements Modi makes on the Israel- Palestine conflict, he added.
The Times of Israel also features Modi’s visit prominently along with an interview by Israeli TV station Channel 2, in which PM Modi recommends Yoga as a solution to the conflict in the Middle East.
Earlier, when Modi’s visit had just been announced, a headline in the Times of Israel read India PM to skip Palestinian Authority in upcoming Israel trip.
The paper had quoted a senior official in Jerusalem as saying:
Meanwhile, Palestinians in the Hamas-controlled Gaza strip are less than pleased with what they perceive as a snub by India.
“He should have come to Palestine. We believe India has good cooperation with Palestine, and we wanted him to come to Gaza as well,” 53-year-old Fathi Tobail told The Indian Express.
Twenty-five-year-old Ali Mohammad Abushbak, who wants to study mass communication at New Delhi’s Jamia Milllia Islamia said: “A lot of people believe the story of Israel, but what about the Palestine story? We are feeling discriminated by this approach of the Indian government.”
Back home in India too, there are detractors of Modi’s visit to Israel. Githa Hariharan, a supporter of the ‘Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions’, a global campaign aimed at putting political pressure on Israel to end the oppression of Palestinians, told Al Jazeera:
“India has, over recent years, got more and more implicated in the Israeli war machine that occupies, kills, and discriminates through apartheid policies against the Palestinians in the [occupied] West Bank and Gaza, as well as its own Arab citizens,” she added.
(With inputs from BloombergQuint.)
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