City
Epaper

Reports of spat with Netanyahu misleading: Germany

By IANS | Updated: April 19, 2024 14:35 IST

Berlin, April 19 (IANS/DPA) Germany's Foreign Office is disputing as "misleading" an Israeli media report about a heated argument ...

Open in App

Berlin, April 19 (IANS/DPA) Germany's Foreign Office is disputing as "misleading" an Israeli media report about a heated argument between Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and German Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock over the situation in the Gaza Strip.

"Key points in this account of the hour long meeting between Foreign Minister Baerbock and Prime Minister Netanyahu are wrong and misleading," the Foreign Office wrote in a post to X, formerly Twitter, on Friday.

The German ambassador to Israel, Steffen Seibert, made the same statement without offering specifics.

A journalist from the Israeli TV station Channel 13 had previously reported that Baerbock reacted negatively when shown footage from the Gaza Strip depicting markets filled with food during a meeting in Israel on Wednesday.

Baerbock reportedly responded by pointing out widespread hunger in Gaza and offered to show Netanyahu pictures of starving children on her cell phone.

Netanyahu is said to have replied that she should look at photos of the markets and also of people on the beach, as there were no cases of hunger there.

According to the Channel 13 report, Baerbock advised him not to show the pictures as they did not correspond to the reality in the Gaza Strip.

Netanyahu, in turn, is said to have loudly replied that the photos were real and that Israel was not showing an invented reality like the Nazis. In 1942, for example, the Nazis had a film crew shoot a propaganda film with scenes of everyday life in the Warsaw ghetto, where Jews were forced to live in abysmal conditions.

Baerbock reportedly asked Netanyahu whether he was accusing doctors working in Gaza, as well as the international media, of lying about the situation.

The images of the market stalls filled with fruit and vegetables were published this week by COGAT, an Israeli agency within the Defence Ministry responsible for contacts with the Palestinian Territories and humanitarian aid.

The images show markets in the north of the coastal area, which is particularly affected by food shortages. According to COGAT and aid organizations, some food recently arrived in the area, although aid workers and residents say it remains far from enough.

--IANS/DPA

dan/

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

Cricket"In the last over, we could've bowled one good ball": MI skipper Harmanpreet Kaur reflects on their loss against RCB

International'Will be hitting them very hard where it hurts...': Trump warns Iran, says US watching situation closely

InternationalPakistan PM thanked me for saving 'minimum 10 million lives': US president repeats claims of settling India-Pakistan conflict

EntertainmentHow Satyajit Ray guided a 14-year-old Sharmila Tagore into cinema

International'You're dealing with us directly, not Venezuela', Trump tells global oil and gas execs

International Realted Stories

InternationalUnion Agriculture Minister Shivraj Singh Chouhan holds bilateral meeting with Fijian counterpart to deepen India-Fiji cooperation in the agriculture sector

International"Will not allow China's hand to reach into Taiwan": President Lai

International'Such communal incidents need to be dealt with swiftly, firmly': MEA responds to recurring attacks on minorities in Bangladesh

InternationalTrump to meet top global oil companies' executives; to "exclusively" discuss Venezuelan Oil, security

InternationalNepal restricts cash transactions above NPR 500,000 at a time