Facebook temporarily bans Israeli PM's son over posts
- Published
A son of Israeli PM Benjamin Netanyahu says Facebook blocked him for 24 hours amid a spat over several posts railing against Palestinians and Muslims.
Last week, Facebook removed a post by Yair Netanyahu in which he called for "avenging the deaths" of two Israeli soldiers killed by a Palestinian.
A post in which the 27-year-old said he would prefer if "all Muslims leave the land of Israel" was also taken down.
He called Facebook "thought police". But it accused him of hate speech.
Mr Netanyahu drew widespread criticism last year after .
He also faced a public backlash over his reported failure to pick up his dog's poo.
On Sunday, , calling the move "unbelievable".
His tweet included a screenshot of a deleted Facebook post that criticised the site for taking down his call to avenge the deaths of the soldiers who were shot and killed in the occupied West Bank on Thursday.
In it he warned that "there will never be peace with those monsters in the form of men that have called themselves 'Palestinians' since 1964" [the founding date of the Palestine Liberation Organisation (PLO)].
"The thought police of the radical progressives at Facebook have reached me as well!" .
"Hamas, Hezbollah and the Iranian regime have official pages on Facebook. There are also endless pages calling for the destruction of Israel and the murder of Jews. Thousands of violent and extreme left-wing posts against me and my family, including threats of physical violence and immoral murder threats.
"All of these do not violate Facebook's community rules."
A Facebook spokesperson said Mr Netanyahu had "posted several posts which included hate speech", .
"Due to that, this content was removed from our platform as we would do for anyone posting similar content about any protected characteristic.
"Following this, Yair Netanyahu decided to share a screenshot of a removed post and called people to share it - which is the same as writing the hate speech all over again."
The spokesperson said Facebook would continue to enforce its policy.
"In addition, we want to emphasise that we never remove posts for criticising the company and the claim that we are censoring criticism of the company on the platform is plainly untrue."
- Published9 January 2018
- Published4 August 2017