'Arabs want to annihilate us': Facebook suspends Netanyahu chatbot for 'inciting hate' against Palestinians

'Arabs want to annihilate us': Facebook suspends Netanyahu chatbot for 'inciting hate' against Palestinians
The chatbot, part of Netanyahu's online election campaign, greeted viewers with an automated message in Hebrew telling voters that 'Arabs want to annihilate us all - women, children and men'.
2 min read
12 September, 2019
Anti-Palestinian and hardline nationalist rhetoric has long dominated Israeli election campaigns. [Getty]

Facebook has suspended a chatbot operated by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's official page after it was found to violate hate speech policies.

The chatbot, part of the online election campaign for Netanyahu's Likud Party, greeted viewers with an automated message in Hebrew telling voters that "Arabs want to annihilate us all - women, children and men".

The message implored voters not to support the formation of a left-wing government that it said would include Palestinian-Israeli lawmakers.

It also boasted that Netanyahu would bring a "right-wing policy of a Jewish state, security, and a strong Israel".

Facebook said the chatbot had violated its "hate speech policy" and suspended it for 24 hours.

The head of the Palestinian Joint List party, Ayman Odeh, welcomed the move.

"Yesterday we went directly to Facebook and demanded that they stop giving a platform to Netanyahu's dangerous incitement and today we are seeing the results. We won against the camera project and we won the incitement too. There is an effect," he said, according to the Times of Israel.

Read more: The kingmakers in Israeli politics: The ultra-orthodox and the far-right parties

The Likud party on Wednesday tried to distance Netanyahu from the content of the chatbot, calling it a "mistake by a campaign worker" which had not been approved by the prime minister.

Anti-Palestinian and hardline nationalist rhetoric has long dominated Israeli election campaigns in a bid to influence voters.

Earlier this week, Netanyahu issued a deeply controversial pledge to annex the Jordan Valley in the occupied West Bank if re-elected in 17 September polls.

He also attempted to introduce controversial legislation to allow party representatives to bring cameras to polling stations in a bid to intimidate Palestinian voters, but the bill was voted down.

Netanyahu famously warned on election day in 2015 that Palestinian-Israelis were "heading to the polling stations in droves", in an attempt to energise his right-wing base.

Netanyahu along with his right-wing and religious allies won a majority of seats in April polls, but he failed to form a coalition and opted for an unprecedented second election in five months.

He is again facing a difficult challenge from ex-military chief Benny Gantz and his centrist Blue and White alliance.

Right-wing nationalist votes will be key to Netanyahu's efforts to continue his reign as Israel's longest-serving prime minister.

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