When Prime Minister Netanyahu visited the Dutch Parliament,
he shook hands with Dutch parliamentarians. When he put out his hand to Turkish
born Dutch parliamentarian Tunahan Kuzu, the latter refused to take it. Kuzu
leads a small minorities’ party, Denk, which was founded after he was expelled
from the Labor Party, the ticket on which he was chosen in the last elections.
In a short video, Netanyahu called the incident a typical illustration of who
wants peace in the Middle East and who doesn’t. This project sets out to demonstrate that media coverage can degrade a country's image by using selective news without context. It uses the Netherlands as an example. It is a reaction to the frequent misrepresentations of Israel in many ways in major media, including those of the Netherlands.
Thursday, September 8, 2016
Netanyahu ridicules ill-mannered Dutch-Turkish Parliamentarian.
When Prime Minister Netanyahu visited the Dutch Parliament,
he shook hands with Dutch parliamentarians. When he put out his hand to Turkish
born Dutch parliamentarian Tunahan Kuzu, the latter refused to take it. Kuzu
leads a small minorities’ party, Denk, which was founded after he was expelled
from the Labor Party, the ticket on which he was chosen in the last elections.
In a short video, Netanyahu called the incident a typical illustration of who
wants peace in the Middle East and who doesn’t.
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