Welcome to DU! The truly grassroots left-of-center political community where regular people, not algorithms, drive the discussions and set the standards. Join the community: Create a free account Support DU (and get rid of ads!): Become a Star Member Latest Breaking News Editorials & Other Articles General Discussion The DU Lounge All Forums Issue Forums Culture Forums Alliance Forums Region Forums Support Forums Help & Search

Little Tich

(6,171 posts)
Wed Apr 13, 2016, 02:25 AM Apr 2016

Peres refuses to meet with leader of far-right Austrian Freedom Party

Source: Jerusalem Post

Heinz Christian Strache, arrived in Israel on Monday, visited Yad Vashem.

Some 16 years after Israel recalled its ambassador to Vienna to protest the inclusion of Jorg Haider’s far-right Freedom Party in Austria’s government, Haider’s heir as head of the party – Heinz Christian Strache – arrived in Israel on Monday and toured Yad Vashem on Tuesday.

Foreign Ministry spokesman Emmanuel Nahshon stressed, however, that Strache – invited by some Likud activists – was not invited by the government, which had nothing to do with his trip.

In 2000, then prime minister Ehud Barak said that Haider was not welcome in Israel. This time, former president Shimon Peres, whom Strache asked to meet, refused the request.

The Foreign Ministry’s policy is to not have contact with members of the Freedom Party.

Read more: http://www.jpost.com/Israel-News/Politics-And-Diplomacy/Peres-refuses-to-meet-with-leader-of-far-right-Austrian-Freedom-Party-450996

Note: In order to illustrate where in the political spectrum the Freedom Party stands, it's worth mentioning that one of the slogans the party used in the 2010 Vienna city elections was: "Zu viel Fremdes tut niemandem gut." (Too many foreigners [or more literally: Too much foreign] does no one good)
(https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heinz-Christian_Strache)

1 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
Highlight: NoneDon't highlight anything 5 newestHighlight 5 most recent replies
Peres refuses to meet with leader of far-right Austrian Freedom Party (Original Post) Little Tich Apr 2016 OP
Likud Lawmaker Meets With Far-right Austrian Leader Despite Official Israeli Policy Israeli Apr 2016 #1

Israeli

(4,306 posts)
1. Likud Lawmaker Meets With Far-right Austrian Leader Despite Official Israeli Policy
Fri Apr 15, 2016, 04:14 AM
Apr 2016
Israel views the Austrian Freedom Party as a racist faction with neo-Nazi elements within it. MK Avi Dichter, after meeting with its leader Heinz-Christian Strache: 'Most of the Arabs I've met are also not my cup of tea.'

Barak Ravid Apr 14, 2016

The leader of the extreme right-wing Austrian Freedom Party, Heinz-Christian Strache, on a visit to Israel this week, met with MK Avi Dichter (Likud), Haaretz learned from David Lasar, who is close to Strache and was present at the meeting. The meeting took place on Wednesday in Ramat Gan, despite the Foreign Ministry's policy to boycott the visit.

Dichter told Haaretz that the meeting with Strache only dealt with the fight against terrorism. "They wanted to know how we deal with terrorism," he said. "It was an interesting meeting." The Likud lawmaker noted that he did not consulted with the Foreign Ministry or the Prime Minister's Office before agreeing to meet with Strache.

"I'm not a member of cabinet, I'm Member of Knesset and if I want to meet someone I decide it myself," he added. "I'm the son of Holocaust survivors and I'm in touch with quite a few people whose opinions I don't like. Most of the Arabs I've met are also not my cup of tea," Dichter, a former Shin Bet chief, said. "I think it's not easy to decide to refrain from meeting with someone who could be the next Austrian Chancellor - [Even] with his past – there should be a good reason for that.

Strache, who arrived in Israel on Monday night, told Channel 1 TV on Wednesday that he had met with government ministers during the course of his visit, but declined to mention names, saying that he had promised confidentiality. The Foreign Ministry announced on Strache’s arrival that he was not here as a guest of the government, and that the government had no connection with the visit.

In fact, Strache was invited to Israel by the Likud party. The official invitation, which Strache posted on his Facebook page, was signed by Eli Barda, head of the Likud’s foreign relations department. The guest’s escort in the country, and the one who set up his meetings, was former MK Michael Kleiner, president of the Likud tribunal. Also involved in the visit and the organization of meetings was former minister Rafi Eitan. Kleiner confirmed to Haaretz that Strache had met with government ministers, but he too refused to identify them, emphasizing that the meetings were of a personal nature.


Haaretz has learned that the event at which Strache met Likud ministers was a reception in his honor on Tuesday night, at the Herzliya Pituach home of David de la Rosa, former Colombian ambassador in Israel. A source familiar with the details of the event noted that Kleiner invited several Likud ministers and lawmakers to the event. Some responded favorably and were in attendance that evening.

Strache is the heir and one-time disciple of Jörg Haider, the late leader of the Austrian Freedom Party, notorious for his anti-Semitic attitudes and support for Nazism. When his party joined the Austrian government in 2000, Israel recalled its ambassador from Vienna in protest; the diplomatic crisis was not resolved until 2003.  

The Israeli government views the Freedom Party as a racist party, tainted by anti-Semitism and xenophobia, and even including neo-Nazi elements within it. The official policy of the Foreign Ministry toward the party is one of complete sanction, and it bans meetings between government representatives and party members. For example, former president Shimon Peres rejected Strache’s request for a meeting in light of the unequivocal opposition of the Foreign Ministry, believing that such a meeting would grant legitimacy to the visit.

In recent years, some Israeli right-wingers, among them West Bank settler leaders, have pushed for a change in policy toward Strache and his party. Their primary rationale is his anti-Muslim views and support for Israeli settlement-building. Strache’s supporters in Israel argue that the Foreign Ministry’s attitude toward the Austrian leader and his party is wrong, outdated, and based on ignorance.

Source: http://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/1.714458

You should also read here :

An alliance of hate

The ties Likud is trying to build with extremist right-wing groups in Europe is an attempt to find common ground over both’s hatred for Islam. This away, Europe’s racist right wing is no longer considered anti-Semitic, while the Israeli Right gets more support for settlement building and the violence against Palestinians in the West Bank and Gaza. Likud, whose members often do not hesitate to label President Barack Obama an “anti-Semite,” does not think twice before it grants legitimacy to a racist political party.

This is an alliance of hatred, which mocks the very idea of Israel’s war against global anti-Semitism. Unfortunately, Jewish-Israeli nationalism, as we have seen, did not shy from forming rotten alliances with the most deplorable groups. It continues to do so today.


Source : http://972mag.com/an-alliance-of-hate-the-israeli-rights-ties-to-european-facism/118580/
Latest Discussions»Issue Forums»Israel/Palestine»Peres refuses to meet wit...