Facebook Suspends Netanyahu's Page over Hate Speech Against Arabs

 Benjamin Netanyahu blamed a staffer for the offending post. Photograph: Amir Cohen/Reuters
Benjamin Netanyahu blamed a staffer for the offending post. Photograph: Amir Cohen/Reuters
TT
20

Facebook Suspends Netanyahu's Page over Hate Speech Against Arabs

 Benjamin Netanyahu blamed a staffer for the offending post. Photograph: Amir Cohen/Reuters
Benjamin Netanyahu blamed a staffer for the offending post. Photograph: Amir Cohen/Reuters

Facebook has suspended a chatbot on Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's official page after it breached hate speech policy by posting a message warning against Arabs who “want to destroy us all”.

Facebook said on Thursday it had suspended the automated chat function on the page, which is run by Netanyahu’s ruling Likud party, for 24 hours.

“After careful review of the Likud campaign’s bot activities, we found a violation of our hate speech policy,” Facebook said in a statement.

"We also found that the bot was misusing the platform in the time period allowed to contact people. As a result, we temporarily suspended the bot for 24 hours. Should there be any additional violations, we will continue to take appropriate action," the statement added.

According to AFP, Netanyahu has long faced accusations from critics that he has demonised Israel's 1.4 million Arab citizens with his political rhetoric.

Last week, Netanyahu pushed for last-minute legislation that would allow party officials to bring cameras into polling stations.

Critics said it was a clear attempt to intimidate Israel’s Arab population into not voting



Lebanon: George Abdallah Released after 40 Years in French Jail

TOPSHOT - This photograph taken during a visit of French leftist party La France Insoumise (LFI)'s MP Andree Taurinya shows pro-Palestinian Lebanese activist Georges Ibrahim Abdallah looking on in his prison cell in Lannemezan, southwestern France, on July 17, 2025, after an appeals court ordered his release.(Photo by Valentine CHAPUIS / AFP)
TOPSHOT - This photograph taken during a visit of French leftist party La France Insoumise (LFI)'s MP Andree Taurinya shows pro-Palestinian Lebanese activist Georges Ibrahim Abdallah looking on in his prison cell in Lannemezan, southwestern France, on July 17, 2025, after an appeals court ordered his release.(Photo by Valentine CHAPUIS / AFP)
TT
20

Lebanon: George Abdallah Released after 40 Years in French Jail

TOPSHOT - This photograph taken during a visit of French leftist party La France Insoumise (LFI)'s MP Andree Taurinya shows pro-Palestinian Lebanese activist Georges Ibrahim Abdallah looking on in his prison cell in Lannemezan, southwestern France, on July 17, 2025, after an appeals court ordered his release.(Photo by Valentine CHAPUIS / AFP)
TOPSHOT - This photograph taken during a visit of French leftist party La France Insoumise (LFI)'s MP Andree Taurinya shows pro-Palestinian Lebanese activist Georges Ibrahim Abdallah looking on in his prison cell in Lannemezan, southwestern France, on July 17, 2025, after an appeals court ordered his release.(Photo by Valentine CHAPUIS / AFP)

One of France's longest-held inmates, the pro-Palestinian Lebanese activist Georges Ibrahim Abdallah, will be released and deported on Friday, after more than 40 years behind bars for the killings of two diplomats.

At around 3:40 am (01:30 GMT), a convoy of six vehicles left the Lannemezan penitentiary with lights flashing, AFP journalists saw, though they were unable to catch a glimpse of the 74-year-old grey-bearded prisoner.

Abdallah was detained in 1984 and sentenced to life in prison in 1987 for his involvement in the murders of US military attache Charles Robert Ray and Israeli diplomat Yacov Barsimantov in Paris.

The Paris Court of Appeal had ordered his release "effective July 25" on the condition that he leave French territory and never return.

He had been eligible for release since 1999, but his previous requests were denied as the United States -- a civil party to the case -- consistently opposed him leaving prison.

Inmates serving life sentences in France are typically freed after fewer than 30 years.

Once out of prison, Abdallah is set to be transported to the Tarbes airport where a police plane will take him to Roissy for a flight to Beirut, according to a source close to the case.

Abdallah's lawyer, Jean-Louis Chalanset, visited for a final time on Thursday. "He seemed very happy about his upcoming release, even though he knows he is returning to the Middle East in an extremely tough context for Lebanese and Palestinian populations," Chalanset told AFP.

AFP visited Abdallah last week after the court's release decision, accompanying a lawmaker to the detention center.

The founder of the Lebanese Revolutionary Armed Factions (FARL) -- a long-disbanded Marxist anti-Israel group -- said for more than four decades he had continued to be a "militant with a struggle".

The appeals court in February noted that Abdallah "had not committed a violent action since 1984" and that Abdallah "today represented a past symbol of the Palestinian struggle".

The appeals judges also found the length of his detention "disproportionate" to the crimes and given his age.

Abdallah's family said they plan to meet him at Beirut airport's "honor lounge" before heading to their hometown of Kobayat in northern Lebanon where a reception is planned.