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UK Bans Israel Tourism Ad For Implying Jerusalem Is Part Of The Coun

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  • UK Bans Israel Tourism Ad For Implying Jerusalem Is Part Of The Coun

    UK BANS ISRAEL TOURISM AD FOR IMPLYING JERUSALEM IS PART OF THE COUNTRY

    Breitbart
    March 5 2015

    Britain has banned an Israeli government tourism advertisement for
    implying that the Old City of Jerusalem is part of Israel, AFP reports.

    The newspaper ad shows a picture of the walls outside of the Old
    City of Jerusalem with the caption, "Israel has it all." The text
    on the image read, "Everyone falls for the Old City, with its narrow
    (and car-free) alleys, teeming pilgrims and bazaar-like buzz."

    The UK's Advertising Standards Authority (ASA) rejected the ad on
    the grounds that it was misleading. The ASA said that the title of
    the advertisement, "Israel Land of Creation," and its references to
    the historical sites in the Old City was "misleading" in insinuating
    that the lands were part of recognized Israel.

    The ASA explained in a statement: "We understood that the status of
    the territories in question was the subject of much international
    dispute. We therefore considered the presentation of the ad would
    mislead consumers into believing that the Old City of Jerusalem was
    part of Israel and into taking a transactional decision that they
    would otherwise not have taken."

    However, Israel's Government Tourist Office denied that the tourism
    campaign ever implied that the Old City was entirely part of the
    modern State of Israel.

    Today's Old City is divided into four quarters: the Jewish Quarter,
    Christian Quarter, Muslim Quarter, and Armenian Quarter. During the
    Arab-Israeli Six-Day War in 1967, in which Arab forces failed in
    their attempt to annihilate the early Jewish state and its people,
    Israeli troops successfully retook possession of the Old City of
    Jerusalem from Jordanian forces.

    The ASA ruling added, "They said the ad did not seek to make
    a political statement and believed it would be inappropriate for
    it to do so. Rather, they believed the leaflet provided practical
    information that made clear that visitors to the places referred to
    in the ad, such as the Old City of Jerusalem, could only be visited
    via traveling to Israel."

    http://www.breitbart.com/national-security/2015/03/05/uk-bans-israel-tourism-ad-for-supposedly-implying-jerusalem-is-part-of-the-country/

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