flights bound for Israel were instead heading to Mecca

Min-Fadhli-Rabii

Junior Member
:salam2:


Brit airline glitch takes Mideast conflict to new heights'Wiping Israel' off Brit airline's map stirs furor


Angry Israeli passengers complained to British BMI airline that the Jewish state was wiped off the inflight map, which showed flights bound for Israel were instead heading to Mecca.

But the airline denied any anti-Israel agenda and insisted there was a simple explanation: the planes were recently bought from a bankrupt charter company that flew mainly to Muslim countries.

"For this reason the inflight entertainment system in the two planes was made to adapt to the passengers flying to and from those destinations and therefore the map showed mainly places holy to Islam," BMI said in a statement.

" I intend to contact BMI chairman Nigel Turner in London and ask for some clarifications... it is unacceptable that we are wiped off the map "
Gideon Sitterman, Israeli Transport MinistryBMI, which started operating low-cost flights to Israel more than a year ago, denied it had any ulterior motive in showing the Israel-free maps.

"If BMI had any political agenda in order not to anger neighboring countries, it would not have invested so much in the Tel Aviv line," it said.

But after furious passengers took up the issue with the authorities, an Israeli official made it clear that either the Jewish state appears on the maps or BMI disappears from its skies.

"Doing business with Israel has its advantages and disadvantages, but we will not agree to a situation where they hide the existence of Israel but want to do business with Israel," transport ministry director-general Gideon Sitterman told army radio.

"I intend to contact BMI chairman Nigel Turner in London and ask for some clarifications... it is unacceptable that we are wiped off the map," he said.

Foes of the Jewish state, including Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, have called for Israel to be "wiped off the map."

This is not the first time Israel has come head-to-head with the technologies interfering in its version of geography. Last year the Israeli city of Kiryat Yam sued Google over references to the Palestinian Nakba, or Catastrophe, appeared when users scrolled over former Arab cities on the Google Earth application.

http://www.alarabiya.net/articles/2009/04/30/71725.html
 

a_muslimah86

Hubbi Li Rabbi
Staff member
8:26 am (US central time)

My first laugh of the day!...

Zionist officials are like little children with sour manners who think the world revolves around THEM!...they're hilarious..they make me laugh OFTEN..I wonder if they know about how much *entertainment* they provide for people all around the world?..*they got nothin' on Garfield* (like we say in American slang)

:wasalam:
 

abubaseer

tanzil.info
Staff member
:salam2:

Lets take Good Omen from it.

Brits turning away from falsehood of Zionist and Jewish towards truth of Pristine Islaam...

:wasalam:
 

Min-Fadhli-Rabii

Junior Member
A good omen, isn't it? Truly the Lord works in mysterious ways!

The end is near for the Zionist. Run away while you still can.

Yes brother, and read this also.

Israel warns European critics

The Netanyahu government has yet to make clear how it will negotiate
Israel has told the European Union to stop criticising Benjamin Netanyahu's government or risk being excluded from future Middle East peace negotiations.

A foreign ministry official called EU envoys in Israel after a commissioner in Brussels suggested freezing a move to upgrade EU-Israeli relations.

The commissioner said Netanyahu should commit to talks with the Palestinians.

The warning comes ahead of the first European trip by Avigdor Lieberman, Israel's new foreign minister.

Israeli media say the warnings have been issued by the deputy director for European affairs at the Israeli foreign ministry, Rafi Barak. His main target the EU External Affairs Commissioner Benita Ferrero-Waldner.


If these declarations continue, Europe will not be able to be part of the diplomatic process

Rafi Barak


Is Israel heading for clash with US?
The UK embassy in Tel Aviv has confirmed it was contacted by Mr Barak but refused to disclose details of the conversation.

"We want the European Union to be a partner but it is important to hold a mature and discreet dialogue and not to resort to public declarations," Rafi Barak reportedly told diplomats, according to a report in Haaretz.

He concluded by "warning" that Europe's influence in the area would be undermined.

"Israel is asking Europe to lower the tone and conduct a discreet dialogue," Rafi Barak is quoted saying. "However, if these declarations continue, Europe will not be able to be part of the diplomatic process, and both sides will lose."

Correspondents say it is far from clear whether Ms Ferrero-Waldner was expressing an official view of the European Union towards Israel .

Israeli officials have told the BBC that they requested a month-long postponement of a ministerial-level meeting in May which discusses the EU-Israeli Association agreement regulating bilateral ties.

The postponement "is to allow the new government time to formulate its policies" before the meeting, foreign ministry officials said.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has so far refused to back the principle of a Palestinian state while Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman has said the Israeli-Palestinian peace process is a "dead end".

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/middle_east/8026941.stm
 
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