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Guardian admits error in publishing Netanyahu cartoon

November 27, 2012 11:35

ByJennifer Lipman, Jennifer Lipman

1 min read

The Guardian has admitted that a cartoon about the Israel-Gaza conflict portraying a grotesque Benjamin Netanyahu as a puppet master controlling William Hague and Tony Blair "inevitably" echoed "past antisemitic usage of such imagery".

Although the paper initially chose not to comment on the image, which sparked accusations from the Community Security Trust that cartoonist Steve Bell had employed an established "antisemitic trope" in his drawing, the matter was addressed by Readers' Editor Chris Elliot last weekend.

Writing that Mr Bell tended to give offence in his work, Mr Elliott noted the attacks on the cartoon were recorded "on websites that are pro-Israel and aimed at the Jewish community". He also referred to other occasions on which Mr Bell has used the theme of a puppet master, in cartoons featuring Presidents Mubarak and Putin.

Mr Elliott said it was an "incontrovertible fact" that in the 1930s and 1940s, Nazi propaganda about Jews featured "a grotesquely drawn Jew shown as a puppeteer, with exaggerated features"."