Netanyahu apologizes to Arab Israelis for Election Day remarks

Published March 23rd, 2015 - 06:34 GMT
Al Bawaba
Al Bawaba

In a meeting with representatives of minority communities in Israel on Monday, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu apologized for the remarks that he made on Election Day about Arab Israeli voters. 

"I know that the things I said a few days ago hurt some citizens in Israel, the Arab Israeli citizens," Netanyahu said. 

"This was not my intention and I am sorry," he said.  

Netanyahu's Election Day remarks have garnered extensive criticism. 

“The Right-wing government is in danger. Arab voters are going en masse to the polls. Left-wing NGOs are bringing them on buses,” the prime minister said last week. 

Netanyahu said Monday that as prime minister he makes enormous investments in minority communities which proves the opposite of his comments last week. 

The prime minister said foreign elements outside of Israel should not be allowed to intervene in Israeli democracy

In the controversial statement on Election Day, Netanyahu said "funding from foreign governments to get more Israeli Arabs to vote worked, which means all Right-wing voters must make sure to go to the polls."

Netanyahu told the gathered community leaders on Monday that he saw himself as the prime minister of every one of them, "without any difference in religion, race, or sex." 

"I see in every Israeli citizen a partner in the building of a flourishing and safe state of Israel for all," Netanyahu remarked. 

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