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Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s government is now trying to walk back the tweet calling the border wall President Donald Trump has ordered a “great idea.”
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu waded into the clash between Mexico and the United States on Saturday, tweeting out his opinion on the efficacy of walls.
Netanyahu referred to the recently installed system of sensors and fences constructed on the country's border with Egypt install to curb an influx of immigrants crossing from various African nations.
Israel has also built a wall dividing the West Bank from East Jerusalem.
The 30-foot-high concrete wall has drawn international criticism from the likes of the Red Cross, been the subject of legal cases before the International Court of Justice, and been the site of numerous protests. Israeli officials though say that the wall has helped reduce the number of suicide attacks launched against Israel since its construction.
David Silverman / Getty Images
“The Mexican Foreign Ministry told the Israeli government, through its Ambassador to Mexico, its deepest dismay, rejection and disappointment over Prime Minister Netanyahu's Twitter message regarding the construction of a border wall,” the statement read. “Mexico is a friend of Israel, and must be treated as such by its Prime Minister.”
A senior Israeli official told Israeli newspaper Haaretz that Mexico was “enraged by the statement” that Israel had put out.
Via gob.mx
The statement also noted that Foreign Minister Luis Videgaray had visited the Israeli embassy the day before to commemorate the International Day of Remembrance of the Holocaust.
“Mexico and Israel share the historic rejection of racism and xenophobia, and Mexico will continue to work closely with Israel to combat any form of discrimination in the world,” the statement continues.
“The Mexican Chancellery reiterates its respect and admiration for the Jewish people, and especially for the great Mexican Jewish community, which every day contributes to the construction of a freer, more just and more prosperous Mexico,” it concluded.
Ronaldo Schemidt / AFP / Getty Images
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