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Netanyahu's campaign warns Israeli voters: 'Arabs want to annihilate us all'

Rights group Adalah reported the incident to the electoral commission for incitement against Palestinian citizens of Israel
Ayman Odeh, head of the Arab Joint List, takes a picture of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in the Knesset (AFP)

A rights group filed a legal complaint on Wednesday after media revealed that Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's Facebook page asked followers to send warning messages to potential voters saying: “Arabs wants to annihilate us all; women, children and men.”

Adalah, a legal group fighting discrimination against Palestinian citizens of Israel, filed an incitement complaint to the Israel Central Elections Committee (CEC) and to Israel's attorney general.

The complaint, filed on behalf of the Arab Joint List political coalition, urges "CEC Chairman Justice Hanan Melcer to issue a restraining order banning Netanyahu from further illegal dissemination of racist election propaganda, and on Israeli Attorney General Avichai Mandelblit to open a criminal investigation into the Israeli prime minister's incitement to racism".

"Netanyahu's most recent statement demonstrates a marked increase in his racial incitement against Arab citizens of Israel," Adalah said in a statement.

Israeli newspaper Haaretz revealed on Wednesday that Netanyahu was running a campaign through Facebook Messenger using chatbot technology to send pre-written messages.

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An automated popup message asks followers if they wish to volunteer in Netanyahu’s election campaign, before providing a suggested script to convince potential voters to give their vote to the prime minister's Likud.

The message suggests warning voters against the "dangerous" threat of Palestinian citizens of Israel and the Israeli left and claims Yair Lapid and Benny Gantz’s centrist Blue and White party will join forces with the Arab Joint List.

“On Tuesday,” the message says, “you can determine the future of our nation. Prime Minister Netanyahu brings a right-wing policy of a Jewish state, security, and a strong Israel.

“We cannot have a dangerous left-wing government with Lapid, [Ayman] Odeh, Gantz and [Avigdor] Lieberman in a week's time.”

It adds that it would be “a secular left-wing weak government that relies on Arabs who want to destroy us all, women, children and men, and will enable a nuclear Iran that will eliminate us”, in reference to Palestinian citizens of Israel  - often referred to in Israel as "Arabs".

Netanyahu’s office said after the revelation of the chatbot that it was a “staffer's mistake”.

The head of the Arab Joint List coalition in the Israeli parliament, Ayman Odeh, slammed Netanyahu for his comments on Palestinian citizens of Israel.

“Netanyahu is a psychopath with no red lines and he wants to see blood," Odeh wrote on Twitter, before referring to ongoing corruption investigations involving the prime minister. "This despicable thug will continue to spill our blood as long as he believes it will help him escape prison.”

Odeh said in his tweet that he reported the automated popup message to Facebook “to stop Netanyahu’s racist and dangerous incitement against the Arab population”.

After Netanyahu delivered a speech on Wednesday at the Knesset, Israel's parliament, Odeh approached and filmed him with his mobile phone, reportedly telling Netanyahu, “You are a liar and you know that you are lying,” according to Israel’s army radio.

The heated language and tit-for-tat statements come as Israel heads to the ballot box on Tuesday, 17 September.

During legislative elections in 2015, Netanyahu used a similar tone to drive voters to the ballot box, warning in a video that an Israeli right-wing government was in “danger” and that Palestinian citizens of Israel were going to polling stations "in droves".

The Blue and White Party is running neck-and-neck with Likud in the polls, meaning that turnout among Palestinian citizens of Israel could be a crucial factor in the final outcome.

Palestinian citizens of Israel make up 21 percent of the population and generally vote for their own parties belonging to the Arab Joint List coalition, or for centrist and left-wing parties.

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