Israel condemns black partition walls around its pavilions at Paris Air Show
Israel's Ministry of Defence has condemned the erection of black partition walls around its defence industry pavilions at the Paris Air Show, calling the move "outrageous and unprecedented" and demanding an immediate reversal by French authorities and event organisers.
The walls appeared overnight ahead of the air show's opening Monday, visually isolating Israeli booths from dozens of other international exhibitors. Israeli officials say the move followed a last-minute demand from organisers to remove offensive weapons systems from display - a request they rejected.
"The French are hiding behind supposedly political considerations to exclude Israeli offensive weapons from an international exhibition - weapons that compete with French industries," the ministry said in a statement Monday, calling the action "ugly and improper."
06:44
A French appeals court ruled Friday against activist groups who sought to block Israeli companies from participating in the show due to the war in Gaza. Despite the legal green light, Israel says it was effectively censored.
Sylvain Pavillet, a lawyer working with the air show organisers, said the final decision on who is allowed to exhibit lies with the French government, not the show itself.
"The fair is not the one who decides which countries are allowed to go to the show or not," he told The Associated Press. "That decision belongs to the government. We are not a state. We are a commercial company."
The Paris Air Show, held at Le Bourget Airport, is one of the world's largest and most prestigious events for the aerospace and defence industry.
"The French are hiding behind supposedly political considerations to exclude Israeli offensive weapons from an international exhibition - weapons that compete with French industries," the ministry said in a statement Monday, calling the action "ugly and improper."
Israeli Weapons Censored In Paris As Airstrikes Continue In Gaza And Conflict With Iran Deepens
A French appeals court ruled Friday against activist groups who sought to block Israeli companies from participating in the show due to the war in Gaza. Despite the legal green light, Israel says it was effectively censored.
Sylvain Pavillet, a lawyer working with the air show organisers, said the final decision on who is allowed to exhibit lies with the French government, not the show itself.
"The fair is not the one who decides which countries are allowed to go to the show or not," he told The Associated Press. "That decision belongs to the government. We are not a state. We are a commercial company."
The Paris Air Show, held at Le Bourget Airport, is one of the world's largest and most prestigious events for the aerospace and defence industry.
Popular from World
- Trump abruptly leaves G-7 amid speculation US will bust Iranian bomb-making facility with bunker-buster
- ‘Immediately evacuate Tehran’: Donald Trump slams Iran for ignoring nuclear deal; US skips G7’ de-escalation call
- 'Pakistan will attack Israel with nuclear missile': Top Iranian official; can Shaheen-3 reach Tel Aviv?
- 'Pushing us to nuclear brink': Israel PM Netanyahu accuses Iran of pushing 'forever war'; watch video
- Watch: Thousands of Iranians try to flee Israel attacks; cause massive traffic jams on Tehran highway
end of article
Trending Stories
- Converting inches to feet: A student-friendly guide with real-life applications
- 'Immediately evacuate Tehran': Trump's big warning amid Iran-Israel conflict; to leave G7 summit early
- Couple gives up seats for others, lives to tell the tale
- TCS deployment policy: 225 billing days mandatory, bench time capped at 35 days
- Fourth scare in 36 hours: Air India Express flight takes U-turn to Delhi; was on way to Ranchi
- 'Pakistan will attack Israel with nuclear missile': Top Iranian official; can Shaheen-3 reach Tel Aviv?
- Mumbai's newly-inaugurated rail overbridge has three lanes, no divider and no pedestrian space; commuters question planning
Featured in world
- 'Agree with Trump': Kremlin on US President's 'excluding Russia from G8 big mistake' remark; calls G7 'useless'
- Expats empty-handed after job offers on visit visas: What every UAE jobseekers need to know
- Explained: Why Qatar Airways cancelled its Major Boeing order and returned to Airbus
- Bible camp bust: 88 children removed in Iowa raid; teen’s calls sparks human trafficking investigation
- Who was Ali Shadmani? Iran's wartime chief of staff, Khamenei's close aide killed in Israeli strikes
- A decade later: Indian diaspora cheers on as PM Modi arrives in Canada for G7 summit
Top Trends
Up Next
Start a Conversation
Post comment