UK Bans Ad Showing Occupied East Jerusalem as Israeli Territory

Thursday March 05, 2015 01:21 by IMEMC News & Agencies

A British advertising watchdog has banned an Israeli government tourism advertisement implying that the Old City of Jerusalem is part of Israel, a status unrecognized by the international community.

photo: Alternative Information Center (AIC)
photo: Alternative Information Center (AIC)

The newspaper brochure showed a panorama of the walled Old City with the text “Israel has it all”, and was ruled as misleading by the Advertising Standards Authority (ASA), which said it implied that UNESCO World Heritage Site was part of Israel.

The international community regards the Old City as occupied Palestinian territory, while the Tel Aviv regime has claimed it as part of its capital.

The dispute is an emotional subject, Al Ray reports, as the area contains places precious to Christians, Jews, and Muslims, including the Church of the Holy Sepulchre, Western Wall, and the Al Asqa Mosque.

Related: Abbas, Arab league, Denounce Israeli Attacks On Holy Sites

Following a complaint, the ASA ruled the title of the brochure “Israel Land of Creation” and references to Old City attractions was misleading and banned the advert from appearing again in its current form.

“We understood that the status of the territories in question was the subject of much international dispute,” the group further stated.

“We, therefore, considered the presentation of the ad would mislead consumers into believing that the Old City of Jerusalem was part of Israel and into taking a transactional decision that they would otherwise not have taken.”

The brochure included a photograph showing the golden Old City landmark and Muslim holy site, the Dome of the Rock, with the modern buildings of Western Jerusalem in the background. Text on the image read: “Everyone falls for the Old City, with its narrow (and car-free) alleys, teeming pilgrims and bazaar-like buzz.”

The Israeli Government Tourist Office denied that the brochure implied East Jerusalem and its Old City were part of the state of Israel. “They said the ad did not seek to make a political statement and believed it would be inappropriate for it to do so,” the ASA ruling stated.

“Rather, they believed the leaflet provided practical information that made clear that visitors to the places referred to in the ad, such as the Old City of Jerusalem, could only be visited via travelling to Israel.”

Israel occupied East Jerusalem in the Six Day War in 1967 and annexed it in 1982, but the international community does not recognize this annexation and considers it an occupied territory.