European parliament head ‘hurt’ by MK ‘extremists’ snub

Martin Schulz [Wikimedia Commons]

European Parliament President Martin Schulz called the Israeli lawmakers who walked out during his Feb. 12 speech to the Knesset “extremists.”

Schulz told the German newspaper Die Welt Feb.13 that he was “surprised and hurt by the harsh reaction because the speech I delivered was pro-Israel.”

The Jewish Home party members who walked out in the middle of the address are “extremists,” he said.

The lawmakers left after Schulz criticized Israel using incorrect facts, and party head Naftali Bennett has called on Schulz to apologize for his misstatements.

“Naturally, I cannot only say things that would be pleasant to everyone’s ears. I must also present the controversial side of the things,” Schulz told Die Welt, adding that he “presented to the Knesset the position of the European parliament.”

Speaking in his native German, Schulz accused Israel of allowing its citizens to use four times the amount of water per person that is allocated to Palestinians, a figure that reportedly is highly inflated. He also criticized the Israeli blockade of Gaza.

Schulz also said there is no European economic boycott of Israel and that the European Union will always stand by Israel.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu later criticized Schulz for what he called “selective hearing.”

“He said that he visited Ramallah and heard from Palestinian youths that an Israeli citizen uses four times as much water as a Palestinian,” Netanyahu said of Schulz. “According to both the Palestinian water authority and our data, this number is not true and is significantly smaller.

“The parliament president said, in all honestly, ‘I didn’t check.’ But that didn’t prevent him from casting aspersions.”