| New York Times Forced to Correct Anti-Israel Editorial 
 Editorial board errs on claim that Netanyahu was silent on murder of teen
 
 http://freebeacon.com/culture/new-york-times-forced-to-correct-anti-israel-editorial/
 July 9, 2014
 
 The New York Times  has issued a correction to its claim that Israeli Prime Minister  Benjamin Netanyahu took days to condemn the murder of Arab teenager  Mohammed Abu Khdeir, when he actually responded immediately to what he  called “the abominable murder.”
 
 The New York Times  was called out by the Committee for Accuracy in Middle East Reporting  in America (CAMERA) for its false characterization of Netanyahu.
 
 CAMERA wrote in the  Times of Israel that Netanyahu had actually commented multiple times on the murder, nearly a week prior to the New York Times false statement.
 
 Subtitled “Can Israeli and Palestinian Leaders End the Revenge  Attacks?”, the editorial ought to have been particularly precise in  reporting the leaders’ respective words and deeds. And, yet, the  author/s grossly erred: “On Sunday, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of  Israel, after days of near silence, condemned that killing and promised  that anyone found guilty would ‘face the full weight of the law.’”
 
 Netanyahu did not remain silent for days concerning the murder of  Muhammad Abu Khdeir. The Israeli prime minister spoke out against the  killing of Abu Kheir from July 2, the very same day of the murder.  As The Times’ own Isabel Kershner  reported:  “On Wednesday, after the body of the Palestinian teenager was found in  the woods, the prime minister called on Israelis to obey the law, and  asked investigators to quickly look into what he called ‘the abominable  murder.’”
 
 The next day on July 3, speaking at the home of U.S.  Ambassador Daniel Shapiro for a July 4 celebration, Netanyahu again  condemned the murder as “a despicable crime” and pledged that everything  was being done to find the criminals.
 
 A firework celebration  was canceled at the event out of respect to the victims of senseless  murders of Khdeir and the murder of three Israeli teens by Hamas.
 
 The following  correction has been added from the New York Times editorial board:
 
 Correction: July 9, 2014
 
 An  article  on Monday about the arrest of six Israelis in the killing of a  Palestinian teenager referred incorrectly to Prime Minister Benjamin  Netanyahu’s response to the killing of Muhammad Abu Khdeir. On the day  of the killing, Mr. Netanyahu’s office issued a statement saying he had  told his minister for internal security to quickly investigate the  crime; it is not the case that “days of near silence” passed before he  spoke about it. The error was repeated in an editorial on Tuesday.
 
 The phrase “after days of near silence” has also been removed from the online version of the editorial.
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