The Jerusalem Post

Chilean Jews tell president to okay anti-hate law

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RIO DE JANEIRO (JTA)– Jewish officials have met Chile’s president to request her commitment to approve a bill to protect citizens from acts motivated by hatred and discrimina­tion.

“We have worked with different bodies, as a community, proving that there is a political, parliament­ary and social consensus to adopt a regulatory framework of this nature,” Shai Agosin, head of the Chilean Jewish Community, told President Michelle Bachelet during a meeting last week at Palacio de la Moneda in Santiago.

The meeting focused on the importance that the Jewish community has been giving to the “law against incitement to violence.” It has undergone several setbacks in its legislativ­e discussion noting that the absence of a legal norm has led to an increase in acts of discrimina­tion, violence and hatred in the country, without any sanction.

“Today it is gratuitous to insult a Muslim, a Jew or an immigrant,” Agosin said. “Any minority can be violated, and therefore it is a priority to have an update of the Anti-Discrimina­tion Law, which is absolutely insufficie­nt.”

In April, the Palestinia­n Federation of Chile threatened the country’s Jewish umbrella organizati­on over its support of Israel’s decision to bar a Chilean boycott activist from entering the Jewish state.

“We warn the Jewish leadership not to play with fire,” read a statement by the Palestinia­n federation regarding its executive director, Anuar Majluf, a prominent anti-Israel activist who was refused entry by the Israeli government on April 10.

The country’s Jewish community had released a statement defending Israel’s ban on Majluf after the Chilean Foreign Ministry condemned the move.

In February, a senior official of an entity tied to the Chilean government threatened to expel Israeli tourists from hostels in the country after a group was removed from a national park.

One month before, a young Jewish and gay activist wearing a T-shirt emblazoned with the flag of Israel was attacked at a Santiago park and suffered several razor cuts perpetrate­d by three men who carried neo-Nazi symbols.

Chile is home to some 15,000 Jews. The country is also believed to host the largest Palestinia­n community outside of the Arab world, with more than 300,000 members.

 ?? (Reuters) ?? MICHELLE BACHELET
(Reuters) MICHELLE BACHELET

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