An editorial in an Israeli newspaper editorial has slammed New Zealand's media as having "blatant prejudice" against Israel following yesterday's story on a Christchurch earthquake victim being an alleged Mossad spy.
The Jerusalem Post has criticised the coverage of the story, broken by the Southland Times, about police fears Israeli agents may have exploited the February 22 earthquake in order to access police records.
"The far-fetched fiction disseminated by New Zealand's news outlets seizes on every Israeli facet of the episode - no matter how innocuous - as evidence of nefarious cloak-and-dagger schemes. It's being claimed that one of the Israeli casualties, Ofer Mizrahi, and three of his travel-mates, were Mossaud agents up to no good in Christchurch.
"But overactive imaginations are the least worrisome aspect of this tale. The fact is that the reports weren't woven from whole cloth. According to New Zealand's own premier, John Key, his country's Security Intelligence Service (SIS) and local police did indeed probe suspicions that the Israeli backpackers were Mossaud agents."
Mr Key acknowledged yesterday there had been an investigation, but had cleared the group of being Israeli spies. However, the Southland Times maintains the investigation is on going.