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BBC News Online: World: Middle East


Friday, 21 December, 2001, 03:52 GMT

Israeli channel pulls Arafat TV game


Two in a Boat television game
The television game was considered too light-hearted
By the BBC's Caroline Hawley in Jerusalem

An Israeli cable television company, Golden Channels, has pulled the plug on a interactive game which features Yasser Arafat and Ariel Sharon as cartoon characters, arguing that the current situation between Israelis and Palestinians is no laughing matter.

The game presents caricatures of the Palestinian and Israeli leaders - Yasser Arafat with a hooked nose and enormous lips and Ariel Sharon with a bulging belly and huge cheeks.



The game itself is very funny, but we felt it crossed a line
Orly Dekel, Golden Channels

The two men, who in real life have not met since Ariel Sharon came to power, are shown sticking their tongues out and flashing victory signs at each other.

Called Two In A Boat, it is a memory game in which the player chooses one of the characters and then has to imitate the movements of the other in the correct order.

Failure earns an order "Go to Gaza!" - an Israeli slang expression meaning "get lost" that derives from the Gaza Strip's reputation as a miserable place.

But the main complaint of Golden Channels, the cable station that was going to run the game, is that it presents Yasser Arafat in too favourable a light, at a time when most Israelis hold the Palestinian leader responsible for attacks that have claimed more than 240 Israeli lives since the latest conflict began in September 2000.

Palestinian children confront an Israeli tank

"Yasser Arafat comes out looking too soft," said Orly Dekel, vice-president of marketing for Golden Channels.

"And we don't think Yasser Arafat's actions are soft. The game itself is very funny, but we felt it crossed a line. When people are dying, it seems wrong."

Golden Channels says it is now asking the company to drop the Yasser Arafat character and replace him with an Israeli politician instead.

The decision comes a week after the Israeli cabinet declared Yasser Arafat irrelevant, but officials at Zoe, the company that made the game, do not believe there is a link.

"Maybe it was just too sensitive," said the director of Zoe, Alon Shtruzman.

"It does relate to a delicate situation. But we thought the game was a nice joke."


Related to this story:
Israeli tanks pull back (20 Dec 01 | Middle East) Hamas may end suicide attacks (20 Dec 01 | Middle East) Arafat pleads for talks with Israel (16 Dec 01 | Middle East) Palestinian police shut out militants (16 Dec 01 | Middle East) Palestinian leader's house raided (13 Dec 01 | Middle East) Arafat says Sharon has him marked (12 Dec 01 | Middle East)


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