Poland PM cancels Israel trip after Netanyahu\'s Holocaust comment

Poland PM cancels Israel trip after Netanyahu's Holocaust comment

IANS  |  Warsaw 

has cancelled a trip to following comments on the Holocaust by Israeli counterpart

He later issued a clarification saying he was not referring to the Polish nation or all Polish people, the reported.

summoned the Israeli ambassador, and on Sunday, said would not attend a summit on Tuesday.

The meeting, hosted by Israel, is of the Visegrad Group that represents the Czech Republic, Hungary, and

Polish said: "told in a telephone call that Poland will be represented at the summit by "

Netanyahu was on a state visit to Poland on Thursday when his comments were reported in Israeli media, including and the

The said its version used the term "Polish nation", which it said it quickly amended.

Netanyahu's office issued a clarification, saying: "In a briefing, PM Netanyahu spoke of Poles and not the Polish people or the country of Poland."

Morawiecki took to to say there was "no Polish regime" during the Nazi occupation of Poland.

Israel's to was summoned by the foreign ministry on Friday.

said that if Netanyahu had said what was first reported "would not be a good place to meet".

On Sunday, Morawiecki announced his trip would be cancelled.

offered to host the meeting of the Visegrad group to strengthen ties with members of the

During World War Two, Poland suffered brutal occupation by the Nazi and Soviet regimes and more than five million Polish citizens, three million of them Jews, died.

In terms of the Holocaust, the country has for years objected to the term "Polish death camps", saying it implies complicity in the Nazi camps built on its soil during occupation.

In February 2018, Poland introduced a making it illegal to accuse the Polish nation or state of complicity in the Nazi Holocaust.

Israel challenged the legislation, its president, Reuven Rivlin, last year saying that while many Poles had fought the Nazis, "Poland and Poles had a hand in the extermination" of during the Holocaust.

Poland agreed to change the law and it now no longer carries the threat of up to three years in jail.

--IANS

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(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Mon, February 18 2019. 05:16 IST