British airline wipes Israel off the map
The Middle East map said to have been used by BMI on its flights to Tel Aviv. The only Israeli city, Haifa, is noted as 'Khefa', the city's Arab name under the British Mandate
Passengers were shocked to discover that Israel had been wiped off the map by Britain’s BMI airline, which omitted the Jewish state from its digital charts on flights from London to Tel Aviv.
Neither Jerusalem nor Tel Aviv itself, which is Israel’s largest city, were shown on the airline’s in-flight map. However, the orientation of Mecca, Islam’s holiest site, was displayed on screens as well as the northern Israeli city of Haifa, written as “Khefa” — the city’s Arab name under the British Mandate before the war of independance in 1948.
BMI insisted that the map had not been drawn with an anti-Israel or political agenda in mind — rather the aircraft in question were recently bought from a bankrupt charter company that largely flew to Arab countries.
“For this reason the in-flight entertainment system in the two planes was made to adapt to the passengers flying to and from those destinations and therefore the map showed mainly places holy to Islam … If BMI had any political agenda in order not to anger neighbouring countries, it would not have invested so much in the Tel Aviv line,” the airline said.
BMI recently reached an agreement with Israel’s Tourism Ministry to launch daily flights between London Heathrow and Tel Aviv. For years, it has operated routes to Muslim countries including Syria, Lebanon and Iran. The two aircarft used to run the flights to Tel Aviv were originally intended to arrive in those Arab countries, the airline said, and therefore the map was tailored to show sites holy to Muslims.
Israeli passengers filed a complaint against the airline with Israel’s Transportation Ministry. Yigal Palmor, an Israeli Foreign Ministry spokesman, said: “By pretending not to go where they are actually going BMI will end up going nowhere. By erasing their Israeli destination from the map, they will risk being erased from the list of eligible airlines for Israelis.”
There is little air traffic between Israel and its neighbours. Israelis are not permitted to enter Syria or Lebanon, while flights to Jordan and Egypt have decreased in recent years.
Over the last two years I have been flying regularly on BMI between London and Riyadh, Saudi Arabia and I noticed immediately that Tel Aviv and Israel are not on the maps - although orientation to Mecca is.
The article says the aircraft were tailored originally for flights to Arab countries.
How does that fact make it okay to deny Israel exists as a country on a map?
Why would BMI perpetuate this denial of Israel's existence regardless of where the aircraft were meant to fly?
Put Cyprus on the map!
Interesting historical revision from Amer: (1) In '48 Arabs were not removed from Jerusalem (some did flee), and there were close to none in Tel Aviv; (2) total number of "Palestinian" refugees was only ~750k incl those who moved into the area between '46&'48, which hardly makes them "Palestinian".