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Israel advances bill linking cultural funding with 'loyalty' to state

Left-wing politicians criticise bill as another step towards silencing expression
Israel Culture Minister Miri Regev (AFP/file photo)

A ministerial committee in Israel's parliament voted on Sunday to advance a bill that would cut subsidies to cultural organisations accused of not showing "loyalty" to the state, the culture minister said.

The proposed legislation, denounced by artists and freedom of speech activists, was proposed by Culture Minister Miri Regev and supported by Finance Minister Moshe Kahlon.

The decision by the Ministerial Committee for Legislation means that the bill will be fast-tracked to a full cabinet vote before being introduced in the Knesset as a government bill, the Times of Israel said.

It would give the finance and culture ministries the power to slash subsidies to any institution presenting work that denies Israel's existence as a democratic and Jewish state or that marks the state's independence day as a national day of mourning, AFP reported.

For Palestinians, the anniversary marks the Nakba or "catastrophe" in Arabic - when more than 700,000 Palestinians fled or were forcefully expelled during the establishment of Israel in 1948.

The draft law would also see funding cut over work that attacks the state flag, or incites racism or terrorism.

Regev said in a news release: “Freedom of expression is a guiding light for us and a central value in the life of the State of Israel as a democratic state, but preserving freedom of expression does not allow incitement against the Jewish and democratic State of Israel.”

Still, left-wing politicians criticised the bill.

Knesset opposition leader Tzipi Livni said the “demand for loyalty in art is another step in silencing expression and forcing culture to be a mouthpiece for the government,” the Times of Israel reported.

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Regev, a member of Israel's ruling right-wing Likud party, is no stranger to controversy and has repeatedly clashed with the country's largely left-leaning cultural elite.

Last year she slammed the Israeli drama Foxtrot, which won the Venice Film Festival's second-highest prize, for spreading untruths about the Israeli army.

She was not invited to September's Ophir Awards - Israel's version of the Oscars - where Foxtrot won the best picture prize.

She instead appeared live on her Facebook page to criticise the movie and members of Israel's Film and Television Academy.

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