The Numbers Crunch: Flotilla stories return (JERUSALEM POST) By ELANA KIRSH 06/01/12)
Source: http://www.jpost.com/Features/InThespotlight/Article.aspx?id=272313
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Jerusalem Post readers struck up debate about the 2010 Mavi Marmara
affair this week, exactly two years after the incident that led to
the killing of nine Turks attempting to break Israel’s naval blockade
of Gaza. On Monday, a Turkish court decided to indict former military
intelligence head Maj.-Gen. (res.) Amos Yadlin, former chief of staff
Gabi Ashkenazi and two other former senior officers for involvement
in the flotilla raid. On the JPost.com talkback forums, two of the
most-viewed articles covered the story, along with three other
diplomacy and security issues.
Looking at the most-read stories according to page views, however,
the indictments drew relatively less attention. Instead, the most-
read story on the site this past week was that of Nadav Ben-Yehuda,
an Israeli climber who saved his Turkish-New Yorker friend’s life by
carrying him for about eight hours down the Everest descent. The
story was shared 1768 times on Facebook in the past week.
The rest of this week’s Top Five list, as is often the case, was
filled with diplomatic comments on regional issues including the
Iranian nuclear threat and the ongoing violence in Syria.
Locally, meanwhile, the biggest story was that of violent clashes
which broke out at an anti-African migrant rally in Tel Aviv last
week. The rally was attended by right-wing MKs from the “Deportation
Now” movement, which calls for the immediate expulsion of African
migrants from Israel. In a JPost quick vote taken this week,
respondents expressed parallel sentiments, with 40 percent voting
that the migrants should be expelled. A further 22% of some 2,000
respondents favored issuing work visas before sending them home.
In another JPost poll, meanwhile, over 60% of over 3,000 respondents
saw South Africa´s decision that products originating from West Bank
settlements not be labeled as Israeli products as a racist act which
unfairly singles out Israel´s policies. Over 10% of voters, however,
said that the move recognizes the injustice of the Israeli occupation.
Moving over to social media, Israelis are still tweeting in English,
a week after popular micro-blogging site Twitter launched its full
Hebrew version. According to real-time trends site Trendsmap, over
the past week 100% of the top trending terms in Israel were written
in English, with three general terms tied for the top spot: #israel,
#syria and #palestine. In Egypt, by way of example, over 50% of
trending topics were posted in Arabic, after three months after the
Arabic version was launched.
On JPost’s social media channels, the most popular Facebook post this
past week was a preview of a ruling on a burial box that could have
held the bones of the brother of Jesus and an inscribed tablet that
could have come from the First Temple. A Jerusalem judge on Wednesday
sentenced a Tel Aviv antiquities collector to a month in jail and
fined NIS 30,000 for allegedly faking the box.
To wrap up, some figures on US public opinion on foreign policy in
the Middle East, thanks to a recent poll from the Pew Research Center:
- 46% of Americans are happy with the current level of US support for
Israel while 20% would like to more
- 54% of Americans worry that the US will take too long to act on the
Iranian nuclear threat, whereas 35% are concerned about a hasty
response
- 64% believe the US have a responsibility to act in Syria
Matthew Kalman contributed to this report
From news sites to blogs, tweets to videos, The Numbers Crunch is a
weekly column which zooms out and brings you the big picture online,
from Israel, the Middle East and around the world, and poll results
from JPost.com.
The writer is the Internet desk manager at The Jerusalem Post (© 1995-
2011, The Jerusalem Post 06/01/12)
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