A Belgian crisis centre operator handling calls about last week’s terrorist attacks has been fired after denying the existence of the State of Israel in a request about the repatriation of hospitalised Israeli victims, according to local media.
A triple suicide bomb attack at Brussels’ international airport and a subway station in the Belgian capital on March 22 left 32 victims dead and wounded a further 340.
Two Israeli citizens were lightly injured, according to the country’s Foreign Ministry.
Israel proposed flying back at least two of its injured citizens, according to the Joods Actueel news website.
To get information on the procedures involved, a volunteer with a Jewish centre in Antwerp phoned the hotline set up by the Belgian crisis centre.
During the phone call, the crisis centre operator repeatedly replaced the word ‘Israel’ with ‘Palestine.’ He gave his name as Zakaria.
He then said he did not know the State of Israel, but knew about ‘Jews who have established themselves in Palestine and are occupying territory,’ Joods Actueel reported.
The crisis center has apologized for the incident and distanced itself from the comments, according to the Belga news agency.
‘It is unacceptable; we regret what happened,’ spokesman Peter Mertens told Belga on Thursday.
‘We have taken measures so this does not happen again.’
The subcontractor running the call centre, IPG, said it has laid off the employee in question.
IPG chief Jac Vermeer said the company wished to apologize to ‘all those people who could have felt offended by the behavior of this ex-colleague,’ Belga wrote.