Britain’s Prince William meets Israeli PM Netanyahu

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Britain's Prince William meets with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his wife Sara on June 26, 2018 in Jerusalem. Britain's Prince William arrived in Israel the previous night, the first member of the royal family to make an official visit to the Jewish state and the Palestinian territories. (AFP)
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Britain's Prince William, accompanied by Chairman of Yad Vashem Avner Shalev, arrives to the Yad Vashem World Holocaust Remembrance Center in Jerusalem, June 26, 2018. (Reuters)
Updated 26 June 2018
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Britain’s Prince William meets Israeli PM Netanyahu

  • Prince William placed a wreath at the Yad Vashem Holocaust memorial’s Hall of Remembrance, and meet two men who survived the Nazi genocide thanks to British intervention
  • He is also scheduled to meet Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas in the occupied West Bank and engage with Palestinian youngsters

JERUSALEM: Britain's Prince William met Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu at the Israeli leader's Jerusalem residence on Tuesday after visiting Israel's memorial to the six million Jews killed in the Nazi Holocaust.
William, on the first official visit to Israel and the Palestinian Territories by a member of the British royal family, was greeted at the residence, against the backdrop of the Union Jack and the Israeli flag, by Netanyahu and his wife, Sara.
Neither William nor Netanyahu made any comment to reporters.William payed homage on Tuesday to the six million Jews killed in the Nazi Holocaust, in a solemn start to the first official visit by a British royal to Israel and the Palestinian territories.
William, second in line to the throne, placed a wreath at the Yad Vashem Holocaust memorial’s Hall of Remembrance, and meet two men who survived the Nazi genocide thanks to British intervention.
Henry Foner, 86, and Paul Alexander, 80, were among thousands of Jewish children taken in by Britain as part of the 1930s “Kindertransport” from a continental Europe that was falling to German conquest.
Speaking before William’s visit, Alexander, freshly back from a bicycle ride that retraced his life-saving voyage as a toddler, said he was chosen to meet the prince as the youngest member of the Kindertransport.
“When I put my foot on English soil for the first time, it was like I had been reborn, because I left Nazi Germany and was received by the British people and I have an enormous debt of the thanks to the British people,” Alexander told Reuters.
Originally from Leipzig, Alexander was reunited with his mother, who reached Britain the day before World War Two erupted, and with his father, who survived Nazi internment at Buchenwald. Many other kindertransport children were less lucky.
Foner, whose original name was Heinz Lichtwitz, was taken from Berlin to the Welsh city of Swansea in 1939, two years after his mother committed suicide — a victim, he believes, of despair at the doom gathering around Europe’s Jews.
Foner received postcards from his father until the war cut off mail contact. In mid-1942, the elder Foner told his son in a final letter delivered through the Red Cross: “Our destiny is very uncertain.” Months later, he was murdered at Auschwitz.
The correspondence was included in Yad Vashem’s Kindertransport exhibit, as well as in Foner’s memoir, copy of which he said he hoped to present to Prince William.
“I was a six-year-old refugee kid, and here I am giving a book I wrote, to honor my father, basically, to a member of the royal family,” he told Reuters. “It’s great honor for me to be able to say thank you, symbolically, to the British people who saved my life.”
During the visit, which Britain has described as non-political, William is also scheduled to meet Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas in the occupied West Bank and engage with Palestinian youngsters.


The art of war: fears for masterpieces on loan to Louvre Abu Dhabi

Updated 13 March 2026
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The art of war: fears for masterpieces on loan to Louvre Abu Dhabi

  • UAE paid more than €1 billion to borrow priceless works, but experts in France want them back

PARIS: The Middle East war has raised fears for the safety of priceless masterpieces on loan from France to the Louvre Abu Dhabi, the museum’s only foreign branch.
The Abu Dhabi museum, which opened in 2017, has so far escaped damage from nearly 1,800 Iranian drone and missile strikes launched since the conflict erupted on Feb. 28.
However, concerns are mounting in France. “The works must be removed,” said Didier Selles, who helped broker the original agreement between France and the UAE.
French journal La Tribune de l’Art echoed that alarm. “The Louvre’s works in Abu Dhabi must be secured!” it said.
France’s culture ministry said French authorities were “in close and regular contact with the authorities of the UAE to ensure the protection of the works loaned by France.”
Under the agreement with the UAE, France agreed to provide expertise, lend works of art and organize exhibitions, in return for €1 billion, including €400 million for licensing the use of the Louvre name. The deal was extended in 2021 to 2047 for an additional €165 million.
Works on loan include paintings by Rembrandt and Chardin, Classical statues of Isis, Roman sarcophagi and Islamic masterpieces: such as the Pyxis of Al-Mughira.

A Louvre Abu Dhabi source said the museum was designed to protect collections from both security threats and natural disasters.