London-based Jewish newspaper attacked by hackers

January 18, 2010 03:33 pm | Updated 03:35 pm IST - London

In this January 4 file picture, Turkey's ambassador to Israel Ahmet Oguz Celikkol, left, and Turkish ambassador to Washington Namik Tan are seen during a meeting in Ankara. Turkey rebuffed on January 13, an Israeli attempt to make amends for humiliating Turkey's ambassador, and threatened to bring Mr. Celikkol home if Israel didn't deliver an apology by the evening. Israeli Deputy Foreign Minister Danny Ayalon, issued a statement criticizing his own undiplomatic behavior, which included forcing Mr. Celikkol to sit on a seat lower than his and denying him a handshake. But the statement fell short of an apology and failed to defuse a diplomatic feud that has further strained ties between the once-close allies. Photo: AP.

In this January 4 file picture, Turkey's ambassador to Israel Ahmet Oguz Celikkol, left, and Turkish ambassador to Washington Namik Tan are seen during a meeting in Ankara. Turkey rebuffed on January 13, an Israeli attempt to make amends for humiliating Turkey's ambassador, and threatened to bring Mr. Celikkol home if Israel didn't deliver an apology by the evening. Israeli Deputy Foreign Minister Danny Ayalon, issued a statement criticizing his own undiplomatic behavior, which included forcing Mr. Celikkol to sit on a seat lower than his and denying him a handshake. But the statement fell short of an apology and failed to defuse a diplomatic feud that has further strained ties between the once-close allies. Photo: AP.

The Web site of Britain’s flagship Jewish newspaper has been attacked by Turkish-speaking hackers, its editor said on Monday.

The site of the London-based Jewish Chronicle, the world’s oldest continuously published Jewish newspaper, was replaced by a Palestinian flag and anti-Semitic writings for several hours, editor Stephen Pollard said.

“Somebody hacked into the site and had a message up for a couple of hours,” Mr. Pollard told AP. “It did no damage, as far as we can tell.”

The site was still unavailable early Monday. A version of the site cached by Google showed a large Palestinian flag against a black background. In a message posted in English and Turkish, a group calling itself the “Palestinian Mujaheeds” quotes from the Quran and attacks Jews in anti-Semitic terms.

Mr. Pollard said that the attack might be related to the diplomatic feud that erupted between Israel and Turkey last week, but added: “I don’t want to speculate.”

The Turkish government was outraged when Israel summoned its ambassador last week to express its anger over a Turkish television drama that depicts Israeli agents kidnapping children and shooting old men. Israel’s deputy foreign minister, Danny Ayalon, denied the ambassador a handshake and forced him to sit on a low sofa as the cameras rolled.

Israel has since apologised for the incident, which threatened to poison relations between the traditional allies.

The Chronicle, founded in 1841, has a weekly circulation of about 30,000.

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