Reshet TV dismisses two employees behind video which turned out to be a fake news item targeting haredim.
Reshet TV, which operates Israel's Channel 2, on Sunday evening dismissed two workers who were behind a video uploaded to Facebook and which turned out to be a fake news item targeting Charedim.
In the video, which was posted at the end of last week, reporter Guy Hochman was seen walking around a neighborhood in Bnei Brak holding an Israeli flag in order to examine the reactions of the city's residents. He claimed that locals spit on him and threw eggs at him and that he and the crew accompanying him felt "a real danger to their lives," as they put it.
Eyewitnesses, however, said that although the reporter invited an incident by holding the flag in the center of the neighborhood in Bnei Brak with a large concentration of the anti-Zionist Satmar hassidic sect, no one paid him the slightest attention.
Later in the video, however, something does happen. Two motorcyclists are seen standing next to the crew, grabbing the Israeli flag and breaking it.
The video was later revealed by the haredi website Kol Hazman to have been staged by the reporter.
Reshet TV, while at first denying the video was fabricated, chose to remove it from its Facebook page on Friday.
"Unfortunately, while the video that was published is not fabricated, in light of the possible harm to the public's feelings, and in light of the comments received, we decided to remove the video immediately,” the broadcaster said on Friday.
The story of the anti-haredi fake news spread on social media, but received little mainstream media attention at first, except for Arutz Sheva and religious websites.
On Sunday, reported the financial newspaper The Marker, after the video did indeed turn out to be staged, Reshet dismissed both Hochman and his editor.
The broadcaster stressed it is working to ensure such an incident does not occur again and added, toning down the bald fact that those trusted to bring viewers the news stooped to the level where a headline is achieved by fabricating a story defaming haredi Jews "Whether caused by human error or not, all those concerned express remorse and are working to correct it. Memorial Day, and right before Independence Day, is a time to bring people together.”