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Special report: Israel and the Middle East

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 In this section
Hamas government acts to free kidnapped BBC man

Masked gunmen kidnap British reporter in Gaza City street attack

Naked, drunk, surrounded by sex toys - it's the Israeli ambassador

Journalists - one of a few remaining western prizes

No word on missing BBC journalist

Undiplomatic ties cost drunk ambassador his job

BBC journalist feared kidnapped in Gaza

Foreign journalists are too useful to resist

Palestinian, 11, says army used her as shield

Israel planned for Lebanon war months in advance, PM says

Israel accused of using Palestinian children as human shields

Song of terror picked by Israel for Eurovision

Call for more rights for Arab minority in Israel

Timothy Garton Ash: Condi's rock'n'roll approach has been and gone. Let's try Benita's slow waltz

Song of imminent nuclear annihilation gets green light to represent Israel in the Eurovision song contest.

Naked, drunk, surrounded by sex toys - it's the Israeli ambassador



Rory Carroll, Latin America correspondent
Tuesday March 13, 2007
The Guardian


As an Israeli ambassador, Tsuriel Raphael was accomplished at putting a gloss on delicate subjects, be it Tel Aviv's nuclear programme, the treatment of Palestinians or the invasion of Lebanon.

When San Salvador police discovered him in his official embassy residence yard in the capital San Salvador, however, smooth talk was not really an option. For starters there was the gag and the rubber ball in his mouth. There was also the matter of being drunk. And naked. And bound. And surrounded by sex toys.

Once he was untied and the gag and ball were removed Mr Raphael identified himself as the ambassador but for perhaps the first time in his diplomatic career, this was a crisis he could not explain away.

"The ministry sees his behaviour as unbecoming of a diplomat," Zehavit Ben-Hillel, an Israeli foreign ministry spokeswoman, said yesterday. It was, she added, an unprecedented embarrassment. Mr Raphael was recalled home two weeks ago when the ministry first learned of the incident but the news became public only yesterday, when reports surfaced in the Israeli media. "He is going to remain in Israel," said the spokeswoman.

The ambassador did not break any law so for the Salvadorean police the case is closed. The Israeli government must wish it could say the same; the incident raises questions not just about Mr Raphael but about the foreign ministry's system of appointments. Before being sent to El Salvador six months ago, the veteran diplomat had served in several other countries, including the US, and as director of the Israel Information Centre in Jerusalem. He was a polished media performer and gave talks on Middle East geopolitics to thinktanks, universities and lobby groups.

However, his adventure in San Salvador revived last year's criticism from a public service watchdog that the ministry lacked transparency in recruitment and promotion procedures.




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