The calls were part of a growing global backlash against Trump's
proposal that cut across nationalities and religions, and began to
hit the real estate mogul's brand in the Middle East.
Although Israeli politicians demanded Trump be blocked from a
planned visit, a Dec. 28 meeting with Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu was still on. In addition to the online petition calling
for a ban on Trump from the United Kingdom, a Scottish university
revoked his honorary degree.
A major chain of Middle East department stores halted sales of the
real estate mogul's glitzy "Trump Home" line of lamps, mirrors and
jewelry boxes.
Even China weighed in with indirect criticism of Trump's comments,
which have been condemned by the White House, U.S. congressional
leaders, the United Nations, the prime ministers of France and
Britain, a wide array of human and civil rights groups and many of
Trump's Republican rivals and potential Democratic opponents in the
November 2016 U.S. presidential election.
Trump, who leads opinion polls in the Republican nominating race, on
Monday called for blocking Muslims, including would-be immigrants,
students and tourists, from entering the country following last
week's deadly shootings in California by two Muslims who authorities
said were radicalized.
Left- and right-wing Israeli politicians, as well as Israeli Arab
lawmakers, condemned Trump's remarks and said he should be barred
from visiting. Omer Bar-Lev of the main center-left opposition
party, the Zionist Union, took to Twitter to call Trump a "racist."
"I recommend fighting terrorist and extremist Islam, but I would not
declare a boycott of, ostracism against or war on Muslims in
general," Energy Minister Yuval Steinitz, a senior Likud lawmaker
and Netanyahu confidant, told Israel's Army Radio.
Netanyahu issued a statement saying he rejected Trump's remarks but
the visit, set two weeks ago, would go ahead as planned and did not
indicate support for Trump.
"The prime minister rejects the recent comments by Donald Trump with
regard to Muslims. Israel respects all religions and diligently
guards the rights of its citizens," a statement from Netanyahu's
office said.
In Britain, the number of signatories to the petition demanding
Trump be banned from visiting exceeded 370,000 and was growing fast.
But the country's finance minister, George Osborne, said the former
reality TV star should not be banned. (http://bit.ly/1ORSaRJ)
In the past, people have been banned from entering the United
Kingdom for fostering hatred that might provoke intercommunity
violence.
Robert Gordon University in Aberdeen, Scotland, revoked an honorary
degree it had awarded Trump in 2010, saying on Twitter that his
statements "are wholly incompatible with the ethos and values of the
university."
In China, home to about 20 million Muslims, Foreign Ministry
spokeswoman Hua Chunying said she could not comment on internal U.S.
matters but said China believed "the international community should
make a concerted effort to fight terrorism, and at the same time we
have always opposed linking terrorism to any specific ethnic group
or religion."
MIDDLE EAST IMPACT
In the Middle East, sales of "Trump Home" products took a hit. The
Landmark Group, one of the region's biggest retail companies with
190 stores in the Middle East, Africa and Pakistan, said it was
pulling all Trump merchandise off its shelves. The company did not
give any details on the value of the contract.
Although there were no other immediate announcements of business
partners breaking with Trump, others made clear they were uneasy
using his brand name in the Middle East, where he has been actively
expanding his footprint in recent years, heavily concentrated in the
Gulf business hub of Dubai.
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A former Trump business partner in Dubai, construction billionaire
Khalaf al-Habtoor, said Trump had wrecked his prospects for
successful future collaborations in the region.
"He is really creating war. He’s creating hatred between Muslims and
Christians," Habtoor, who at one time held the contract to build a
later-canceled Trump International Hotel & Tower in Dubai, told
Reuters.
"Muslims have invested hundreds and hundreds of billions of dollars
(in America), creating jobs for Americans. They can go invest it
somewhere else."
Trump has courted controversy during his White House run with
derogatory comments about immigrants and controversial proposals to
deport undocumented immigrants and implement a database to keep
track of Muslim Americans.
Some supporters rallied to his defense. Evangelist Franklin Graham,
son of legendary evangelist Billy Graham, posted on Facebook that
Trump was echoing his own longheld belief that Muslim immigration
should be stopped until "we can properly vet them or until the war
with Islam is over." The post had nearly 75,000 likes on Facebook.
(http://on.fb.me/1OS3iQE)
Qatar Airways Chief Executive Officer Akbar Al Baker said he
disagreed with the proposed ban but voiced support for Trump, saying
the proposal was meant to gain political mileage.
"I don't think he means it. He has many Muslim friends. He has
investments in Muslim countries. And at the same time he has only
put this out of context just to gain some more votes," he said.
Closer to home, former boxing champion Muhammad Ali took an apparent
jab at Trump without mentioning him by name in a statement to NBC
News headlined "Presidential Candidates Proposing to Ban Muslim
Immigration to the United States."
"We as Muslims have to stand up to those who use Islam to advance
their own personal agenda," Ali said in the statement, according to
the network.
Trump defended his proposal on Tuesday, comparing his plan to ban
Muslims to the U.S. government's World War Two detainment of
Japanese-Americans. He said President Franklin Roosevelt had
overseen the internment of more than 110,000 people in U.S.
government camps after Japanese forces bombed Pearl Harbor in 1941.
Trump told CNN on Wednesday in reply to a question about how the ban
would work that there would exceptions in cases such as diplomats
and Muslim athletes, and that it might be short-lived.
"Exceptions will be made. We're not going to say, you can't come
into the country. ... It could go quickly. It's a subject that has
to be discussed," he said.
(Editing by Jonathan Oatis and Lisa Shumaker)
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