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World / Gulf

Saudi Twitter account posts photo of plane 'attacking' Canada icon amid diplomatic spat

Published: 07 Aug 2018 - 06:22 pm | Last Updated: 28 Dec 2021 - 11:39 am
Screen grab of a tweet posted by the account @Infographic_KSA, which has since been shut down. @Infographic_KSA / Twitter

Screen grab of a tweet posted by the account @Infographic_KSA, which has since been shut down. @Infographic_KSA / Twitter

The Peninsula Online | Bloomberg

Saudi Arabia’s diplomatic spat with Canada prompted a tweet that touched a raw nerve in the kingdom: a photomontage of an Air Canada plane heading toward the iconic CN Tower in Toronto.

The photo was posted after tensions between Saudi Arabia and Canada erupted this week over the the Trudeau government’s call to release jailed Saudi women’s rights activists. Saudi Arabia, enraged by what it said was meddling in its internal affairs, asked the Canadian ambassador to Riyadh to leave the country within 24 hours and recalled its envoy to Ottawa. It also suspended new trade dealings with Canada.

Many commentators were quick to point out the impropriety of such a tweet that invoked a gruesome incident in the history.

 

 

The Saudi Ministry of Media ordered the Twitter account of the Infographic KSA, @Infographic_KSA, that posted the photo shut down, apparently unamused by its invocation of the 9/11 attack on the World Trade Center in New York. The photo’s English-language caption read: "Sticking one’s nose where it doesn’t belong! As the Arabic saying goes: He who intervenes with what doesn’t concern him finds what doesn’t please him.”

The Media Ministry said it ordered the Twitter account shut down pending an investigation after receiving a complaint about the post. Infographic tweeted an apology before its account went dark.

"Earlier we posted an image that was inappropriate, so we deleted the post immediately,” it said. "The aircraft was intended to symbolize the return of the ambassador. We realize this was not clear and any other meaning was unintentional.”

The group behind the Twitter handle which describes itself as a project "managed by a group of Saudi youth who are interested in technology and social media Facts backed by numbers & evidence". Its presence is on Twitter, Instagram and Telegram. The Website sott.net says there were also versions in languages other than English. The image of CN tower in Toronto was then reportedly reposted, but without the plane in its upper right corner.