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Elon Musk lands in Tel Aviv as he is set to meet Israel's Netanyahu and President Isaac Herzog after billionaire X owner faces accusations of amplifying anti-Semitic hatred on his social media platform

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Tesla founder Elon Musk is in Israel to meet with the country's senior leadership where they will highlight the plight of hostages held in war-torn Gaza and discuss rising antisemitism online.

Since the beginning of the current conflict in the Jewish state, which began with Hamas' barbaric assault on October 7, Musk has faced waves of criticism for turning a blind eye to anti-Semitism on X, formerly known as Twitter. That criticism has led to a reported loss in ad revenue. 

Israeli media reported that Musk will meet with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu as well President Isaa Herzog and war cabinet minister Benny Gantz. The families of some of the hostages will also be present. 

The meetings come after an eventful weekend which saw numerous hostages including four-year-old American-Israeli orphan Abigail Mor Edan freed from Hamas' clutches. 

Avi Scharf, an aviation expert with Israel's Haaretz newspaper tweeted that the billionaire's Gulf Stream touched down in Tel Aviv around 8am local time on Monday. 

Benjamin Netanyahu and Elon Musk last met in September in which the Israeli prime minister spoke about the prevalence of anti-Semitism on X

Four-year-old orphan Abigail Mor Edan was released Sunday after 49 days in captivity, she celebrated her birthday as a hostage 

As part of his trip, Musk will be shown a 44-minute video montage showing the atrocities that were carried out on October 7.  

Netanyahu met Musk in California on Sept. 18 and urged him to strike a balance between protecting free expression and fighting hate speech after weeks of controversy over anti-Semitic content on X.

Musk responded by saying he was against antisemitism and against anything that 'promotes hate and conflict,' repeating his previous statements that X would not promote hate speech.

Antisemitism and Islamophobia have risen in the United States and worldwide, including during the now seven-week-old war between Israel and the Islamist Palestinian faction Hamas.

Earlier this month, Musk was accused of promoting anti-Semitism again after he responded to a man who posted a screed on X criticizing a Foundation to Combat Anti-Semitism campaign video.

In the video, a father is seen talking to his son about the online hatred the son has spewed, and calling him out for his rhetoric.

The X user dismissed the video, writing: 'Jewish communties (sic) have been pushing the exact kind of dialectical hatred against whites that they claim to want people to stop using against them.

'I'm deeply disinterested in giving the tiniest s*** now about western Jewish populations coming to the disturbing realization that those hordes of minorities that support flooding their country don't exactly like them too much.

Earlier this month, Musk was roundly criticized for his response to this message on X

 'You want truth said to your face, there it is.'

Musk, who has 163 million followers, replied: 'You have said the actual truth.' 

The father of 11 has a long history of toying with dog-whistle rhetoric about Jewish people, in particular George Soros, who enraged him in May by selling his Tesla stock.

On Sunday, Abigail Mor Edan's grandfather, Carmel, said that even though he is filled with joy that his granddaughter is now on her way home, he knows that 'there are many people who haven’t yet come back.' Abigail was the first American released in the negotiated cease-fire between Palestine and Israel.

'I greatly want them to be returned and that the IDF finish what it has promised: All the hostages [back] and Hamas [destroyed],' he said.

The grandfather has not been allowed to speak or meet with Abigail yet, but plans to smother her with kisses when they reunite.

'There's nothing to say,' he added.

Edan was one of 17 hostages released Sunday, 49 days after the war broke out and militants stormed her kibbutz in southern Israel.

Fighters gunned down her parents, Roy Edan, 43 and Smadar Edan, 40, in the attack.

The first picture of Abigail since her release: seen in a Red Cross ambulance (right) after being released by Hamas as the first American to be set free

The girl's siblings, aged ten and six, survived after hiding out for hours in the family home. Carmel Edan said he hasn't told them about their younger sister's release yet.

Abigail, who celebrated her fourth birthday in captivity, is now in the hands of Red Cross officials. President Joe Biden said, after her release, that what the youngster has endured is 'unthinkable' and that she has suffered a 'terrible trauma.'

'I wish I were there to hold her,' Biden said. 'Today she's free, and Jilly and I, together with so many Americans, are praying for the fact that she is going to be alright.'

The grandfather thanked Biden saying: 'We love him very much for all the help he is giving us, to Israel. Keep going. Keep going. We don’t admire you. We love you.'

The terror group has been keeping captives since its October 7 surprise attack on Israel that left more than 1,200 Israelis dead. Over 13,000 Palestinians have been killed in the Israeli counteroffensive.

State Department officials have yet to release the names of the other American hostages. A total of 10 Americans are currently unaccounted for.

Of the 17 hostages released Sunday, 14 were Israeli, while three were foreign citizens.

Appearing on ABC’s 'This Week,' National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan said two women, one child and seven men were confirmed to have been taken by Hamas.

'All of these hostages have been through a terrible ordeal, and this is the beginning of a long journey of healing for them,' Biden said in an address from Nantucket, Massachusetts, where he was celebrating Thanksgiving.

Earlier that day, the president was briefed multiple times by his national security team on the latest developments regarding the hostage release from Gaza.

'This morning I've been engaged with my team as we begin the first difficult days of implementing this deal,' Biden said. 'It's only a start but so far it's gone well.'

He noted how the first group of hostages included 'an elderly woman, a grandmother and mothers with their young children, some under the age of six years old.'

The sides are currently in a truce under which Israel has been recovering some of the 240 people Hamas took hostage during a cross-border killing spree on Oct 7. In exchange, Israel has been freeing some Palestinians jailed on security grounds.

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