With the presidential and parliamentary elections in ‎Turkey only a week away, Turkish Prime Minister ‎Binali Yildirim has found a new way of discrediting ‎Israel in hopes to score political points: the ‎Eurovision song contest. ‎

Israeli singer ‎Netta Barzilai won the 2018 ‎Eurovision song contest ‎held in Lisbon, Portugal, in May ‎with her ‎catchy techno-dance tune “Toy.” ‎

“Israel only knows how to kill, not sing,” Yildirim ‎said on Saturday.

He further claimed that the winning Israeli ‎song was “not good,”  telling local media that the “imperialists”—the judging countries—“changed ‎the rules” to ensure that next year’s Eurovision ‎would be held in Jerusalem, something he predicted ‎would “spark a religious war.”

‎“They let Israel win even though it didn’t have ‎enough points, so it could host the competition,” he ‎said.‎

Yildirim ‎also attacked Barzilai ‎personally, saying: ‎‎‎“She can’t sing.”

The prospect of holding the 2019 Eurovision song ‎contest in Jerusalem has already sparked ‎some controversy. Earlier in June, the European ‎Broadcasting Union, an alliance of ‎public-service ‎broadcasters that organizes the contest, asked ‎Israel to find an ‎alternative venue rather than ‎Jerusalem for the contest, citing the “politically ‎‎charged” nature of the Israeli capital.‎

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