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Jerusalem: Israeli police announced Monday an investigation after a photoshopped picture of President Reuven Rivlin wearing a Palestinian scarf emerged amid anger over his decision to reject a soldier's pardon request.
Rivlin had on Sunday refused to pardon Elor Azaria, the soldier convicted of manslaughter for shooting dead a wounded Palestinian assailant as he lay on the ground in March 2016.
Right-wing politicians criticised Rivlin's decision, and Culture Minister Miri Regev went as far as saying that he had "abandoned Elor Azaria and harmed the pardoning institution".
Rivlin's Facebook page quickly filled with messages of support but also scathing criticism, with responders telling him he was "no longer my president," as one wrote, or accusing him of "fawning to appease your Arab and Leftwing friends," as another said.
Populist lawmaker Oren Hazan of the ruling Likud party -- the same Rivlin was a member of in parliament and later as a minister -- called on Rivlin to resign, and said pardoning authority should move from the presidency to the parliament.
Police said they had launched the probe after an image of Rivlin wearing a keffiyah scarf was distributed on social media.
The badly photoshopped picture features a smiling Rivlin on the backdrop of books, with a Palestinian symbol and the words "Reuven Rivlin a traitorous Jew-boy may his name and memory be accursed" in Hebrew.
The statement did not elaborate on those being investigated nor the possible crime committed.
Posters of Israeli slain premier Yitzhak Rabin in a keffiyah had appeared before his assassination by a Jewish extremist in 1995.
The image was meant to equate Rabin to Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat, who wore a keffiyah regularly, and imply he was betraying Israel's interests.
Opposition head Isaac Herzog of the Labour party published Rivlin's doctored image next to Rabin's.
"We all know how it starts, we all know how it ends," he wrote on Twitter.
Rivlin's office meanwhile postponed an olive harvesting event at the presidential residence in Jerusalem set for Monday morning, citing "inclement weather," despite clear skies.
Azaria is due to remain in prison until October 2018.
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