In the wake of the EU's controversial decision to to label Jewish products made in Judea-Samaria and the Golan Heights, Education Minister Naftali Bennett appeared on British news station BBC blasting the measure as a "new form of anti-Semitism."

When pushed by BBC's reporter to say consumers are entitled to know the origins of their products, Bennett accused the EU of "singl[ing] out Israel specifically, because there's got to be 200 land disputes around the world and I don't see them singling out anyone else."

Ignoring's Bennett's charge of discrimination, the reporter once against brought up the question of consumer rights. "Surely people are entitled to know precisely where they're buying their goods from," he stated. 

"And they're buying their goods from Israel," the Jewish Home chairman stated, before dismissing the reporter's claim the products are being made in "occupied territories."

"No, they're not occupied, they're disputed as are hundreds of other locations around the globe, and when the EU, Europe of all places, singles out Israel, I see that as a form - a new form of anti-Semitism."

The EU is "holding Israel - the only democracy, the only vibrant democracy in the Middle East - to different standards."