To sa teroristima je (Izraelska) glupost, pa imate izjave igrača Argentine
Argentina has cancelled a football World Cup warm-up match with Israel, apparently under pressure over Israel's treatment of Palestinians in Gaza.
Striker Gonzalo Higuain said they had "finally done the right thing".
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu called Argentina's president in an attempt to salvage the tie, but was told by Mauricio Macri that "there was nothing that I could do", Israel's Army Radio reported.
Argentine Foreign Minister Jorge Faurie had said he believed his country's footballers "were not willing to play the game".
"In the end, they've done right thing, and this is behind us," Higuain told ESPN. "Health and common sense come first. We felt that it wasn't right to go."
The news was met with cheers in Gaza, where at least 120 Palestinians were killed and thousands more injured by Israeli forces during recent protests.
In Ramallah in the occupied West Bank, the Palestinian Football Association issued a statement thanking Argentina striker Lionel Messi and his teammates.
"What happened... is a red card from the rest of the world to Israelis," the association's president, Jibril Rajoub, told a news conference on Wednesday.
Saturday's friendly, which was to be Argentina's final game before the start of their World Cup campaign in Russia later this month, was to be played at the Teddy Kollek Stadium in West Jerusalem.
The status of Jerusalem is highly sensitive. Israel regards the city as its "eternal and undivided" capital. Palestinians see the eastern part of Jerusalem - occupied by Israel in the 1967 Middle East war - as the capital of a future Palestinian state.
Palestinians were angered by a decision by promoters to relocate the Argentina football game to Jerusalem from Haifa, reportedly after the Israeli government contributed funding.
In December, US President Donald Trump infuriated Palestinians by recognising Jerusalem as the capital of Israel. The US embassy was moved there from Tel Aviv last month.