Israeli envoy to UK: Labour ‘in denial’ about anti-Semitism
In jab at party leader Corbyn, Mark Regev says those who fail to condemn anti-Jewish hatred should themselves be condemned
Times of Israel
Britain's Labour Party opposition leader Jeremy Corbyn waves to supporters as he arrives to meet with US President Barack Obama at an event in central London on April 23, 2016. (AFP/Justin Tallis)
Israel’s new ambassador to the
United Kingdom on Sunday said parts of Britain’s left are “in denial”
about the “disease” of anti-Semitism.
Speaking
to The Sunday Times, Mark Regev addressed a rising tide of anti-Semitic
outbursts by Labour party members, including most recently Ken
Livingstone, who was suspended from the party on Thursday for declaring
and continuing to insist that Adolf Hitler was initially a Zionist.
“I have no doubt that part of the left is in
denial. They say ‘anti-Semitism, that’s the right, that’s the fascists.’
That’s a cop-out. It doesn’t stand up to serious historical
examination,” Regev said in the interview, which ran on the newspaper’s
front page.
“Anti-Semitism should concern everyone. When
it does raise its ugly head, it should be condemned across the board.
And failure to condemn has to be in itself condemned,” the Israeli envoy
added, in remarks that the British paper said would likely be
interpreted as an attack on Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn.
Israel’s envoy to the United Kingdom Mark Regev (Miriam Alster/Flash90)
Corbyn called on Friday for an independent inquiry into anti-Semitism and racism within the Labour party, after initially denying
there was a problem. This came a day after former mayor and veteran
Labour politician Livingstone said Hitler was a supporter of Zionism
before he “went mad” and killed six million Jews during World War II.
Israel’s Labor chief, Isaac Herzog, on Saturday called Livingstone’s remarks “repulsive,”
and offered to show UK Labour leaders around the Yad Vashem Holocaust
memorial museum to remind them of “the painful realities that they have
perhaps forgotten, but we remember every day.”
“If someone wouldn’t dream of sharing a
platform with an anti-black racist or an anti-female sexist, shouldn’t
one be equally concerned about sharing a platform with an anti-Jewish
racist?” asked Regev.
Regev also praised British Prime Minister
David Cameron for his “outspoken and unequivocal” denunciations of
anti-Jewish hatred. “That’s leadership,” he said.
Livingstone’s comments have sparked an ongoing
uproar, prompting his suspension from the party and the condemnation of
a large number of Labour MPs, some of whom called for him to be
expelled.
John Mann (Wikipedia)
Labour MP John Mann, who was among the first
to condemn his colleague, calling him a “Nazi apologist,” said Saturday
the Labour party has “no reason to exist” if it fails to denounce and
shake off anti-Semitism.
“Hitler started with the Jews, as others have
done in persecutions throughout history. But it never ends with the
Jews,” wrote Mann in an op-ed in The Mirror.
“That is why Labour has always prided itself
in upholding the rights of the Jewish people and has always been the
Party that never tolerates anti-Semitism.
“If we cannot do that now, then we have no reason to exist,” he wrote.
The British Labour Party’s candidate for mayor of London, Sadiq Khan. (public domain via wikipedia)
Meanwhile, the Labour candidate for London
mayor, who has also condemned Livingstone, conceded the controversy
could prevent him from becoming the city’s first Muslim mayor in next
week’s election.
“I accept that the comments that Ken
Livingstone has made make it more difficult for Londoners of Jewish
faith to feel that the Labour party is a place for them, and so I will
carry on doing what I have always been doing, which is to speak for
everyone. If I should have the privilege to be the mayor I will show
Londoners the sort of mayor I can be,” Sadiq Kahn said, according to The
Observer.
After doubling down on his comments Friday,
Livingstone on Saturday further refused to apologize directly and
defended his comments by charging that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu essentially said the same thing several months ago.
“How can I have hurt and offended the Jewish
community when the prime minister of Israel said exactly the same
thing?” Livingstone said in an interview with LBC radio station. He
cited comments made by Netanyahu last October
suggesting that Hitler had not initially intended to annihilate the
Jews, only expel them from Europe, and that the idea of extermination
came from Jerusalem’s then-grand mufti, Haj Amin al-Husseini, a
Palestinian nationalist widely acknowledged as a fervent Jew-hater.
Said Livingstone, “The prime minister of
Israel, Benjamin Netanyahu, is addressing the World Zionistic Congress.
This is the sentence he says, ‘Hitler didn’t want to exterminate the
Jews, but only to expel them.'”
“If the prime minister of Israel can say, two
days before, exactly what I said, it can’t mean that I’m anti-Semitic —
and he’s certainly not anti-Semitic,” alleged Livingstone, giving an
incorrect timeline of Netanyahu’s statements and falsely implying that
Netanyahu had suggested Hitler supported Zionism.
Livingstone said he would “invite the prime
minister of Israel to come over and defend me, as he clearly agrees with
what I said,” according to The Telegraph.
Netanyahu walked back the controversial comments
at the time, amid intense criticism in Israel and abroad. In a lengthy
Facebook post, he said he wished to “clarify [his] remarks about the
connection between the Mufti Haj Amin al-Husseini and the Nazis.” He
said that he “did not mean to claim that in his conversation with Hitler
in November 1941 the mufti convinced him to adopt the Final Solution.
The Nazis decided on that by themselves… The decision to move from a
policy of deporting Jews to the Final Solution was made by the Nazis and
was not dependent on outside influence. The Nazis saw in the mufti a
collaborator, but they did not need him to decide on the systematic
destruction of European Jewry, which began in June 1941.”
British historian and journalist Andrew
Roberts wrote Thursday that Livingstone knew full well that Hitler was
no Zionist and that his remarks were intentionally made to offend as
many Jews as possible.
“The sole reason Ken Livingstone brought up
the Fuhrer in his interview was to be as vicious and loathsome as he
possibly could to any Jews listening, rather than genuinely intending to
make some valid historical point about the migration policies of the
putative Third Reich in the 1930s,” Roberts wrote in an article on CapX,
adding “he must know perfectly well that the very insertion of the word
‘Hitler’ in the context of a debate over anti-Semitism would create
precisely the effect that it has.
“It was therefore a totally cold-blooded attempt to offend the maximum amount of Jews to the maximum extent,” Roberts wrote.
In a letter published by the Guardian,
83 Jewish members and supporters of the Labour party rejected
assertions that the Labour party had an anti-Semitism problem and said
the accusations were “part of a wider campaign against the Labour
leadership, and they have been timed particularly to do damage to the
Labour party and its prospects in elections in the coming week.”
“As Jews, we are appalled that a serious issue
is being used in this cynical and manipulative way, diverting attention
from much more widespread examples of Islamophobia and xenophobia in
the Conservative and other parties,” they wrote, adding “we dissociate
ourselves from the misleading attacks on Labour from some members of the
Jewish community.”
Naz
Shah with former London mayor Ken Livingstone in Bradford, April 2015,
before her election as a Labour MP. (Wikimedia Commons, goodadvice.com,
CC BY-SA 4.0)
The Livingstone controversy erupted a day
after Corbyn, a bitter critic of Israel who has referred to Hamas and
Hezbollah representatives as “friends,” reluctantly suspended MP Naz Shah, who had called for the dismantling of Israel, compared Israelis to Hitler and posted pro-Hamas tweets.
Senior UK Labour Party lawmakers have called
on Corbyn to take firmer action against anti-Semitism among its members,
in light of the anti-Semitic remarks by Livingstone, MP Shah, and
others.
At least 39 members of the Labour Party’s 230 members of Parliament have criticized Corbyn’s handling of the scandal, according to The Telegraph,
which has included the party leader’s suggestion that the crisis was
created by “those who are nervous of the strength of the Labour Party at
local level.”
On Friday, a Labour council leader apologized for sharing a Facebook post likening
Israel to the Islamic State terror group. “Israel is a terrorist state
like ISIS,” said the post shared by Muhammed Butt on April 16, Jewish
News reported.
“I apologize for sharing this on social media.
I do not agree with these views and as Leader of Brent Council I have
championed diversity, tolerance and respect for all faith communities,
and will continue to do so,” Butt told Jewish News on Friday.
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