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BDS movement 'fuelling antisemitic attacks in Stamford Hill' warns Gove

Minister visiting North London links anti-Israel campaign to violence

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Secretary of State for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities, Michael Gove, visits the Hatzola Ambulance service in North London today. Pictured with (L to R) Hatzola paramedics Moses Lipschitz and Aron Heilpern. Byline John Nguyen/JNVisuals 26/05/2022

Communities Secretary Michael Gove has warned the movement to boycott Israel is fuelling antisemitic incidents in the UK and is even directly linked to recent attacks in Stamford Hill.

Speaking while visiting the Charedi community in north London, the Minister pledged a Bill to prohibit public bodies supporting the BDS (Boycott, Divestment, Sanctions) campaign will be passed before the end of this Parliament.

In a vehemently passionate condemnation of the anti-Israel movement, he said it fed into antisemitism that threatened to “take us back to the darkest place humanity has known”.

Mr Gove said: “Let’s be clear: the BDS campaign is not about running an ethical foreign policy. The BDS campaign is designed for only one purpose: to attack and delegitimise the State of Israel and the idea that there should be a Jewish state at all.”

He added: “That campaign has not only undermined efforts for peace in the Middle East. It also leads to community tension in the UK. We’ve seen an increase in antisemitic incidents and the BDS campaign is a driver of that. We have got to make it clear that local authorities and other public bodies should not be running campaigns that subvert the United Kingdom’s foreign policy and exacerbate community tension.

“I have talked to Labour MPs who understand the importance of fighting antisemitism and who want support this legislation, which I’m grateful for. It’s critically important that we call out the BDS campaign for what it is: an explicitly antisemitic campaign.”

Asked by the JC whether he saw a connection between BDS and the recent spate of violent antisemitism in the Stamford Hill area, Mr Gove said: “Absolutely. The way in which certain people, some ex-politicians, some academics, others in activist movements have used rhetoric like that is, to my mind, unacceptable.

“I believe in free speech, of course. But I don’t think you should use public money or public institution to run campaigns that encourage hate of that kind. It is simply wrong to equate apartheid South Africa with Israel, and the attempt to do is an attempt to delegitimise the Jewish state. The rhetoric of the BDS campaign towards Israel is a classic example of double standards – one of the oldest ways in which antisemitism manifests itself.

“A Jewish state is held to different standards than other states, and when you compare the furious energy behind the BDS campaign with some of the other atrocities that genuinely deserve our attention; when you compare it with what we should be looking at in Ukraine and Xinjiang and elsewhere, it’s remarkable that people are concentrating their campaigning energy against Israel, a democratic state that protects the rights of all its people, whatever their ethnic background of faith.

“We know that what begins as prejudice against the Jewish people takes us to the darkest place humanity has known. We have been warned and we need to take a stand.”

Mr Gove said the Bill would be published in July or September, and enacted by the end of the current Parliament.

He was speaking after a visit to the Hatzola ambulance station, the Charedi volunteer service that serves Jews and non-Jews throughout the area.

He said this had left him “incredibly impressed. It’s amazing to see people who are volunteers and giving up their own money to provide a first-class ambulance service.

"I’ve heard about how the Hatzola team hope to expand and it’s a first-class example of how the Charedi community here set an amazing standard in terms of philanthropy and community spirit.”

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