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Geoffrey Alderman

ByGeoffrey Alderman, Geoffrey Alderman

Opinion

Cameron's Jerusalem syndrome

March 10, 2016 13:23
2 min read

What are we to make of David Cameron's extraordinary rant against Israel in the House of Commons on February 24? On that day, the Labour MP for Bradford East, Imran Hussain, drew Cameron's attention to one "Nora" and her family, who he declared had been living in "the old city of East Jerusalem" since 1953.

"Israeli settlers," Hussain alleged "are now trying to force Nora from her home of over 60 years… Does the Prime Minister," he asked, agree that "illegal settlements and constructions are a major roadblock that hinder peaceful negotiations? What are this Government doing to help prevent these infringements into Palestinian lives and land?"

There are several incorrect assertions in Hussain's remarks. There is no such thing as "the old city of East Jerusalem." There's a continuous and well documented history of Jewish settlement in Jerusalem spanning the last 2,000 years and more. The case of "Nora" and her family is complicated by larger questions of property ownership in the city: my own inquiries suggest that the house they occupy was rented from the Jordanian government (then in illegal occupation of the city) in 1953 and that it may have been previously owned by Jews, whom the Jordanians of course expelled.

Be that as it may, I certainly don't blame Hussain for asking his questions. Hussain won the Bradford East seat last year in a contest that pitted him against that well-known Lib-Dem friend of the Jews, David Ward, having previously (2012) been trounced by another well-known friend of the Jews, George Galloway, in a by-election in neighbouring Bradford West. Both contests involved bitter fights over Muslim votes.