At LSE, SOAS and QML, you can help us #BanFran
Francesca Albanese, the UN Special Rapporteur on the Occupied Palestinian Territories, is going to be lecturing on British campuses. She has previously posted about “the Jewish lobby” and is alleged to have told a conference featuring Hamas leaders that they have “the right to resist”.
We will be holding demonstrations at universities where she is scheduled to speak to make clear that she is not welcome. Even if the UN refuses to #BanFran, Britain’s leading educational institutions should.
Please join us at:
- London School of Economics (LSE), 11th November, 11:30
- School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS), 11th November, 16:00
- Queen Mary University of London, 12th November, 11:00
We are also writing to the universities which are planning to host her.
By now, Ms Albanese’s indefensible past comments about “the Jewish lobby” and repulsive comparisons between the Nazis and the Jewish state are well known. There can be no excuse for inviting her to address students on campus in light of her views, which she has unrepentantly promoted for decades.
You can read more about her record here.
At a time when, according to our polling, almost one in ten 18-24 year olds have a favourable view of Hamas, an antisemitic genocidal terrorist group, universities need to be doing more to stop the spread of antisemitic extremism on campuses, not inviting those who appear to endorse it into their lecture theatres.
We are at a tipping point and Jewish students, who have been facing over a year of hatred on campus, need us.
Speakers like these help to fuel the activism on campuses that puts Jewish students at risk and radicalises the student body and the leaders of tomorrow. We will not let this pass without an answer.
Join us. Together, we can #BanFran!
Since students returned to campus, we have been standing with them
Students have been back on campus for several weeks now, and Campaign Against Antisemitism has been standing with them. Our campus tour is well underway, and we have launched our new Student Ambassadors programme, bringing together fearless, motivated students – Jewish and non-Jewish – for training in monitoring and combating antisemitism at their universities.
In addition to supporting students, we have also been monitoring developments on campuses and submitting complaints to universities.
By way of example, in recent weeks in London:
- We wrote to UCL regarding anti-Israel protesters calling for intifada and chanting “From the river to the sea” on the anniversary of 7th October. We heard reports that students had to use the side entrance to the campus because demonstrators blocked off the main way in, and some told us how they did not feel safe attending lectures.
- We wrote to Queen Mary University in relation to students surrounding a vigil for victims of 7th October on the first anniversary of the attack and chanting against them. That was not the only incident at the university.
- We called out shocking signs at SOAS that read “Stop genocide baby killer Israel” and “You will never be free of us until Palestine is free of you!!”
- At Goldsmiths, students chanted “From Gaza to Beirut all our martyrs we salute”, “From London to Gaza Globalise The Intifada” and “When people are occupied, resistance is justified.”
- At London Metropolitan University, a lecturer published an effusive eulogy for the leader of Hamas who orchestrated the massacre of 1,200 people. Our lawyers are examining the case.
Last year, Jewish students faced the worst period of campus antisemitism. We will continue to do everything that we can to ensure that that this year is not a repeat, and that university authorities and regulators finally do their jobs.
Palestine Action and this weekend’s protests
The authorities have been too lax on Palestine Action.
Given the events of this weekend – during which Palestine Action activists allegedly smashed glass at Manchester University to steal two busts of Chaim Weizmann, a Reader in chemistry at the University who went on to become the first President of Israel, and vandalised the premises of Jewish charities in London – it is clear that Palestine Action will only continue to escalate its campaign of criminality, and the authorities are failing to stand in its way.
Whether that is due to an unwillingness to take action or an inability to do so due to the constraints of existing legislation, the result is that a group of petty vandals continue to terrorise the British public and, in particular, the Jewish community and its institutions. This has got to change.
We are talking to the Government and our legal team is reviewing existing legislation to assess its effectiveness in tackling what has become essentially a criminal organisation that wrecks businesses and charities, and terrorises the Jewish community.
The police and the Government must take urgent steps to ensure that Palestine Action faces enforcement action.
This latest vandalism comes in the same weekend when anti-Israel protesters in London invoked the age-old blood libel in a banner that read, “Israel enjoys killing kids. Never forgive. Never forget,” and when a sign was displayed at the protest that read, “Our media, TV, radio and government are controlled by Zionists.” This sort of rhetoric is regularly seen on the streets of London these days, another sign of what happens after a year of failed policing.
Still, there are some bright spots. A Met Police officer was filmed calmly explaining to an anti-Israel protester how wearing a T-shirt bearing a swastika and comparisons between Israel to the Nazis could be seen as offensive. The protester grew belligerent and started yelling at the officer who was trying to do his job. The police rightly detained the man. We will be writing to the Met to find out what further action they took.
Also at the regular anti-Israel march this weekend, police spoke to a man carrying a flag with the words “Free Palestine” and an inverted red triangle. In recent months, the inverted red triangle and its emoji variant have been used by some anti-Israel activists to signal support for proscribed terrorist organisations such as Hamas, inspired by the appearance of the symbol in Hamas propaganda videos to indicate targets for attack. It was encouraging to see that the police actually pulled this man aside.
Could it be that our police forces are beginning to recognise what may possibly count as more nuanced forms of support for banned terror groups? We will be writing to the Met to find out what the outcome of this interaction was and whether any arrests were made.
We are grateful to the volunteers of our Demonstration and Event Monitoring Unit, who continue to monitor anti-Israel protests and activities, week after week.
Problems in our politics persist
Concerns over antisemitism in our politics do not seem to go away.
Regarding the Conservative Party:
- We observed that if Kit Malthouse MP thinks that making vague references to “humanity’s darkest period” and feigning ignorance blinds us to the Holocaust comparisons that he is almost certainly insinuating in recent comments to the House about Israel, he is wrong. Comparing the Jewish state to Nazis breaches the International Definition of Antisemitism, which has been adopted by the Conservative Party. We have called on the Conservatives to urgently require him to clearly reject such comparisons, or face full disciplinary action.
- In an interview with a YouTube channel, former minister Sir Alan Duncan said of one of the Conservative leadership candidates, Robert Jenrick: “Now this man is an extremist. He does not believe in any kind of two state solution, although he says he does. He knows nothing about it. He takes his script entirely from the Conservative Friends of Israel and the Israelis, so he would be a disaster if he were leader of the Conservative Party.” Sir Alan was asked why he thinks that Mr Jenrick, whose wife is Jewish, is a supporter of Israel. He replied that “it is disgusting extremism born of ignorance. But there’s also family connections which have a Jewish link. But just because someone’s Jewish doesn’t mean that they have to agree with Netanyahu.” The suggestion that a politician’s political views are adversely dictated by the ethnic heritage of their spouse is surely beyond the pale of our politics. You can read about the full exchange and Sir Alan’s subsequent statement here. After already being investigated earlier this year in relation to antisemitism, Sir Alan – emboldened by the Conservatives’ recent appalling decision not to sanction him in relation to other antisemitism allegations – is at it again. We will be writing to the Conservative Party once more.
- Baroness Warsi, who surrendered the Conservative whip following a complaint against her but who remains a member of the Party, recently shared a repulsive propaganda video that makes direct comparisons between Israel and the Holocaust, in breach of the International Definition of Antisemitism. We are writing to the Conservative Party about her yet again.
Labour MPs, meanwhile, continue to upset members of the Jewish community and their allies, many of whom have written to us to share their frustrations with how their MPs have replied to their letters about the hostages, the suspension of arms licences to Israel and other issues.
These replies have included references to “hostages on both sides” and support for Gaza with no appreciation for the impact of the war on Israeli or British Jews. The levels of ignorance and ideological entrenchment are remarkable.
We encourage you to continue writing to your MP – no matter their party and no matter their stated position – to express your views and show them that you are an active and interested constituent whose opinions matter. You may not change minds, but there is no harm and only good can come from engaging with your MP.
If you receive particularly supportive or egregious responses, please forward them to us at [email protected].
Jewish students have been facing the worst period of campus antisemitism over the past year.
From submitting complaints and publishing open letters, to organising targeted protests and publicising incidents, providing victim-support and launching our Student Ambassador programme, we will continue to do everything that we can to ensure that that this year is not a repeat of last year, and that university authorities and regulators finally do their jobs, and do right by Jewish students.