Belfast Telegraph

Corbyn must address anti-Semitism claims after rabbi’s criticism: May

- BY SHAUN CONNOLLY

PRIME Minister Theresa May has waded into the row over anti-Semitism in the Labour Party by calling on Jeremy Corbyn to directly respond to stinging criticism from a former chief rabbi.

The interventi­on comes after Lord Jonathan Sacks branded the Labour leader an “anti-Semite” and compared Mr Corbyn’s comments on Zionists to Enoch Powell’s inflammato­ry “rivers of blood” speech.

During a tour of Africa, Mrs May said: “Anti-Semitism is racism. We should all condemn racism in all its forms.

“Lord Sacks was a long-standing chief rabbi, he raised significan­t concerns but it’s not just him. Members of the Labour Parhad ty have raised concerns as well. I think the leader of the Labour Party needs to respond to those concerns.”

Lord Sacks’s remarks, in which he claimed Mr Corbyn had given support to “racists, terrorists, and dealers of hate”, drew an angry response from Labour.

Condemnati­on of the leader of the Opposition by the crossbench peer, who served as chief rabbi between 1991-2013, comes just a week before Labour’s ruling national executive committee again considers its code of conduct on anti-Semitism.

Labour hit back at the comments by branding them “absurd and offensive”.

Lord Sacks’s remarks came after footage from 2013 emerged of Mr Corbyn verbally attacking a group of British Zionists who

Prime Minister Theresa May and Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn

criticised Palestinia­n ambassador Manuel Hassassian.

Mr Corbyn said: “They clearly have two problems. One is they don’t want to study history, and secondly, having lived in this country for a very long time, probably all of their lives, they don’t understand English irony.”

Lord Sacks said: “The recently disclosed remarks by Jeremy Corbyn are the most offensive statement made by a senior British politician since Enoch Powell’s 1968 rivers of blood speech.

“It was divisive, hateful and like Powell’s speech it undermines the existence of an entire group of British citizens by depicting them as essentiall­y alien.”

The Labour Party said: “This comparison with the race-baiting Enoch Powell is absurd and offensive. Jeremy Corbyn described a particular group of pro-Israel activists as Zionists, in the accurate political sense, not as a synonym or code for Jewish people.

“Jeremy Corbyn is determined to tackle anti-Semitism within the Labour Party and in wider society and the Labour Party is committed to rebuilding trust with the Jewish community.”

The Labour leader has said his remarks had been defending the ambassador from “what I thought were deliberate misreprese­ntations” by people “for whom English was a first language, when it isn’t for the ambassador”.

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