The Borneo Post

UK police probe Labour Party ‘anti-Semitic hate crimes’

-

LONDON: British police announced yesterday they were investigat­ing alleged ‘antiSemiti­c hate crimes’ within the main opposition Labour Party after receiving a leaked internal dossier.

The criminal investigat­ion comes after a national radio station obtained what it said was an internal Labour document detailing 45 cases involving messages posted by party members on social media.

Labour, led by veteran socialist Jeremy Corbyn, spent the British summer dogged by accusation­s of anti- Semitism.

The issue has bubbled under the surface for years, but intensifie­d in recent months with a series of incidents coming to light.

“A criminal investigat­ion has commenced into some of the allegation­s within the documentat­ion,” London’s Metropolit­an Police said in a statement.

Britain’s top police officer Cressida Dick was handed the leaked dossier two months ago after an interview at LBC.

“The complainan­t alleged that the documentat­ion included evidence of anti- Semitic hate crimes,” the Met Police said.

“The contents have been examined by specialist officers.”

The Met said early investigat­ive advice was being sought from the Crown Prosecutio­n Service.

The CPS, England’s state prosecutor­s, decides on whether to bring criminal charges once an investigat­ion is complete.

LBC had previously showed the dossier to former senior Met Police officer Mak Chishty, who had been in charge of dealing with hate crime.

He believed that 17 instances should have been reported to the police for investigat­ion, and another four were potential race hate crimes.

Dick said Labour as a whole was not under investigat­ion.

“We are not going to investigat­e the Labour Party. We would always want institutio­ns and political parties and similar to be able to regulate themselves,” she told BBC radio.

“However, if somebody passes us material which they say amounts to a crime we have a duty to look at that.

“We are now investigat­ing some of that material because it appears there may have been crime committed.

“I hope we will be able to clear that up very quickly.”

Labour deputy leader Tom Watson told BBC radio that the investigat­ion was “thoroughly depressing, although sadly I’m not surprised.

“If people have committed hate crimes, then they need to be dealt with by the full force of the law.

There’s no role for them within the Labour Party.

“If this does one thing, it will be able to silence a very small number of people who still believe that anti- Semitism doesn’t exist in my party,” which he said was hampering efforts to stamp out the problem.

Labour said they had not been contacted by the police but stood ready to co- operate with the investigat­ion.

“The Labour Party has a robust system for investigat­ing complaints of alleged breaches of Labour Party rules by its members,” a spokesman said.

“Where someone feels they have been a victim of crime, they should report it to the police in the usual way.” — AFP

 ??  ?? File photo shows people holding up placards and Union flags as they gather for a demonstrat­ion organised by the Campaign Against AntiSemiti­sm outside the head office of the British opposition Labour Party in central London. — AFP photo
File photo shows people holding up placards and Union flags as they gather for a demonstrat­ion organised by the Campaign Against AntiSemiti­sm outside the head office of the British opposition Labour Party in central London. — AFP photo

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia