Daily Mail

Hate-filled curtain-raiser for Corbyn’s wreath tribute

A speaker who claimed Jews drink Christian blood. Another who’s said it’s ‘legitimate’ to kill Jewish children – and one who declared: ‘ISIS and Israel are the same thing’ . . . at conference attended by Corbyn on eve of Munich terror wreath ceremony

- Andrew Pierce reporting

WORLDWIDE condemnati­on has engulfed Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn after the daily Mail published photograph­s of his presence at a wreath-laying ceremony for terrorists linked to the 1972 Munich olympics massacre.

Yet the day before his visit to the terrorists’ graves at a Tunisian cemetery in 2014, he was a guest of honour at an equally controvers­ial event, sharing a conference platform with senior figures from a terrorist organisati­on as well as with a speaker who compared Israel to the terrorist organisati­on ISIS.

The conference on the Palestinia­n situation took place in the five-star Le Palace hotel in Tunisia’s seaside resort of Gammarth and was attended by the president of Tunisia, dr Moncef Marzouki, who swept in accompanie­d by armed guards.

The president did not disappoint his fiercely partisan audience when he said: ‘ Israeli soldiers and authoritie­s must be held accountabl­e for their crimes against innocent civilians in Gaza.’

Corbyn clapped enthusiast­ically from his privileged spot on the main platform along with six other VIP guests.

The gathering, on September 30, 2014, was called ‘The Internatio­nal Conference on Monitoring the Palestinia­n political and legal situation in the light of Israeli aggression’.

dressed casually in a beige summer jacket, the Islington North MP could not have imagined in his wildest dreams that within 12 months of the conference he would be the Leader of her Majesty’s official opposition.

Back then he was a lowly backbench MP best known in Parliament for regularly opposing the Labour Party’s own leadership.

But at the conference Corbyn was feted by many of the 200 speakers and guests, who were mainly academics and politician­s. he was well known in the Middle east as a hardline opponent of the state of Israel.

he was interviewe­d by the Iranian state-run Press TV channel which was banned from broadcasti­ng in the UK. In the interview Corbyn boasted how he would be supporting a Commons motion the following month to recognise a Palestinia­n state.

Clearly relaxed, he described the gathering as a ‘conference searching for peace’, adding: ‘The only way we achieve peace is by bringing people together and talking to them.’

But peace did not seem to be on the mind of many of the speakers, including senior figures from the terrorist organisati­on hamas, who talked of waging armed conflict with Israel. other speakers spewed out vile anti-Semitic rhetoric.

ONE of the most high profile speakers at the gathering was osama hamdan, the hamas representa­tive in the Lebanon, who shared a platform with Corbyn.

In a four-point plan he called for ‘armed resistance’ to Israel. In the past he’s threatened to send missiles deep into Israel and said: ‘Killing children . . . is engraved in the historical Zionist and Jewish mentality.’

Just before the conference, hamdan had given an interview to Lebanese media in which he said that the antiSemiti­c myth that Jews drank Christian blood was ‘not a figment of imaginatio­n or something taken from a film. It is a fact.’

Corbyn has no difficulty rubbing shoulders with such individual­s as hamdan or with hamas, which is regarded as a terrorist organisati­on not only by Britain, but the EU, Israel and the U.S.

Indeed in 2009 he called for hamas to be removed from Britain’s list of banned terror groups.

Two others listed to speak at the conference were hamas co-founder Mahmoud al-Zahar who has declared that killing Jewish children is ‘legitimate’. In a TV interview he added that Jews were ‘hungry dogs and wild beasts’ who had ‘no future among the nations of the world’ and were ‘headed to annihilati­on’.

he was listed alongside Mousa Marzook, the hamas second-incommand designated a terrorist by the U.S. and found guilty of financing terror by an American court.

SPEAKER after speaker condemned Israel at Corbyn’s ‘peace conference’, while the former Tunisian foreign office minister othman Jerandi compared the country with the blood-soaked terrorists of ISIS.

he said: ‘ ISIS and Israel are the same thing.’ There was not a murmur of disapprova­l from Corbyn.

other speakers included Anouar Gharbi from the Muslim Brotherhoo­d, who is close to Sheikh Raed Salah, an individual jailed in Israel for eight months for inciting antiJewish racism.

Corbyn invited Salah, who blamed the Jews for the 9/11 Twin Towers atrocity, for tea in the Commons.

Among delegates at the conference was lawyer Sabah al-Mukhtar who appeared as an expert witness in 2010 for extremist cleric Abu hamza when he was resisting moves to be stripped of his British citizenshi­p.

hook-handed hamza, who preached at London’s Finsbury Park Mosque, was deported and in 2015 given a life sentence in prison in the U.S. for terrorism and kidnapping offences.

There were two other British MPs at the conference, both close to the Labour leader. one was Francie Molloy, a Sinn Fein MP, who like all his party colleagues never takes his seat in the Commons as he refuses to swear loyalty to the Queen.

In december 2015, ahead of a Commons vote on whether Britain should join internatio­nal bombing raids against ISIS militants in Syria, Molloy tweeted. ‘Brits back to what they do best: Murder.’

Molloy and Corbyn were photograph­ed together at a demonstrat­ion in 1992 to mark 20 years since the Bloody Sunday shooting in which 28 civilians were shot dead by the British Army in Northern Ireland.

Grahame Morris, one of the 36 Labour MPs whose vote for Corbyn

ensured his name went on the ballot in the Labour leadership contest, was also present. He is a long-standing critic of Israel.

There was also an appearance from Lord Sheikh, the president of the Conservati­ve Muslim Forum, who called last week for Boris Johnson to be ejected from the Tory Party for saying women in burkas looked like ‘letter boxes’ and ‘bank robbers’.

Two years ago Sheikh led a delegation to Syria, paid for by Palestinia­n lobbyists, to meet the country’s President Assad.

He was photograph­ed warmly shaking hands with Assad. He is now facing calls to be censured by the same party disciplina­ry machine that has been mobilised against Boris Johnson.

Earlier this month Corbyn, under pressure over the deepening anti-Semitism row, apologised for sharing platforms with extremists whose views he neither ‘accepted or condoned’. The apology came after it emerged that in 2012 he had chaired a meeting at the House of Commons where Israeli actions in Gaza were compared with those of the Nazis during the Holocaust.

The meeting was called The Misuse of the Holocaust for Political Purposes. While Corbyn never condoned the comparison­s, he never attempted to contradict or challenge speakers who made the deeply offensive comparison­s.

Judging by some of the people he shared a platform with in Tunisia, it is almost certainly time for another apology.

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 ??  ?? Feted: Jeremy Corbyn on the platform with VIP guests — none of whom expressed the views below — at the Tunisia conference on ‘Israeli aggression’
Feted: Jeremy Corbyn on the platform with VIP guests — none of whom expressed the views below — at the Tunisia conference on ‘Israeli aggression’

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