The Daily Telegraph

Palestine flags taken down after Jews felt intimidate­d

- By Robert Mendick CHIEF REPORTER

THE mayor of Tower Hamlets has bowed to pressure and ordered the removal of Palestinia­n flags from council buildings and lampposts.

Lutfur Rahman insisted that the flags were “symbols of solidarity and sympathy” for Palestinia­ns in Gaza but that the borough was taking them down after being advised to do so.

The Telegraph has highlighte­d the upset caused to Jewish residents by the council’s previous refusal to remove the flags. Other boroughs have removed Palestinia­n flags hung from posts and street signs and council-owned property but Tower Hamlets had allowed them to flourish, many of them close to schools.

The Government has ordered an inspection amid fears over how it is being run by Mr Rahman, who had previously been barred from public office for five years for corruption.

Having served his ban, Mr Rahman, who is an independen­t, was voted back into the post in the local elections in May 2022.

Tower Hamlets’ about-turn comes three days after a group of lawyers sent the borough a legal letter threatenin­g to bring a private prosecutio­n.

UK Lawyers for Israel had complained that the flags were intimidati­ng Jewish residents and that the council was committing a criminal offence by refusing to take them down.

Jonathan Turner, the group’s chief executive, said in the letter: “Many Jewish and other people who live and/or work in the borough have expressed their distress to us. A number of them are so distressed that they are looking to move out of the borough.”

In a statement on social media, Mr Rahman blamed his decision for the removal of the flags on adverse publicity in the media. He claimed a rise in Islamophob­ia had made Tower Hamlets, which has the highest population of Muslims in the country, “a target”.

Mr Rahman said: “Sadly, it is clear the Palestinia­n flags flying in the borough have been the focus of these media attacks. I understand that those who have erected these flags across the borough have done so in line with our strong tradition of solidarity, and I reject that they are symbols of division.”

But he went on: “Although these flags are an understand­able expression of solidarity, I now feel they are being used to unfairly attack the people of the borough and further the Islamophob­ic narrative.”

Mr Turner said he was pleased that Tower Hamlets had relented. But he also expressed disappoint­ment that police had not intervened earlier.

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