The Daily Telegraph

Gary Lineker refers to Oct 7 terrorist attacks as ‘the Hamas thing’

- By Albert Tait

GARY LINEKER has been accused of “tone-deaf ” comments after he appeared to refer to the Oct 7 attacks as “the Hamas thing”.

The Match of the Day presenter made the comment on the British-american broadcaste­r Mehdi Hasan’s Mehdi Unfiltered programme.

Speaking about the war in Gaza, he said: “I can’t think of anything that I’ve seen worse in my lifetime. The constant images of children losing their lives day in, day out. Now obviously we all know Oct 7 happened, and the Hamas thing, but the minute you raise your voice against what they’re now doing there, you get accused of being a supporter of Hamas.”

More than 1,100 people died in the Hamas attack on Israel on Oct 7, and more than 250 were taken to Gaza as hostages, according to Israeli tallies.

Air and artillery strikes carried out by the Israeli military in response have killed more than 33,000 Palestinia­ns in Gaza, the Hamas-run health ministry says. Mr Lineker, 63, has come under fire for his “tone-deaf” comments, which were criticised as minimising the Oct 7 atrocities.

A spokesman for the Campaign Against Antisemiti­sm (CAA) said: “Gary Lineker is not a lone heroic voice: he is one of a mob offering up one-sided, tone-deaf interventi­ons on social media.

“It has not escaped anyone’s notice that, despite his clear interest in the topic and social media habit, he has barely commented on the worst antisemiti­c atrocity since the Holocaust on Oct 7 – ‘the Hamas thing’, as he has now reluctantl­y referred to it in passing.”

A representa­tive for Mr Lineker refused to comment when approached by The Telegraph.

The CAA has also claimed that the presenter breached BBC impartiali­ty guidelines. The podcast on which he made the comments is not affiliated with the BBC, and is produced by Mr Lineker’s own company, Goalhanger Podcasts.

The CAA said: “Far from being silenced, Mr Lineker’s stance has become so normalised – and the voice of the mob of which he is a part has grown so loud – that the BBC is desensitis­ed to it and regularly ignores the clear breaches of its impartiali­ty guidelines that these interventi­ons represent.”

The BBC has been approached for comment.

It is not the first time that Mr Lineker has been embroiled in an impartiali­ty row. He was criticised by Conservati­ve MPS after calling a government policy “not dissimilar to that used by Germany in the 30s” in March 2023.

He has also backed a campaign to scrap the Government’s plan to send asylum seekers to Rwanda.

In January, Jewish BBC staff lodged formal complaints about Mr Lineker’s social media use after he shared, then deleted, a message calling for Israel to be banned from internatio­nal football tournament­s. It is understood Mr Lineker believed he was sharing news of such a ban, rather than a call for one, and deleted the post.

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