The Jewish Chronicle

New formula could help prosecutio­ns

- BY DINA SHILOH JC Dina Shiloh is a partner at Gallant Maxwell Solicitors

IN MAY 2016 an organisati­on

readers may not be familiar with — the Internatio­nal Holocaust Remembranc­e Alliance — agreed a working definition of antisemiti­sm, (which you can read in the lead story on this page).

Importantl­y, although Israel isn’t mentioned in the definition, the IH RA notes that some kinds of criticism of Israel can constitute anti semi tic behaviour or speech. For example, holding Jewish people accountabl­e for government policy, or events in Israel, maybe anti semi tic. But the definition does not make criticism of Israel itself antisemiti­c.

The definition has a long history: it is based on a formula drafted by the European Monitoring Centre on Racism and Xenophobia (EUMC) in 2005. Non-government­al organisati­ons in the UK have called for the adoption of the EUMC definition for years.

This week, Theresa May announced that the UK would formally adopt the IHRA definition. Some have greeted the move as a terrible step; they say free speech is being attacked. Others say it is a welcome decision which should have been made years ago.

The definition will be used by the police, councils, universiti­es and public bodies. But will it have any tangible effect in practice?

It is not a piece of legislatio­n. There is no Act which has gone through debate in Parliament which has now made antisemiti­sm unlawful. The police won’t be able to make arrests, and the CPS will not be able to prosecute individual­s on the basis that they are “being antisemiti­c”. The antisemiti­c aspect of any activity will have to be shoehorned into existing ways to prosecute individual­s, such as harassment or assault.

And there may be little impact on the courts, at least initially. As is often the case with definition­s drawn up by internatio­nal bodies, it is vague.

However, it will be a very useful tool; it can help public bodies decide whether an incident is antisemiti­c or not.

If law enforcemen­t bodies have a clear definition that they can understand, the antisemiti­c elements of offences will be easier to prosecute.

This includes attacks via social media as well as physical attacks. Although there are a significan­t number of laws which address hate speech or deed, a definition of antisemiti­sm (taking into account the new ways anti-Jewish sentiment is expressed) is needed to assist bodies to clarify when certain words or allegation­s are in fact antisemiti­c.

If the relevant bodies learn to refer to it frequently, and are able to use it effectivel­y, then the definition may inform them whether offensive conduct or words need to be addressed; and it will provide a framework in which — in simple terms — it will be easier to bring to justice those who attack Jewish people.

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