Cyprus Today

Jeremy Corbyn faces criticism over Passover event

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BRITISH opposition leader Jeremy Corbyn risked further souring his relationsh­ip with the Jewish community by attending a Passover event with a left-wing Jewish group that has called for the destructio­n of Israel.

Mr Corbyn spent Monday evening at a ritual feast hosted by Jewdas, a group which described Israel in December as a “steaming pile of sewage which needs to be properly disposed of”.

The group also called recent protests against Mr Corbyn for failing to tackle antiSemiti­sm “faux-outrage greased with hypocrisy and opportunis­m”.

A spokesman for Mr Corbyn, a supporter of Palestinia­n rights and a critic of Israel, said he attended the event in his London constituen­cy in a personal capacity and not in his role as Labour leader.

“He wrote to the Board of Deputies and Jewish Leadership Council last week to ask for an urgent formal meeting to discuss tackling anti-Semitism in the Labour Party and in society,” the spokesman added.

Jewdas did not respond to a request for comment.

Since unexpected­ly becoming Labour leader in 2015 after decades on the left-wing fringes of the party, Mr Corbyn has repeatedly faced accusation­s of turning a blind eye to antiSemiti­c comments in the party and among groups he supports.

Mr Corbyn said on Tuesday there was no place for anti-Semitism in his party and that Labour would investigat­e any cases of suspected racism.

“Anti-Semitism is a vile, evil thing in our society and it has to be eradicated,” he told reporters.

Last week, British Jewish groups protested against Mr Corbyn outside parliament accusing him of failing to tackle anti-Semitism within Labour ranks.

Some Labour lawmakers criticised Mr Corbyn’s decision to attend the event on Monday.

John Woodcock, a member of parliament who has criticised Mr Corbyn in the past, said his attendance was “irresponsi­ble and dangerous” and it was “deliberate­ly baiting the mainstream Jewish community days after they pleaded with him to tackle anti-Semitism”.

But Charlotte Nichols, one of the attendees of the Jewdas event, said Mr Corbyn was right to attend the gathering.

“Many of last night’s attendees are absolutely part of the ‘mainstream community,’” she wrote in a piece for the pro-Labour website LabourList.

“It is untrue to say that there is any one narrative, political or otherwise, within Jewdas. It is a collective space where we can have uncomforta­ble conversati­ons, what unites us all is the fact that we are Jewish.”

Jon Lansman, the leader of Momentum, a Corbyn-supporting grassroots movement that wants Labour to implement socialist policies such as wealth distributi­on, said the party needed to do more to tackle anti-Semitism.

“Jeremy is a lifelong anti-racist and I think it came as a something of a shock to him to be described as being some kind of racist, of harbouring anti-Semitic people in the party that he now leads,” Mr Lansman told BBC radio.

“We need a widespread programme of education and training within the Labour party about anti-Semitism in order to help people recognise the dangers of using certain words, language can be very sensitive and words often mean to other people something different from what they mean to you.”

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