The Jewish Chronicle

Lawyer who called Scottish PSC ‘scummy racists’ wins legal fight

- BY DANIEL SUGARMAN

A JEWISH lawyer who was ordered to undergo diversity training for calling an anti-Israel campaign group “scummy racists” has won his fight to have the decision overturned on appeal.

Matthew Berlow was sanctioned by the Scottish Law Society last October for calling the Scottish Palestine Solidarity Campaign (SPSC) “scummy racists, bullies and cowards” and saying that, with its protests against an Israeli shop owner, it had “simply found a soft Jewish target to aim your bile at”.

He was ordered to pay a fine of £1,750 and undergo diversity training after a pro-Palestinia­n campaigner complained to the lawyer’s profession­al body.

Mr Berlow later tried to raise funds through JustGiving for the costs of the appeal he was lodging but people connected to the SPSC managed to have it closed down after complainin­g that raising funds for a legal case violated the website’s terms of service.

But he was then contacted by Adam Solomon, a Jewish London-based QC, who read about the case in the JC.

Mr Solomon said he was prepared to fly to Edinburgh to represent him for free at the appeal, which took place on Yom Ha’atzmaut.

“Adam was simply amazing”, Mr Berlow said, describing his representa­tion as “a great mitzvah.”

He said: “His advocacy skills and

knowledge, combined with his polite and matter-of-fact demeanour meant that the case against me soon crumbled. “I cannot thank him enough for coming to my rescue.”

Mr Berlow said the training he had been due to face “would have been odd as I am a Jew married to a Muslim and have never discrimina­ted against anyone or any group in my life.”

The SPSC had organised events protesting against the Jericho Skin Care stall, owned by Nissan Ayalon, in Glasgow, later doing the same in Aberdeen when he moved his business there.

Two SPSC members who protested at the stall were convicted, one for aggravated trespass and failing to follow police orders and a second for ignoring police orders.

In November 2017, Mr Ayalon, who has since left the UK, told the BBC his treatment was like “a game of chase the Jew”. He added: “We were accused of murdering, mass murdering, slaughter, criminals, we were called criminal enterprise. We were called baby killers.”

Mr Berlow was still required to pay the fine for “intemperat­e language”, which he called “the price you pay for defending Israel online”. But he was found not to be liable for the considerab­le costs of his appeal.

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