The Mail on Sunday

Blair blasts Pink Floyd star in row over Israel

- By Glen Owen POLITICAL CORRESPOND­ENT

TONY Blair has been drawn into Labour’s bitter anti- Semitism row after condemning rock star Roger Waters for spewing‘ ideologica­l poison’ about Israel.

The former Prime Minister spoke out after the Pink Floyd singer and guitarist compared the Israeli government to Nazi Germany and called for a boycott by artists over its record on rights for Palestinia­ns.

Waters, a Labour activist and supporter of Jeremy Corbyn, said the ‘parallels [between Israel’s actions] and what went on in the 1930s in Germany are so crushingly obvious’ and criticised the ‘extraordin­arily powerful’ Jewish lobby.

Mr Blair, who frequently defended Israel’s record during his time as a Middle East peace envoy, was asked in an interview if Waters’s remarks were anti-Semitic.

‘I think the criticism [of Israel by Waters] is so ludicrous that it indicates a basic hostility to the notion of a homeland for the Jewish people... you’ve got to overcome the legacy of that ideologica­l poison which has dripped into the system over many decades,’ he said.

The interventi­on by Mr Blair – whose own pop career peaked with t he group Ugly Rumours as a student – came after a week in which Labour’s annual party conference in Brighton was dominated by arguments about the alleged anti-Semitic beliefs of Mr Corbyn’s followers. The leader fuelled the allegation­s by failing to turn up at a reception for Labour Friends of Israel, while his deputy Tom Watson pledged an investigat­ion into how campaigner­s were allowed to use the conference fringe to question the Holocaust. The Jewish Labour Movement demanded action over what it says was the use of an ‘anti-Semitic trope’ in the conference hall at Brighton, and called for ‘ zero tolerance’ of such comments. But Unite union leader Len McCluskey said claims that the leadership was condoning anti-Semitism, racism and misogyny were designed to ‘bring Jeremy Corbyn down’. Mr Blair was also asked during the interview by campaignin­g filmmaker Ian Halperin, as part of a documentar­y about Waters’s political beliefs, whether it was a ‘big insult to six million innocent Jews who perished’ to make the comparison with Hitler’s Germany. Mr Blair said: ‘Yes. I’m a great fan of the music of Pink Floyd, but I don’t agree with Roger Waters and his campaign. I think it is part of a wider alliance which is dangerous and worries me... which is the leftist-Islamist alliance. It’s a growing problem… there is nothing progressiv­e about a totalitari­an ideology.’ A spokeswoma­n for Waters declined to comment.

 ??  ?? ‘POISON’: Pink Floyd guitarist Roger Waters
‘POISON’: Pink Floyd guitarist Roger Waters

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom