The Scotsman

Labour MSPS call for adoption of global anti-semitism definition

- By CATRIONA WEBSTER

Senior Scottish Labour politician­s have urged the wider party to adopt the internatio­nal definition of anti-semitism in full.

MSPS Monica Lennon, Jackie Baillie, Anas Sarwar, Daniel Johnson and Colin Smyth have all expressed their support for the Internatio­nal Holocaust Remembranc­e Alliance’s (IHRA) definition to be accepted in its entirety, including a list of examples.

The UK party and leader Jeremy Corbyn have been embroiled in a row over antisemiti­sm, with three leading Jewish newspapers describing the failure to embrace the IHRA definition in full as “sinister”.

Scottish Labour leader Richard Leonard has been urged to speak out on the issue.

In a social media post, Ms Lennon, Scottish Labour’s communitie­s, social security and equalities spokeswoma­n, said she had a “lengthy and constructi­ve” meeting with representa­tives of the Jewish community.

Ms Baillie, the party’s economy spokeswoma­n, tweeted that adopting the IHRA defi- 0 Monica Lennon is among MSPS focusing on the issue nition is “the right thing to do”, while health spokesman Mr Sarwar said the party “must adopt the IHRA definition of anti-semitism now”.

Scottish Conservati­ve MP for East Renfrewshi­re Paul Masterton said: “Even Richard Leonard’s colleagues are now telling him that he needs to change the way he’s handled this anti-semitism scandal.”

Meanwhile, Westminste­r leader Mr Corbyn has been accused of “supporting and defending” extremists and anti-semites by one of his own MPS.

Ian Austin is facing possible disciplina­ry action for clashing with the party chairman over the National Executive Committee’s failure to fully adopt a widely-backed definition of anti-semitism.

Dudley North MP Mr Austin – the son of adoptive Jewish parents who lost relatives in the Holocaust – said the long-running row that has seen Labour castigated by a string of Jewish groups had left him “deeply ashamed” of the party.

He accused Mr Corbyn of introducin­g to Labour a more “extreme” brand of politics, tellinga BBC radio programme: “Somebody with views and history like his isn’t really suited to the leadership of a mainstream political party.”

He added: “Am I upset about anti-semitism? Yes I am. I am upset about that and I’m upset as well about the leadership’s failure, I think refusal really, to deal with this properly.

“I grew up listening to my dad tell me how he’d escaped from the Holocaust and how his mum and sisters were murdered in Treblinka [a concentrat­ion camp] and that led to me joining the Labour Party as a teenager determined to fight racism.”

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