Zack Polanski has vigorously defended his decision to wear a T-shirt calling for the release of a convicted Palestinian terrorist responsible for attacks that killed five civilians.
The Green Party leader was photographed wearing a football-style shirt bearing the slogan “Free Marwan”, a reference to Marwan Barghouti, the Palestinian political figure serving five life sentences in Israel for his role in orchestrating terror attacks between 2001 and 2002.
It comes after Polanski signed a letter calling for British-Israelis who served in the IDF to be put on a list by British authorities and a "secondary screening" process for travellers arriving in the UK from Tel Aviv.
The Green leader prompted outrage when an image of him wearing the £45 T-shirt at an election results party alongside other party figures – including their newest MP Hannah Spencer – circulated on social media.
Members of the Green Party were celebrating their recent success in the local elections[Missing Credit]
Iranian activist Heidi Bachram wrote on X: “What the hell is @ZackPolanski doing wearing a shirt to free the Palestinian terrorist Marwan Barghouti who murdered 5 civilians. This is TOO FAR.”
Bachram's husband's relatives were murdered and taken hostage by Hamas.
Responding, Polanski defended his support for Barghouti.
He wrote: “Good. Let's talk about Marwan Barghouti. Imprisoned for 25 years. An inter-Parliamentary Union report found he was not given a fair trial. Nelson Mandela: ‘What is happening to Barghouti is exactly the same as what happened to me.’ Free Marwan.”
But Polanski was met with fierce criticism.
Dave Rich, policy director at the Community Security Trust (CST), commented on X: “Barghouti was acquitted of most charges (but still convicted of some) which suggests he got a fair trial.
“And there's no proof Mandela ever said that. But why let facts get in the way when there's a convicted terrorist to support?”
The quotation cited by Polanski originates from comments attributed to Nelson Mandela by Barghouti's lawyer, Khader Shkirat, in 2002.
Marwan Barghouti is led to a police vehicle on 29 September 2003 (Getty Images)AFP via Getty Images
According to reports at the time, Shkirat quoted Mandela as saying: “What is happening to Barghouti is exactly the same as what happened to me. The government tried to de-legitimise the African National Congress and its armed struggle by putting me on trial.”
Barghouti, a former elected member of the Palestinian Legislative Council, has been held in Israeli prisons since his arrest in Ramallah in 2002.
Israeli authorities accused him of orchestrating attacks that killed five civilians, and he was convicted on terrorism charges by an Israeli court. He was acquitted of 21 counts of murder in 33 other attacks, due to a lack of evidence.
He was also a founding member of the Al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigades, a Fatah-aligned coalition of Palestinian armed groups that was involved in the October 7 massacre.
Currently serving five life sentences, Barghouti has become a symbolic leader for some pro-Palestinian activists.
On Saturday, his son Aarab Barghouti was invited to the stage at Barcelona’s Primavera Sounds by Damon Albarn’s band Gorillaz.
During a speech to open the Gorillaz set, he told the festival crowd: “My father is one of 10,000 Palestinian prisoners held by Israel, but for millions of Palestinians he represents something that Israel cannot imprison: hope.
“Freedom won in South Africa, in Ireland, and in Algeria, because people like you refused to look away, refused to give up. So keep fighting for Palestine, for Gaza, and for justice.”
Mawran Barghouti has consistently maintained his innocence and argued that the court which tried him was illegitimate.
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