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By

Denis MacShane

Opinion

A dangerous continental drift

Sometimes under cover, sometimes openly, Euro politics is now riddled with antisemitism

October 22, 2010 09:37
2 min read

The deepening of antisemitic discourse in Europe is now beginning to challenge the post-war democratic settlement. It is commonplace to report attacks on Jewish cemeteries, synagogues and upon Jews themselves. The 1930s slogan, Kauft nicht bei Juden (Don’t buy from Jews) has been taken up by a number of liberal-left institutions, including the British trade union movement. Other attempts to impose boycotts on Israel focus on universities, journalists and intellectuals — paradoxically, three areas of protest in Israel against continued occupation of Palestinian lands.

There are no calls to boycott Saudi Arabia or the Gulf States despite the appalling treatment of foreign labour in those countries. Although Turkey has illegally occupied northern Cyprus and sent thousands of settlers there in defiance of UN resolutions, there is no campaign against Turkey or call to boycott Turkish goods or universities. Iran hangs teenage gays and authorises the stoning to death of women who flout ultra Sharia codes. Yet no one demands that Iranians bear a collective guilt for the decisions of their government.

David Cameron, when in Turkey, referred to Gaza as “a prison camp”. He did not mention that Egypt also was blockading Gaza or that Israelis had handed Gaza over to the Palestinians and been promptly confronted with a hail of rockets. He did not mention that the Turkish state adopted far more ferocious measures against the Kurdish PKK than Israel does against Hamas.

In Europe today, the hard right, the anti-Zionist left, and militant Islamist ideologues combine to use old images of secret Jewish wielders of influence under the rubric of the “Israel Lobby”.

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