Become a Member
Rob Rinder

ByRob Rinder, Rob Rinder

Analysis

Blame politicians for Palestine march chaos, not the police

The Met deserve our appreciation rather than our scorn for the tough job that they do

February 26, 2024 11:55
1904562356
Police officers make their way among protesters during a Pro-Palestinian demonstration in central London on January 6, 2024 (Photo by HENRY NICHOLLS / AFP)
3 min read

I wonder if you saw a story a few weeks back about one of the pro-Palestinian marches in Edinburgh? Footage popped up online of a policeman advising a Jewish man to tuck his Star of David behind his jumper. He tells the guy that if some of the marchers saw it, they might get “very angry”. There weren’t enough officers to handle it (just three), he explains, if things got hairy.

Criticism of the officer in particular and Police Scotland in general flowed in a steady, depressing torrent… splashing and crashing about the internet, gushing through social media and out into the world beyond.

It all got me thinking. I was, of course, horrified by what I’d seene all are as Jews. It’s intolerable that we should feel unsafe or singled out in any city. It immediately called to mind other times in history where simple outward expressions of Judaism were inherently dangerous. But there’s a tendency now among a very vocal few to imply that the police are too fearful of reprisal or, worse still, behaving in support of the language or violence of some protesters.

I simply don’t believe that’s the case. And I certainly don’t believe it in the case of the Scottish officer.

Topics:

Demos