MPs Diane Abbott and Lisa Nandy leave PSC event before BDS founder speaks
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MPs Diane Abbott and Lisa Nandy leave PSC event before BDS founder speaks

Two Labour MPs avoided sharing a platform with the founder of the movement to boycott Israel, Omar Barghouti, before he addressed the event via video link from Ramallah

Lisa Nandy speaks at the PSC event during Labour conference (PSCUpdates on Twitter)
Lisa Nandy speaks at the PSC event during Labour conference (PSCUpdates on Twitter)

Two senior women MPs, Diane Abbott and Lisa Nandy, avoided criticism for sharing a platform with the founder of the BDS movement, Omar Barghouti, by leaving a Palestine Solidarity Campaign event before Mr Barghouti spoke — by video link, from Ramallah.

Kamel Hawwash, who chairs the PSC in Britain, explained that Mr Barghouti’s visa to come to the Brighton conference had been delayed, drawing the packed audience’s attention to the fact that the Home Secretary is Priti Patel. “And guess what Priti Patel was doing a couple of years ago?” he asked, though refusing to make a direct on the record link to Ms Patel’s controversial visit to Israel two years ago.

The tone of the meeting was set by the Unite union’s deputy general secretary, Gail Cartmail, who set the audience chanting “Free, free Palestine!” Her remarks were followed by an address from the president of the Unison public service union, Josie Bird. Both women spoke of previous visits to Palestinians and of advances made in securing equal rights for Palestinian workers.

Lisa Nandy, standing at a table covered with a Palestinian flag and a freedom fighter’s revolutionary keffiyeh, acknowledged that despite being chair of Labour Friends of Palestine and the Middle East, she had received criticism for attending the meeting. She made it clear that she was in favour of the two-state solution and against the boycott movement. She said she had spoken out in favour of the right of Israel to exist — and also of the right of Labour Friends of Israel to exist. Nevertheless, she was angry, she said, at attempts to shut down debate and warned: “actions have consequences”.

Shadow Home Secretary Diane Abbott’s remarks were brief and lacklustre, citing Amnesty International’s reports on alleged Israeli human rights abuses.

It was left to Omar Barghouti, currently studying at Tel Aviv University, to make an incendiary speech accusing Israel of “weaponising false claims of antisemitism against the BDS movement”. In a series of long remarks he said that BDS had had many successes, including, he said, the failure of Israel to attract record numbers of tourists for Eurovision in early May this year. Instead of the projected 40-50 thousand, he said, there had only been at best 5,000 from abroad.

The PSC panel was one of a large number of Palestinan-related events during the Brighton conference. As in the past two years, Labour delegates were able to replace their conference pass lanyards with Palestinian-coloured ones, identifying the wearer’s politics immediately. Palestinian flags were on display everywhere at fringe events.

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