Sunak accused of ignoring letter from British family of Hamas atrocity victims
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Sunak accused of ignoring letter from British family of Hamas atrocity victims

Steve Brisley revealed his devastated parents, whose family were murdered by Hamas terrorists, wrote to the PM over a month ago. 'That letter remains unanswered,' he told an LFI lunch

Lee Harpin is the Jewish News's political editor

Steve Brisley speaking at LFI annual reception
Steve Brisley speaking at LFI annual reception

Rishi Sunak has been accused of ignoring a letter sent to him over a month ago by the British family of victims of the Hamas terrorist atrocity in Israel who had informed him they felt “isolated and abandoned” by the UK government’s response.

In an emotional speech delivered at the annual Labour Friends of Israel lunc in central London, Steve Brisley, told of his struggle to come to terms with the murder of his sister Lianne Sharabi along with his two nieces Yahel,13, and Noiya,16, by the terrorists in kibbutz Be’eri, close to the Gaza border.

Two other family members Eli and Yosi,53, remain kidnapped but Brisley accused the UK government of remaining “silent” over efforts to locate them and bring them home.

“We have seen a number of hostages released over the past few days and we are, of course, heartened by this,” Brisley said.

“But we have also seen how fragile these agreements are
and how time is of the essence. My government can help my British family – Eli and Yosi’s British family – by meeting with us and intervening in a meaningful way and in a way which acknowledges its obligations towards Eli and Yosi and members of my British family.

“But they are silent. How can I be reassured that my government’s voice is being heard on the international scene, when I cannot even be reassured that my government has heard my voice?”


Yahel, left, with mother Lianne, centre, and sister Noiya

Then Brisley referenced his own parents Peter and Gill, who live in South Wales and are in their 70s, attempt to raise the matter with the prime minister.

He revealed:”It’s now over a month since my parents wrote personally to Rishi Sunak, setting out their feelings of isolation and abandonment by the British government. 

“They asked their Prime Minister if he felt that his government’s response to this British family, shattered by events, has been adequate. 

“That letter remains unanswered. Are the standards of this government and its commitment to my British family so depleted that it cannot even argue its case that it has met a threshold as low as ‘adequacy’?”

In his damning rebuke, Brisley added:”Last Thursday, David Cameron visited Kibbutz Be’eri. 

“His feet broke the dirt into which the blood of my sister and two nieces is soaked. And yet, neither he, nor his predecessor, has seen fit to meet with the British families who have been traumatised by their loss and who, every day, live in uncertainty about the fate of their relatives in captivity. 

“When will the names Lianne, Noiya, Yahel, Eli and Yosi pass from the lips of the British government?”

Labour shadow foreign secretary David Lammy, who delivered the keynote speech at Tuesday’s event, which was attended by over 450 people including 90 Labour parliamentarians, responded to Brisley’s speech telling the audience he would be raising the matter with Lord Cameron immediately.

Earlier Brisley, who lives in Bristol, said:”Eli Sharabi is my brother. I love him and I miss him. I need your help to bring him
home.

“Eli is married to my sister, Lianne, and father to my two beautiful nieces, Noiya and Yahel. 

“My sister and nieces, each of whom are British citizens, were brutally murdered in the attack on their home on Kibbutz Be’eri on the 7 th of October. Eli, and his brother, Yosi, were kidnapped and taken to Gaza. 

“My family and I will mourn our loss for the rest of our days, but the safe return of Eli and Yosi will act as the greatest memorial possible to Lianne, Noiya and Yahel’s lives.”

Bristol-born Lianne, 48, and her two teenage daughters were killed when Hamas stormed their home in Kibbutz Be’eri, Israel, on 7 October.

Parents Gill and Pete Brisley told the BBC last month how Lianne was a “devoted mother” who “tried to protect her daughters to the end”.

“Lianne was doing what a mother would do – holding her babies in her arms.”

As he continued his speech at the LFI event Brisley said:”Eli is not ‘my sister’s husband’, he is my brother.

“Yosi is not just Eli’s brother, he is my brother.

“Eli is as much an integral part of my British family as my own two daughters. I have known and loved him for 28 years and shared countless memories with him, both in Israel and the UK.

“Eli’s part in my British family was not extinguished when my sister’s life was brutally ended. Eli’s part in my British family was not broken when our hearts were. Because he is us and we are him.”

Lianne Sharabi was buried alongside her daughters, Noiya and Yahel. All were murdered in Kibbutz Be’eri. Pic: Itay Gross

But in further criticism of the Conservative government’s response to the hostage crisis he added:”It’s been seven weeks since my family was ripped apart by the massacre and kidnappings at Kibbutz Be’eri.

“On the 25 th of October, I sat with my sobbing parents on their sofa, huddled round my mobile phone propped up on a coffee table, so that we could watch, via a Whatsapp videocall, my sister and her daughters being buried in Israel. Does my government know this?

“The British government has repeatedly stated that it is doing ‘all it can’ to secure the safe release of all hostages. In that time, myself and other British families, with relatives taken hostage who have strong British ties, have asked – no begged – for ameeting with the Foreign Secretary, simply to seek reassurance about what the British government has been doing, is doing and proposes to do to bring Eli, Yosi and all the hostages home. 

“The silence has been deafening. Two different foreign secretaries, two different expressions of contempt for British families. Where is my government now?”

Also in the room as Brisley made his speech were Chief Rabbi Ephraim Mirvis, Board of Deputies president Marie van der Zyl, Jewish Leadership Council chief executive Keith Black, United Synagogue chief Michael Goldstein, along with senior Jewish Labour figures including Lord Michael Levy, Sir Trevor Chinn, and Lord Mendelsohn.

Labour frontbenchers in attendance included Rachel Reeves, Pat McFadden, Bridget Phillipson, Peter Kyle and Lord Mandelson.

Brisley added:”I will never again share a cup of tea with my sister, Lianne. I will never again laugh with my niece, Noiya, at how badly she sings.

“I will never again see my niece, Yahel, roll her eyes at my terrible jokes. How much longer will my government disrespect their memory through their silence?

“I need your help. The people in this room. It is the job of the opposition to hold the government to account. I am asking you now – the people in this room with the power to do so – to do two things.

“Firstly, to hold the government to account, to raise my family’s case in Parliament, and to ask why the Prime Minister, Foreign Secretary and all other ministers have refused to meet us or even give us a simple update about what they are doing to help our families.

“And, secondly, I need you to commit to do everything in your power going forward to fight for the return of the hostages and to keep this terrible war crime on the public agenda, no matter how long it takes to bring them home.

“Eli Sharabi is my brother. I love him and I miss him. I need your help to bring him home.”

Also speaking at the lunch were LFI parliamentary chair Steve McCabe MP, Adrian Cohen, lay chair, Michael Rubin, the group’s director and Louise Ellman.

Others at the LFI event included former Labour MPs Luciana Berger and Joan Ryan, Lord John Mann, the JLC’s Claudia Mendoza, HET chief executive Karen Pollock, Mitzvah Day founder Laura Marks and Progressive Britain director Adam Langleben.

Jewish News has contacted Downing Street for comment.

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