Monday, October 09, 2023

Labour Party Conference 2023

After years in opposition, Britain's Labour Party senses it's on the verge of regaining power



By Euronews with AP

Members of Britain’s opposition Labour Party gathered in Liverpool on Sunday for their annual conference with an unfamiliar feeling: optimism.

The Labour party has been out of power for 13 years, and in the last national election in 2019, voters handed Labour its worst drubbing since 1935.

But, with an election due next year, polls put Labour as much as 20 points ahead of the governing Conservative Party.

The positive mindset was bolstered further still earlier this when Labour scored a morale-boosting by-election victory in Scotland.

Power is now within the party’s grasp - and top members are keen not to mess that up.

“It was a big step in the right direction, an important one,” Labour leader Keir Starmer said Friday after the by-election result. “But we accept this humbly. This is a step on the journey.”

Labour’s landslide 1997 election victory under Tony Blair is a distant memory now, with the party suffering four straight election defeats since then.

The Conservatives have been in power nationally since 2010, years that saw austerity following the world banking crisis, Britain’s still controversial decision to leave the European Union, a global pandemic and a European war that has triggered the worst cost-of-living crisis in decades.

Is populism to blame for the current political situation?

Those upheavals left both Britain’s main parties in turmoil - and both responded by picking populist leaders.

Labour members elected the veteran left-wing lawmaker Jeremy Corbyn in 2015.

The Conservatives, after years of division and wrangling over the country’s EU exit, chose brash Brexiteer Boris Johnson and won a thumping election victory over Corbyn in 2019.

Corbyn quit after that defeat, amid criticism that he’d allowed antisemitism to fester in a party that sees itself as proudly antiracist.

Keir Starmer won the next party leadership contest in 2020 - vowing to restore relations between the party and the Jewish community.

He also has steered the party back towards the political middle-ground after the divisive tenure of Corbyn, a staunch socialist who advocated nationalisation of key industries and infrastructure.

Starmer's actions have angered some grassroots Labour members who want a bolder agenda - but they have revived the party’s poll ratings.

In a clear sign that corporate Britain is preparing for a change of government, Labour says companies have been queuing up to buy stands in the conference exhibition hall and to attend a business forum with Starmer and other senior party leaders.

In a speech opening the gathering, Deputy Leader Angela Rayner accused the Conservatives of presiding over “national decline” and being too consumed with internal political chaos to sort out the country’s problems.

"Rishi Sunak and his party have taken a sledgehammer to the foundations on which a good life can be built," she said, adding, “and now the simple things in life are crumbling: a decent job, a secure, affordable home and a strong community".

The party has to walk a delicate line to convince voters it can ease the UK’s chronic housing crisis and repair its fraying public services, especially the creaking, overburdened state-funded National Health Service - but without imposing significant tax increases on the public.

The Conservatives, who held their own conference in Manchester last week, have not given up hope, though.

Conservative officials maintain that voters are not sold on Starmer, a lawyer and former chief prosecutor, known for his cautious, managerial style of leadership.

Sitting Prime Minister Rishi Sunak has depicted himself as a force for change, with Starmer as the face of the status quo.

But Sunak’s party has a big gap to close. The Conservatives are losing support across the country, from affluent southern voters turned off by Brexit to working-class northern voters who switched from Labour to the right in 2019.


Scottish Labour leader Anas Sarwar (R) with candidate Michael Shanks after Labour won
 the Rutherglen and Hamilton West by-election, at South Lanarkshire Council HQ, Scotland
Jane Barlow/PA

Labour is also gaining ground in Scotland, where its former dominance had been obliterated in recent years by the pro-independence Scottish National Party (SNP).

Labour’s emphatic by-election victory over the SNP on Thursday for the parliamentary seat of Rutherglen and Hamilton West, near Glasgow was hailed by Starmer as a “seismic result”.

“They said that we couldn’t change the Labour Party and we did it,” Starmer told local party workers. “They said that we couldn’t win in the south of England and the north of England, and we did it. They said ‘You’ll never beat the SNP in Scotland’ - and, Rutherglen, you did it.”

Rob Ford, professor of politics at the University of Manchester, said the polling figures are “stark” for the Conservatives. But he cautioned that voters remain “depressed and very sceptical” of all political parties.

“They are much more enthusiastic about the idea of turfing the Tories out than they are about putting Labour in,” Ford said. “Starmer’s own poll ratings remain pretty mediocre. People think he’s a bit weak, they think it’s unclear what he stands for, they’re not really sure what his vision is for the government.

“What Labour really need to do with this conference is to convince people - to steal a line from Tony Blair’s 1997 campaign - that things can only get better.”

Labour Party Conference 2023

Labour branded ‘cowards’ for its ‘unconditional’ support of Israel's war with Hamas
Smoke rises following an Israeli airstrike, in Gaza City, October 8, 2023

-PALESTINE activists branded Labour “cowards” today as they condemned Sir Keir Starmer’s “unconditional” support for Israel’s war with Hamas at a protest outside the party’s conference in Liverpool.

They blasted the Labour leader for saying there was “no justification” for the militant group’s surprise attack on Israel, which has killed hundreds on both sides after Israel responded with air strikes on Gaza.

The group from Palestine Action and Fight Racism, Fight Imperialism were supported by pedestrians and tooting motorists as they marched on the conference hall today morning from Liverpool’s Queen Victoria Monument.

At the site, they gagged their mouths in protest against Labour “censoring” the words “end apartheid” from the description of a fringe meeting about Palestine in the conference’s events guide and shouted: “Labour are cowards.”

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Israel was “at war” on Saturday and vowed that Hamas, which rules Gaza, would “pay an unprecedented price.”

Sir Keir said on social media platform X : “I utterly condemn the ongoing attacks on Israel and her citizens.

“There is no justification for this act of terror which is being perpetrated by those who seek to undermine any chance for future peace in the region.

“Israel has a right to defend herself.”

Speaking outside the conference, Sean Middlebrough, of Palestine Action Liverpool, which campaigns to end Britain selling arms to Israel, said: “Because they refuse to talk about it doesn’t mean that it’s not ongoing.

“We are here to make it politically unviable to exterminate the Palestinian population.”

Fellow activist Drew Robson said: “We initially planned this because the Labour Party had censored the words ‘end apartheid’ from the listing at the conference.

“We got a big end apartheid banner as we want to make sure as much as we can help it that the words aren’t censored out.

“Because we feel once again it’s the Labour Friends of Israel trying to normalise the occupation.”

Ellie Oates, 18, who said she joined The Revolutionary Communist Group and Fight Racism, Fight Imperialism because her “family are from the occupied north of Ireland,” added: “Thousands of people are going to be killed in the next few days and it’s important to recognise that.”

Aidan Kelly, 21, said: “We should really be concerned with Keir Starmer’s response to all this.

“Usually you get a nuanced response ... but now he has shown how he unconditionally supports the state of Israel and its occupation.”

A spokesman for Palestine Solidarity Campaign said: “The offensive launched from Gaza can only be understood in the context of Israel’s ongoing, decades long, colonisation and military occupation of Palestinian land and imposition of a system of oppression that meets the legal definition of apartheid.


“If violence is to end, both that of the oppressor and the oppressed, then action must be taken to end the root cause — Israel’s continuing violent imposition of a system of oppression.”

Amnesty International secretary general Agnes Callamard said: “We are deeply alarmed by the mounting civilian death tolls in Gaza, Israel and the occupied West Bank and urgently call on all parties to the conflict to abide by international law and make every effort to avoid further civilian bloodshed.

“Under international humanitarian law all sides in a conflict have a clear obligation to protect the lives of civilians caught up in the hostilities.

“Deliberately targeting civilians, carrying out disproportionate attacks, and indiscriminate attacks which kill or injure civilians are war crimes.

“Israel has a horrific track record of committing war crimes with impunity in previous wars on Gaza.

“Palestinian armed groups from Gaza must refrain from targeting civilians and using indiscriminate weapons, as they have done in the past, and most intensively in this event, acts amounting to war crimes.”

UK

NEC member: Labour attempting to “disempower members from marginalised groups”


National executive committee (NEC) member Mish Rahman has described proposed rule changes, which would remove the obligation on Constituency Labour Parties (CLPs) to have equalities officers on their executives, as an attempt to “disempower members from marginalised groups”.

“While the Labour Party likes to think it is the party of equality”, Rahman argued, ‘in my opinion its actions say otherwise”. He also described the changes as an “attack on members’ rights” and on “member democracy”.

Rahman was speaking at a protest against the shakeup which took place outside the ACC Liverpool this afternoon, which is hosting Labour’s annual conference. The protest featured speakers from Disability Labour, Momentum, Young Labour, Labour for Trans Rights, and Labour Black Socialists.

Former Shadow Chancellor John McDonnell described the proposed changes as a “huge retrograde step”, saying that he was “asking the Labour Party leadership to think again”.

Momentum co-chair Hilary Schan told the small crowd which assembled: “I spend an awful lot of my time thinking this Labour leadership can’t sink any lower, and somehow they always manage to”.

A Disability Labour campaigner also said that opposing the changes was not a matter of “left and right” but of “right and wrong”.

The rule changes were first revealed by LabourList at the end of September, shortly before they were approved by the NEC. They will be voted on by this week’s party conference, with results expect on Monday morning.

But one party source previously told LabourList changes reflected the will of many smaller CLPs outside cities in particular, who found the process of recruiting for so many officers “cumbersome”.

“CLPs always used to be divided into an executive who had voting rights, who are supposed to be able to make rapid decisions, and a larger group of functional officers, so it’s restoring that difference.

“A requirement to have a big group of executive officers with voting rights politicises certain roles so instead of going to the most suited person, people get elected on political slates.”

UK
Labour Party Conference 2023
Labour would introduce ‘no loopholes ban on conversion therapy’
LGBTQ RIGHTS ARE HUMAN RIGHTS


Chair of the Labour Party, Anneliese Dodds addresses the Labour Party Women’s Conference 2023 in Liverpool. Picture date: Saturday October 7, 2023 
(Stefan Rousseau/PA)

By Richard Wheeler, PAToday
Sunday, 8 October 2023

A “no loopholes”, trans-inclusive ban on conversion therapy would be introduced under a Labour government, according to the shadow women and equalities secretary.


People responsible for anti-LGBT+ hate crime would also receive the “tougher sentences they deserve”, Anneliese Dodds said.

Concerns have been expressed in Parliament in recent weeks over the whereabouts of the Government’s draft proposals to ban conversion therapy, which seeks to suppress a person’s sexual or gender identity.

We will deliver where the Conservatives have failed by bringing in a full, no loopholes, trans-inclusive ban on conversion therapyAnneliese Dodds

The Government first announced its intention to ban so-called “gay cure” conversion therapies in 2018 as part of its LGBT (lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender) action plan.

It added the Bill must not inadvertently criminalise parents or clinicians who need to be able to have “legitimate conversations” with children and young adults experiencing gender-related distress.

The proposals were initially intended to be “universal” and protect all LGBT people, although in 2022 then-prime minister Boris Johnson defended a decision not to include trans people.

In January 2023, the Government said it would set out how it would ban conversion therapy for “everyone” – including transgender people – in England and Wales.

Ms Dodds, speaking at the Labour Party conference in Liverpool, said: “Combating inequality is fundamental to our party, it’s why we’ll always take the right decision over the easy one and we’ll never descend into the gutter, where the Conservatives wish to take us.

“I know it’s been a difficult year for many LGBT+ people. Rising hate crime, including physical attacks, a Tory Government that treats their lives and their rights as a political football, and a Prime Minister that sees them as a cheap punchline.

“Labour will never do that. We believe everyone deserves to be accepted without exception and treated with respect and dignity.

“That’s why we will tackle the rising tide of hate with stronger laws so those who carry out anti-LGBT+ hate crime get the tougher sentences they deserve.

“We will deliver where the Conservatives have failed by bringing in a full, no loopholes, trans-inclusive ban on conversion therapy.”

Ms Dodds also reiterated the party’s intention to modernise gender recognition legislation.

In July, Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer said a self-identification system to allow transgender people to legally identify as their chosen gender without a medical diagnosis is not the “right way forward”.

Speaking on Sunday, Ms Dodds told delegates: “We will modernise the gender recognition law to a new process while continuing to support the implementation of the Equality Act that protects everyone.”

'Toilets for every body': Labour conference boasts of gender-neutral facilities - but urges people to get help if they feel 'unsafe' - after Keir Starmer's wavering over whether a woman can have a penis

By JAMES TAPSFIELD, POLITICAL EDITOR FOR MAILONLINE and SHAUN WOOLER HEALTH EDITOR

 8 October 2023 

Labour activists are using gender-neutral facilities at the party's conference - but have been urged to contact staff if they feel 'unsafe'.

The conference venue in Liverpool has signs for the cubicles boasting of 'toilets for every body'.

A message says the aim is to have 'facilities where everyone can feel safe and respected'.

'If you spot a problem or feel unsafe speak to a member of the ACC Liverpool team,' the signs add.



The Labour conference venue in Liverpool has signs for the cubicles boasting of 'toilets for every body'



A message says the aim is to have 'facilities where everyone can feel safe and respected'




Women's rights and trans rights activists were both staging protests outside the Labour conference today


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It is not clear how much influence Labour had over the conference centre's policy.

However, Keir Starmer has struggled to give a clear account of his position on gender identity issues.

He was ridiculed for claiming earlier this year that 99.9 per cent of women 'haven't got a penis'.

Conservatives have pinpointed access to women-only spaces as a key dividing line where Labour seems out of step with public opinion.

Rishi Sunak upped the pressure at Tory conference last week by insisting that 'a man is a man and a woman is a woman'.

A Deltapoll survey for the Mail on Sunday found of 35 per cent of voters agreed that a woman was 'a human being characterised by female biology', while just 14 per cent said that 'trans women are women'.

The use of woke terms such as 'pregnant person' was supported by just 11 per cent, with 81 per cent preferring to talk about a 'pregnant woman'.



Rishi Sunak upped the pressure at Tory conference last week by insisting that 'a man is a man and a woman is a woman'





Keir Starmer is gathering activists for what could be the last conference before the election

© Vincenzo Lullo/Shutterstock.com

In the two and a half years since the murders of Sarah Everard, Bibaa Henry and Nicole Smallman sparked outrage across the country and collective demands for change, women and girls continue to be harmed and killed by men. Sabina Nessa, Zara Aleena, Bobbi-Anne McLeod and just last week, 15 year old Elianne Andam.

Elianne’s murder on her way to school has been predominantly framed as knife crime by a media which racialises this issue as one that predominantly affects Black boys. However, we cannot ignore that this story is also one of violence against women and girls, as details to date suggest that Elianne was killed defending her friend who had rejected the romantic advances of her attacker; repeating a pattern seen across cases of domestic abuse, with escalated risk of violence post-separation.

We live in a culture that justifies and normalises male violence in the context of romantic relationships – a culture in which inequality and harmful social attitudes reproduce boys and men’s sense of entitlement to our bodies, time and affection, and sees women and girls as conquests and disposable. This is the reality that we find ourselves in despite countless promises from our political leaders and justice agencies to prioritise tackling violence against women and girls (VAWG) – backed up by a Tackling VAWG strategy.

Last month, End Violence Against Women Coalition and 70 expert women’s organisations launched a manifesto for the 2024 General Election, calling on all political parties to adopt its principles and commit to its recommendations for ending this abuse. This means looking beyond the criminal justice system alone and delivering a comprehensive, whole-society approach to tackling VAWG that centres those who face the greatest barriers to support and protection.

While the criminal justice system urgently needs reform, not least to address the routine disclosure of rape survivors’ counselling notes and the lack of independent legal advice available to them, the ambition cannot stop here.

If we want to end this violence, we need to first understand that it is the product of a deeply unequal society, and work to change the cultural attitudes that justify and tolerate VAWG, that blame and disbelieve victims, and that uphold a collective mindset that views this abuse as a normal and inevitable part of life. We know that a different world is possible, but to get there we need an approach that prioritises and invests in preventing this violence, instead of waiting and acting only when the harm is done.

This looks like going beyond the criminal justice system for solutions and sustainably funding vital specialist support services that help survivors recover and meet their holistic needs. It means scrapping No Recourse to Public Funds for survivors of VAWG and ending the hostile environment, so that migrant victims aren’t forced to stay with a perpetrator for fear of facing immigration enforcement, detention and removal from the UK.

It means taking a human rights-based and whole-society approach to tackling this issue and pouring our attention and funding into our schools and education institutions. Quality Relationships and Sex Education, a Whole School Approach to tackling VAWG and public attitude campaigns play a key role here.

Amid ongoing threats to tools which are vital to protecting women and girls from violence, such as the Human Rights Act, the European Convention on Human Rights and the UN Refugee Convention, we are seeing that a rise in rhetoric around ending VAWG does not always result in action to make that a reality. Women and girls cannot afford for the next government to repeat the same story.

We’ll explore these issues and more at the Labour Party conference on Tuesday 10th October, in a panel made up of Women’s Aid Federation England, Latin American Women’s Rights Service, Respect, Women and Equalities Select Committee member Bell Ribeiro-Addy MP, new Shadow Victims and Sentencing Minister Kevin Brennan MP, and chaired by the End Violence Against Women Coalition.

A Manifesto for Ending Violence Against Women and Girls

Tuesday, 8.45 – 9.45am / Meeting Room 21, ACC Liverpool / with Ellie Reeves MP, Bell Ribeiro-Addy MP, Andrea Simon (EVAW Coalition), Farah Nazeer (Women’s Aid), Gisela Valle (Latin American Women’s Rights Service), Caroline Bernard (Respect)

Read more from LabourList’s conference coverage: 

GUIDES:


NEWS:

 

COMMENT AND SPEECHES



Andrea Simon is director of the End Violence Against Women Coalition.
NORTHERN IRELAND


Pro-Palestinian activists place giant flag on Belfast mountain, while M&S is targeted in sticker blitz


A giant Palestinian flag on Black mountain

Amy Cochrane
Today at 10:03

Republican activists erected a giant Palestinian flag on Black mountain.

Gael Force Art posted on Facebook that their group “stands in solidarity with the Palestinian people who launched their biggest operation in fifty years against the rogue state of Israel”.

They added that they will support “our Palestinian brothers and sisters who will continue to face a murderous bombardment from the Zionist Israel state”.

They added that “Israel maintains a system of settler colonialism, apartheid and occupation over the Palestinian people.

“Gael Force Art calls on everyone to fly the Palestinian flag in support of the Palestinian people. Long Live Palestine.”

Elsewhere, activists in Co Down have “relabelled” goods in Marks & Spencer with pro-Palestinian stickers.

The ‘Newry Rebel Art’ group took to Facebook to highlight the act, which they said: “will make people aware of the reality of what is happening in Palestine”.

The stickers are of the Palestinian flag with the words ‘Boycott Israeli Apartheid’.

They said the reason behind it is because the store is a “leading distributor of Israeli goods”.

In a post on Facebook on Sunday, barely 24 hours after Hamas led attacks against Israel, they said: “Such stores use suppliers that trade in products from illegal Israeli settlements, these settlements are built on stolen Palestinian land and are illegal under international law.

“Purchasing Israeli products provides support to the Israeli economy, which in turn lends support to the Israeli state and its murderous campaign against the Palestinian people.


“The boycotting of Israeli goods sends a very strong economic and political message to Israel – ‘apartheid and genocide are not acceptable in our world.’

“Just like the apartheid regime of South Africa, Israel is on the wrong side of history. For as long as that regime exists right-thinking people across the world will organise opposition to it.”

Dissident republican group Saoradh – regarded as the political wing of the New IRA – yesterday raised the Palestinian flag at its Newry office.

A flag representing the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine [PFLP] was also held aloft in support of the Abu Ali Mustafa Brigades, the armed wing of the Front, spokesman Stephen Murney said.

“Irish Republicans have watched with admiration as Palestinians bravely stood up against all odds and launched ‘Operation Al-Aqsa Flood’, an offensive against the Israeli war machine,” he said.

“We salute the martyrs who have selflessly paid the supreme sacrifice while resisting the occupiers over the past few days. Their bravery and resilience is inspiring for Revolutionary anti-imperialists around the world, ourselves included.”

MLA Gerry Carroll hits back after criticism of ‘Victory to the Palestinian Resistance’ social media post



People Before Profit MLA Gerry Carroll speaking during a rally at Belfast City Hall in response to the Israeli attack on�Jenin refugee camp.
Credit: Liam McBurney/RAZORPIX
Mark BainToday at 13:19

Left-wing politician Gerry Carroll has said he “will be taking no lessons” from Ulster Unionist leader Doug Beattie after the People Before Profit MLA sparked anger after tweeting: “Victory to the Palestinian Resistance”, accompanied by two clenched fist emojis.

Mr Beattie has reported the post to the Assembly’s Standards Commissioner while UUP deputy leader Robbie Butler said the West Belfast MLA's comments were “utterly disgusting” and “despicable”.

In response to the criticism for his comments as their war of words continued, Mr Carroll said: “I’ll be taking no lectures from Doug Beattie or anyone else who hasn’t a word to utter about the brutal occupation, apartheid and violence faced by Palestinians on a daily basis.”


He also referred to Mr Beattie’s book An Ordinary Soldier, in which the former the Royal Irish Regiment captain and Military Cross recipient wrote about his experiences in Afghanistan.

“In Doug’s book, Israeli state terror – inaccurately described as ‘right to defend itself ‘ – is fine, and he seems to have no problem supporting a nuclear state that’s armed to the teeth which regularly terrorises Palestinians.

“Doug would do well to reconsider his party’s support for a state that has widely been condemned across the world, including in Ireland, for its ongoing violence, denial of the right to return of some six million refugees and regular human rights abuses,” added Mr Carroll

Mr Beattie had criticised the social media post on Saturday, which followed news of Hamas attacks on Israel, saying: “Such acts, as with any act of terror, must be condemned in the strongest sense by all right-minded people. To act or comment on this horror with triumphalism is nothing short of abhorrent.

“Therefore, I was shocked and disgusted to see a People Before Profit MLA – Gerry Carroll – tweet ‘victory to the Palestinian resistance’ as these images were being broadcast on our screens.

“Promoting violence and a terrorist attack in this manner is not acceptable and brings Stormont into disrepute.

“On behalf of the Ulster Unionist Party MLA group, my party leader is reporting him and his comments to the Standards Commissioner.”

Alliance MP Stephen Farry said the post was “shameful” while former First Minister Dame Arlene Foster added: “Surely this is against the Assembly pledge against violence? It’s absolutely disgraceful.”



DUP brands Sinn Fein ‘shameful’ over pro-Palestinian posts as British citizen among the dead

500 Israeli civilians killed and dozens more taken hostage after Hamas attackOver 400 Palestinians dead and nearly 2,000 injured in Gaza from retaliatory air strikes

Netanyahu warns Israel will take "mighty vengeance for this black day"

Assembly watchdog urged to probe ‘disgusting’ post by People Before Profit MLA



Cars are on fire after they were hit by rockets from the Gaza Strip in Ashkelon, Israel




Fire and smoke rises following an Israeli airstrike, in Gaza City (Fatima Shbair/AP)

Sinn Fein has been branded “shameless” over social media posts following the deadly attack by Hamas that killed over 500 Israelis.

DUP MLA Emma Little-Pengelly hit out after the party’s youth wing Tweeted a photo of a Palestinian flag, saying it was “a disgrace”.

The post was also criticised by UUP leader Doug Beattie, who also described a post from the party’s South Down MP Chris Hazzard in support of Palestine as “crass”.

It came as the Assembly watchdog was urged to probe a “disgusting” pro-Palestinian Tweet from People Before Profit MLA Gerry Carroll.

In the most serious escalation in the decades-old conflict in a generation, Palestinian militants launched an unprecedented assault into Israeli territory, sending fighters across the border and firing thousands of rockets.

More than 500 Israelis have been killed since Saturday, local media reported this afternoon.

Israel retaliated with strikes in Gaza City, reducing buildings to rubble, with at least 400 more dead. Its premier Benjamin Netanyahu declared Israel will take "mighty vengeance for this black day".

He warned people living in Gaza to leave as he vowed to turn parts of the territory "into rubble" in revenge.

A 20-year-old British man serving in the Israeli army is among the dead. Nathanel Young was serving with the Israeli Defence Services when he was killed on the Gaza border on Saturday.

His death comes after 26-year-old Jake Marlow, who went to the same London school at Mr Young, was reported missing while providing security at a music festival near Kibbutz Re'im, close to the Gaza border.

Dozens of Israelis have been taken hostage by Palestinian militants. The Israeli Embassy to the United States put the figure at 100 in a social media post.


There has been widespread condemnation, with US President Joe Biden saying support for Israel was “rock solid and unwavering”.

Read more
‘Massive shooting of rockets’ amid unprecedented Hamas operation against Israel

However, Sinn Fein’s youth wing, Ogra Sinn Fein, was criticised after Tweeting an image on Saturday evening of a Palestinian flag.

Ms Little-Pengelly said it was “shameful by Sinn Fein”.

She added: “No matter the view on the region SF may have, the murder and torture, including of many, many civilians, is wrong and evil. To allow the official Sinn Fein youth organisation to post this of all days is a disgrace.”

Mr Beattie said he was “staggered” by what he said was Sinn Fein’s “support” for Hamas’s actions.


He also described as “unbelievably crass” comments by Mr Hazzard on X, where he said: “Palestinians must be free to live without oppression, apartheid & colonisation”, adding “Free Palestine”.

Sinn Fein was contacted for comment on both posts. The party referred to an earlier statement from TD Matt Carthy

Mr Carthy said: “The attacks by Hamas against Israeli civilians and military targets, and the Israeli bombardment on Gaza, must stop immediately. These events have the potential to lead towards a new dangerous tipping point.”

He added: “A lasting and just peace between Palestinians and Israelis requires an end to the occupation and apartheid systems being imposed upon the Palestinian people.”

Earlier, West Belfast MLA Gerry Carroll sparked anger after Tweeting: “Victory to the Palestinian Resistance”, accompanied by two clenched fist emojis.


Mr Beattie has reported the post to the Assembly’s Standards Commissioner.

UUP deputy leader Robbie Butler said Mr Carroll’s comments were “utterly disgusting” and “despicable”.

“Such acts, as with any act of terror, must be condemned in the strongest sense by all right-minded people. To act or comment on this horror with triumphalism is nothing short of abhorrent,” he said.

“Therefore, I was shocked and disgusted to see a People Before Profit MLA - Gerry Carroll - tweet 'victory to the Palestinian resistance' as these images were being broadcast on our screens.

“Promoting violence and a terrorist attack in this manner is not acceptable and brings Stormont into disrepute.

"On behalf of the Ulster Unionist Party MLA group, my party leader is reporting him and his comments to the Standards Commissioner.”

Alliance MP Stephen Farry said the post was “shameful”.

Former First Minister Dame Arlene Foster said: “Surely this is against the Assembly pledge against violence. It’s absolutely disgraceful.”

On Saturday evening, Tel Aviv and other central Israeli cities were hit by a new barrage of rockets.

President Biden reaffirmed the US's full support for Israel, saying its support is "rock solid and unwavering".


"This is not a moment for any party hostile to Israel to exploit these attacks, to seek an advantage. The world is watching,” he added.

Israel’s ambassador to the UK says the country is now in a “necessity war” with Hamas “to protect our people”.

Speaking to BBC Breakfast from Giv’at Shumel in Israel, Tzipi Hotovoley says Israelis woke up yesterday to a “nightmare”, and called Hamas a “terrorist organisation” that targets civilians and “innocent children”.

Read more
US and European leaders condemn Hamas attack on Israel

Israel has blockaded Gaza since Hamas gained control of the territory in 2007 and the two have fought wars ever since.

Hamas caught Israel off-guard on Simchat Torah, a major holiday, with the strength, sophistication and timing of the attack shocking Israelis.

On Sunday an Israeli military official said "hundreds of terrorists" have been killed and dozens captured amid ongoing fighting with Hamas militants in Gaza and southern Israel.

Rear Admiral Daniel Hagari spoke to reporters, more than 24 hours after the Palestinian militant group launched an unprecedented assault into Israel.

Israeli soldiers battled Hamas fighters in streets in the south of the country on Sunday and exchanged strikes with Lebanon's Hezbollah militant group in the north.

The prospect of Hezbollah joining the fighting a day after the attack from Gaza raised the chances of a broader conflict.

Hamas fighters, backed by a volley of thousands of rockets, broke through barricades around Gaza early on Saturday to rampage through nearby communities in Israel.

They took captives back into the coastal enclave, including women, children and the elderly, while Israel's retaliation strikes levelled buildings in Gaza.

Israeli media, citing rescue service officials, said at least 300 people were killed, including 26 soldiers.

More than 400 Palestinian militants have been killed in southern Israel and the Gaza Strip, and dozens more have been captured, according to IDF spokesman Daniel Hagari.

On Saturday, Hamas gunmen used explosives to break through the border fence enclosing Gaza, then crossed with motorcycles, pick-up trucks, paragliders and speed boats on the coast.

They rolled into as many as 22 locations outside the Gaza Strip, including towns and other communities as far as 15 miles from the Gaza border, while Hamas launched thousands of rockets at Israeli cities.

On Sunday, the Israeli military said its forces were fighting Hamas incursions in eight places.

An Israeli military spokesperson said two hostage situations had been "resolved" but did not say whether all the hostages had been rescued alive.

In a televised address on Saturday night, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said the military will use all of its strength to destroy Hamas' capabilities.

"All the places that Hamas hides in, operates from, we will turn them into ruins," he added.




Smoke rises from an explosion caused by an Israeli airstrike in the Gaza Strip, Saturday, Oct. 7, 2023. The militant Hamas rulers of the Gaza Strip carried out an unprecedented, multi-front attack on Israel at daybreak Saturday, firing thousands of rockets as dozens of Hamas fighters infiltrated the heavily fortified border in several locations by air, land, and sea and catching the country off-guard on a major holiday. (AP Photo/Hatem Moussa)




Rockets are fired toward Israel from Gaza, Saturday, Oct. 7, 2023




People Before Profit MLA Gerry Carroll




Palestinians celebrate by a destroyed Israeli tank at the Gaza Strip fence east of Khan Younis




A paraglider attempting to infiltrate southern Israel




Hundreds of people have been injured in the attacks, with at least 22 Israelis dead, according to Israeli officials.




Israeli soldiers deploy in Sderot, Israel, on Saturday




Cars are on fire after they were hit by rockets from the Gaza Strip in Ashkelon, Israel




Fire and smoke rises following an Israeli airstrike, in Gaza City (Fatima Shbair/AP)

UK: Scotland Yard keeps vigil after pro-Palestinians celebrate  Hamas attack on Israel

Met police taking precautions against possible protests

Web Desk Updated: October 08, 2023 



British police have increased vigil to prevent any untoward incidents in the wake of the Israel-Hamas clash in London and other parts of the country. The Scotland Yard has increased visible patrolling on streets and the Home Ministry has urged police to take necessary action against pro-Hamas displays and possible hate crimes against Israelis and British Jews in the UK.

Assuring hate crimes against Jewish communities will not be tolerated, Home Secretary Suella Braverman said, “Whenever Israel is attacked, Islamists and other racists use Israeli defensive measures as a pretext to stir up hatred against British Jews.” Braverman added necessary are being taken to ensure the protection of Jewish communities and said, “There must be zero tolerance for anti-semitism or glorification of terrorism on the streets of Britain. I expect the police to use the full force of the law against displays of support for Hamas, other proscribed terrorist groups or attempts to intimidate British Jews.”

UK had condemned Hamas' strike on Israel and said, “UK unequivocally supports Israel's right to defend its borders and its citizens from this evil.” The Metropolitan police’s action following several social media flagged visuals of pro-Hamas individuals celebrating the Hamas strike in the streets of London. London Mayor Sadiq Khan said hate crimes will not be tolerated in the city. “Tragically, we know that violence in the Middle East can lead to a rise in hate crime in London. I’m in touch with senior officers at the Met and communities across our city. Let me be clear - hate crime in London will not be tolerated. Now or ever,” Khan tweeted.



In a statement, Metropolitan Police said, “We are aware of a number of incidents, including those that have been shared on social media, in relation to the ongoing conflict in Israel and the border with Gaza. The Met has increased policing patrols across parts of London in order to provide a visible presence and reassurance to our communities. We remain in contact with partners and community leaders to listen to any concerns.”

Police added, “We are aware that the ongoing conflict may lead to protests over the coming days. We will ensure that an appropriate policing plan is in place in order to balance the right to protest against any disruption to Londoners."




Video: Celebrations in London after Hamas attacks Israel, cops step up patrols

ByMallika Soni
Oct 08, 2023 

Israel-Palestine Conflict: UK home office minister Robert Jenrick said, “These disgusting people are glorifying the terrorist activities of Hamas."

Scotland Yard said it has increased patrols across London after a number of incidents were reported, including messages and images shared on social media, amid the ongoing conflict in Israel. UK home office minister Robert Jenrick condemned anyone “glorifying” the terrorist activities of Hamas while London mayor Sadiq Khan warned that hate crimes will not be tolerated.

Israel-Palestine Conflict: A number of incidents were reported, including messages and images shared on social media

“We are aware of a number of incidents, including those that have been shared on social media, in relation to the ongoing conflict in Israel and the border with Gaza,” the Met Police said in a statement on Saturday evening.

“The Met has increased policing patrols across parts of London in order to provide a visible presence and reassurance to our communities. We remain in contact with partners and community leaders to listen to any concerns,” it said.

"We are aware that the ongoing conflict may lead to protests over the coming days. We will ensure that an appropriate policing plan is in place in order to balance the right to protest against any disruption to Londoners," the statement added.

The UK home office minister Robert Jenrick said, “These disgusting people are glorifying the terrorist activities of Hamas, a proscribed organisation. There is no place for this in the UK. I trust the Met Police will be taking this seriously."


The London Mayor later tweeted that he had been in touch with senior officers at the Met over safety concerns.

"Tragically, we know that violence in the Middle East can lead to a rise in hate crime in London. I remain in close contact with senior leadership at the Met and communities across our city. Londoners will see an additional police presence. Let me be clear: hate crime in London will not be tolerated,” he said.