The Jewish Chronicle

ANTISEMITI­C INCIDENTS FALL

- BY JACOB JUDAH

▶ THE COMMUNITY Security Trust (CST) has recorded the third-highest number of antisemiti­c incidents for the first six months of a year, despite the coronaviru­s pandemic leading to a slight decrease in overall incidents.

According to the figures, outlined in the CST’s new half-yearly report, there were 789 recorded incidents of antisemiti­sm between January and June 2020 — a drop of 13 per cent compared to the first six months of 2019.

The report, published on Thursday, added that instances of antisemiti­sm online were at their highest ever recorded in the CST’s January to June half-yearly reports, with 344 incidents.

The CST said that the overall drop in antisemiti­c incidents was explained by the Covid-19 pandemic and the lockdown, adding that the lowest monthly totals in the figures were recorded in April and March, with 98 and 102 incidents.

The report said it was “likely” that the lockdown “contribute­d to the reduction in reports. The fact that over 100 incidents were recorded in five of the six months,” it wrote, “sustains the pattern of historical­ly high antisemiti­c incident figures.”

The CST noted that the Covid-19 pandemic had seen the emergence of antisemiti­c conspiracy theories online that included “theories accusing Jews of inventing the Coronaviru­s ‘hoax’, or of creating and spreading COVID-19 itself, for various malevolent or financial purposes”.

Of the 789 that were reported to the monitoring organisati­on, the CST said that only 47 were “violent antisemiti­c assaults” — a decrease of 45 per cent compared to the January to June period in 2019.

The vast majority, 673, of antisemiti­c incidents were classed as “verbal abuse, antisemiti­c graffiti, antisemiti­c abuse via social media and one-off cases of hate mail.” The report also stated that it had recorded 36 “direct antisemiti­c threats” and five cases of “massmailed antisemiti­c leaflets or emails.”

Incidents in Greater London rose two per cent, while those in Greater Manchester dropped 44 per cent.

The report found that as “antisemiti­c incidents in Manchester tend to be more street-based than in London,” such a drop was to be expected because of the lockdown.

Incidents in Northumbri­a, which is home to Jewish communitie­s in Gateshead and Newcastle, almost doubled from 24 to 40, while incidents in West Yorkshire, Hertfordsh­ire dropped slightly.

The CST’s Chief Executive David D––– elew said: “Any reduction in antisemiti­sm is welcome but it is worrying that even during a national lockdown antisemiti­c incidents only fell by 13 per cent and new antisemiti­c lies have emerged to add to old hatreds. History tells us that antisemiti­sm grows at times of great social upheaval and we need to ensure the same is not happening here.”

Lord Mann, who is the government’s Independen­t Adviser on Antisemiti­sm, said that the rise in “some regions” underlined that antisemiti­sm was a problem facing Jews nationally.

He added: “Despite a good policing response, internet companies are failing to play their role in tackling this hatred and we need to see a robust consistenc­y from all our political parties.”

Home Secretary Priti Patel said that antisemiti­sm was “abhorrent” and underscore­d the government’s grant of £14 million to the CST “to keep members of the Jewish community safe as they go about their daily lives.”

Her Labour counterpar­t Nick Thomas-Symonds added that the report showed “the scourge of antisemiti­sm continues in our society” and said that the Labour Party under Sir Keir Starmer was committed to “tearing out the poison of antisemiti­sm by its roots from the Labour Party” and wider society.

It is likely the lockdown contribute­d to the fall in incidents’

 ?? PHOTO: TWITTER ?? Antisemiti­c daubing last year in Hampstead
PHOTO: TWITTER Antisemiti­c daubing last year in Hampstead

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom