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£30,000 reward offered to catch Oxford Street attackers

London police hit a dead end after Arab men attacked a busload of Jewish teens on Europe’s busiest shopping street last year.

Oxford Street in the West End of London. Credit: Wikimedia Commons.
Oxford Street in the West End of London. Credit: Wikimedia Commons.

Jewish groups in Britain are offering a reward of £30,000 (nearly $34,000) to find those responsible for an attack on a busload of Jewish teenagers in Central London during Chanukah last year.

The move comes after the Metropolitan Police Service closed its investigation without identifying any suspects.

The young passengers, a Chabad group of British Jews and Israelis from northwest London, were on the bus on Oxford Street during holiday celebrations in November 2021 when a group of Arab men began yelling and banging on the vehicles. As video of the incident showed, the men even tried breaking the windows and gave a Nazi salute.

No one was injured in the attack and police began an investigation, calling the incident a hate crime.

In a statement given to the Jewish News in the U.K. earlier this month, the Metropolitan Police said they had received tips as to who the assailants were, however, “the only names provided in response to those appeals have been eliminated from our inquiries. The identity of those involved is still unknown. A decision was taken in July to close the case.

“Hate crime of any kind is unacceptable,” the police said in the statement. “Should new information come to light that provides a realistic line of inquiry, we will of course be willing to carry out further investigation.”

The decision to close the case promoted the Jewish News, the Jewish Chronicle and the Campaign Against Antisemitism (CAA) to offer a reward of £30,000, up from a previous offer of £10,000, for information leading to the conviction of the attackers.

A spokesperson for the Campaign Against Antisemitism said, “Despite the video going viral and all the resources at its disposal, the Metropolitan Police Service failed to make any arrests and quietly closed the investigation in July.

“If even high-profile hate crimes such as these are not solved and the perpetrators brought to justice, what hope do the many other anti-Semitic crimes against Jews have of being satisfactorily investigated?” the statement said.

According to a report on hate crimes in the United Kingdom released on Oct. 6, from March 2021 to March 2022 more than 1,900 incidents of hate were directed at the Jewish community in England and Wales.

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