Anti-Israel Bias
Israeli and U.K. Jewish groups say the resignations highlight deeper problems with the network’s coverage of Trump, Israel and Gaza.
“For us, the Jewish people, this is nothing more than a piece of paper,” Chaim Herzog famously declared at the U.N. General Assembly in 1975.
The Jewish-American actress expressed concern over the growing normalization of antisemitic remarks and the threat of violence.
“This symbolic resolution fosters hate and division rather than the open exchange of ideas that should define our university,” Ari Israel, of Maryland Hillel, told JNS.
The Football Association of Ireland approved a motion to kick Israel out of the world association for alleged violations amid Dublin’s boycott action.
Premier Tech ends its four-year co-title sponsorship of Israel–Premier Tech despite the team’s planned rebrand after violent pro-Palestinian protests in Europe.
“I saw a young man brandish a flare on the balcony. I was really frightened,” an audience member said.
State-funded organization invites anti-Israel activists to Holocaust remembrance event as Norwegian PM confirms attendance.
“Anti-Israel bias leads to antisemitic violence,” Gil Hoffman, executive director of media watchdog HonestReporting, told JNS. “Bias kills.”
The state’s congressman said material for the class “directly attacks” the Antisemitism Awareness Act, “bipartisan legislation that I have led.”
The defendant alleges the network’s Middle East editor “plays a key role in a wider ‘BBC’ culture of ‘systematic Israeli propaganda.’”
Leaders of Christians for Israel put up banners recalling the Royal Concert Hall’s Nazi-era history.