"To chant ‘never again, until next year’ is exactly what Hamas promised: to repeat October 7 over and over again,” retired British judge Nigel Lithman said.
Following the attack, protests erupted in London and other cities in the UK among the Indian and Pakistani diaspora communities.
The Jerusalem Post Podcast - Travel Edition, Episode 105.
The 'Essex March for Palestine' passed through the streets of Westcliff, near Southend, chanting “stop killing children” while Jewish families walked home from synagogue after Shabbat.
The London police denied telling Jews to stay home during protests, calling the viral claim false and harmful. The misinformation, spread by a misleading account, fueled fear before being debunked.
The London mayor cited Hamas figures on the Gaza death count and claimed the deaths were "betrayals of humanity."
The men were released on bail and have a mid-July court date.
One respondent related that three days after the Hamas-led pogrom in Israel, a receptionist had told them, “I don’t feel sorry for you Jews, you kill Muslim babies at Passover.”
From the dark years of the Corbyn era, the prime minister has transformed the Labour Party to a place where Jews are welcome again.
"If [threat of legal action] didn't work the first time, it won't work the second," said Palestine Action in response.