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UK tribunal rules anti-Zionist views protected and not anti-Semitic

Professor David Miller was “unfairly dismissed” from his role at Bristol University, a tribunal found. (PA)

The UK Employment Tribunal ruled that political sociology professor David Miller was wrongfully dismissed for his anti-Zionist views, which are protected by anti-discrimination laws.

It's a landmark victory in a more than four-year witch hunt that upended the life of political sociology professor David Miller, the Employment Tribunal hearing his case now issued a 120-page judgment saying he is entitled to his anti-Zionist views.

The court found that I was wrongfully dismissed, but they also, most importantly, found that I had been dismissed because of my anti-Zionist views, and they determined that my views were worthy of respect in a democratic society, to use the language from the equality legislation, which meant that they were not, as the university had tried to maintain, akin to Nazism.

So this was a tremendous victory.

David Miller, Academic

A tremendous victory that Professor Miller says sets a vital precedent.

One can stand up and fight the Zionists and win, and that ... we don't have to simply apologize, move on, not engage in the argument.

If we engage in the argument, then we can win, even in Western societies like the UK.

David Miller, Academic

Professor Miller gave a lecture at Bristol University in 2019 in which he identified Zionism as inherently racist and a pillar of Islamophobia. Soon he was targeted as an anti-Semite by Jewish students and pro-Israel groups and in 2021 he was fired.

But to understand how it all came about, one needs to go back a few years.

Since 2015, the British government has enforced the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance's definition of anti-Semitism on universities and beyond; a definition which equates criticism of Israel and Zionism with anti-Semitism.

At the moment, it seems that to actually commit genocide is okay for the British legal system, it isn't okay for the ICJ but for the British system, it’s okay.

But to criticize genocide, to criticize Israel and other countries like Britain ... arming it for the genocide, is not okay.

Now this is totally illogical and immoral and doesn't make any sense at all.

Haim Breshteeth, Professor of Cultural and Audiovisual Studies at the University of East London

Professor Miller's legal battle with the University of Bristol over how much compensation he should be awarded is still ongoing.

The ruling in Professor Miller's favor is the second successful challenge to the made up allegations of anti-Semitism used to hound opponents of those in Tel Aviv out of their jobs.

It is a body blow, activists say, to the global challenge by the usurpers in Tel Aviv and their Western allies to conflate anti-Zionism with anti-Semitism.


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