New footage adds context to police response to Jewish man during pro-Palestine protest in London

Footage shared by the Campaign Against Antisemitism on Friday showed a police officer warning the organization’s CEO, Gideon Falter, during a pro-Palestinian demonstration. (Screenshot)
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Updated 22 April 2024
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New footage adds context to police response to Jewish man during pro-Palestine protest in London

  • Former senior police officer said initial reports, based on a shorter video released by CAA ‘did not fully represent the situation’

LONDON: A former senior police officer said on Monday that initial reports of an incident involving a Metropolitan Police officer and a Jewish man during a pro-Palestinian demonstration in London, which prompted significant criticism of Scotland Yard, “did not fully represent the situation.”

Footage shared by the Campaign Against Antisemitism on Friday showed a police officer warning the organization’s CEO, Gideon Falter, during a pro-Palestinian demonstration this month that his “openly Jewish” appearance might provoke protesters.

The initial version of the video gave the impression that Falter was being prevented from going about his business in the vicinity of a pro-Palestinian rally simply because he was Jewish. However, a longer version of the video, broadcast subsequently by Sky News, showed the officer expressing concern about Falter’s actions because they seemed to be deliberately attempting to provoke the demonstrators.

Dal Babu, a former chief superintendent with the Metropolitan Police, said on Monday the extended footage revealed “a completely different encounter than what Mr. Falter reported.”

He told BBC Breakfast it showed Falter “attempting to go against the march, trying to push past the officers, and I think for 13 minutes the officers showed great restraint.”

Babu added: “They offered to take him to a crossing point, they offered to help him, and the group he was with the opportunity to cross at a more appropriate place. So the narrative that’s been pushed for the past few days is not accurate.

“Personally, if I was policing that march, I would have been inclined to have arrested (Falter) for assault on a police officer and breach of the peace.”

The short version of the video released by the CAA shows Falter standing beside the protest march in central London, wearing a kippah, the Jewish head covering, and attempting to cross the road through the path of the protesters. A police officer offers to escort him elsewhere and tells him that if he chooses to remain where he is, he could be arrested for breach of peace because his presence could be considered antagonizing in the context of the march.

The extended footage provides further context, including the fact that Falter had deliberately walked into the middle of the march, as a result of which the officer talking to him was concerned that he was attempting to incite a reaction.

The Metropolitan Police commissioner was due to meet with leaders of Jewish groups on Monday to discuss the incident. The CAA previously has faced criticism for allegedly attempting to equate support for Palestinians or anti-Zionist views with antisemitism.
 


Stranded travelers scramble to make new connections as war shuts much of Middle East to air travel

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Stranded travelers scramble to make new connections as war shuts much of Middle East to air travel

  • Airspace or airports in Israel, Qatar, Syria, Iran, Iraq, Kuwait, Bahrain, Oman and the United Arab Emirates were closed, according to flight tracking sites and government agencies there

DUBAI: Hundreds of thousands of stranded travelers scrambled to make new connections and get through to airlines on jammed phone lines Sunday after the attack on Iran by the United States and Israel shut down much of the Middle East to air travel.
Tourists and business travelers crowded hotels and airports, with no word on when many airports would reopen or when flights to and through the Middle East would resume. Some governments advised their stranded citizens to shelter in place.
Shutdown airports in Dubai, Abu Dhabi and Doha — including Dubai International Airport, one of the busiest in the world — are important hubs for travel between Europe, Africa and the West to Asia. All three were directly hit by strikes.
Mohammad Abdul Mannan, in the crowd at Hazrat Shahjalal International Airport in Dhaka, Bangladesh, said he wasn’t concerned about the war, but that he needs to get his flight to the Middle East to make a living.
“We have set out to go for work, and we must go,” he said. “My only concern is how to go abroad and how to earn an income.”
Confusion reigned for many travelers as they tried to get answers on online portals or through busy phone lines.
In Dubai, stranded travelers could hear fighter jets overhead and an explosion when the Fairmont Palm Hotel was hit by a missile strike.
Many were unable to get updated flight information from tour operators or Dubai-based Emirates, which suspended all flights to and from Dubai until at least Monday afternoon.
Louise Herrle and her husband had their flight to Washington canceled on their way back to their Pittsburgh home after a tour of Dubai and Abu Dhabi, with no word when they could reschedule.
“We’re in the hotel room, we are not leaving it, so you’re not going to give it up until we know we have a flight out of here,” Herrle said. “I’m sure everyone else is in the same situation.”
Flights canceled, airports and airspaces still closed
Cirium, an aviation analytics firm, said it is hard to calculate the number of travelers stranded worldwide.
However, it estimated that at least 90,000 people alone change flights daily in the airports in Dubai, Doha or Abu Dhabi on just three airlines, Emirates, Qatar Airways and Etihad Airways.
Airspace or airports in Israel, Qatar, Syria, Iran, Iraq, Kuwait, Bahrain, Oman and the United Arab Emirates were closed, according to flight tracking sites and government agencies there.
More than 2,800 flights were canceled Sunday to and from airports across the Middle East, including those that remained open in Saudi Arabia, Jordan and Egypt, according figures on flight tracking site FlightAware. International airports in London, Mumbai, Delhi, Bangkok, Istanbul, Sri Lanka and Paris each reported dozens of flights canceled, as well.
Cancellations will extend beyond Sunday, at least.
Emirates suspended all flights to and from Dubai until at least Monday afternoon. Air India suspended all flights to and from the United Arab Emirates, Saudi Arabia, Israel and Qatar until Tuesday. Israeli airline EL AL said it was preparing to fly home Israelis stranded abroad once the airspace reopened and closed ticket sales for flights through March 21 to ensure stranded customers get priority.
Two airports in the United Arab Emirates reported strikes as the government there condemned what it called a “blatant attack involving Iranian ballistic missiles” on Saturday.
Officials at Dubai International Airport said four people were injured, while Zayed International Airport in Abu Dhabi said one person was killed and seven others were injured in a drone strike. Strikes were also reported at Kuwait International Airport.
Iran did not publicly claim responsibility.
Flight disruptions are likely to continue
Airlines urged passengers to check their flight status online before heading to the airport. Some airlines issued waivers to affected travelers that will allow them to rebook their flight plans without paying extra fees or higher fares. Others offered full refunds.
“For travelers, there’s no way to sugarcoat this,” said Henry Harteveldt, an airline industry analyst and president of Atmosphere Research Group. “You should prepare for delays or cancelations for the next few days as these attacks evolve and hopefully end.”
Mike McCormick, who used to oversee air traffic control for the Federal Aviation Administration, said countries might reopen their airspace once American and Israeli officials tell airlines where military flights are operating and how capable Iran remains at firing missiles.
‘No one really knows what’s going on’
The reverberations echoed far outside the Middle East — for example, airport authorities in the resort island of Bali in Indonesia said more than 1,600 tourists were stranded at I Gusti Ngurah Rai International Airport on Sunday after five flights to the Middle East were canceled or postponed.
Airlines that are crossing the Middle East will have to reroute flights around the conflict with many flights headed south over Saudi Arabia. That will cause delays and higher costs.
Kristy Ellmer, an American who had been on business meetings in Dubai, said she was staying in a hotel and keeping multiple flights booked in case airports reopen.
She said she was gaining confidence in the government’s ability to protect the city from missiles, but also keeping away from windows when she hears explosions.
“You hear a lot of explosions at times, there’s hundreds of them,” Ellmer said. “And so when we hear them we sort of just don’t stay near the windows just in case the glass was to break or there was some impact.”