UK PM Starmer condemned for meeting Israel’s Herzog ‘while children starve’

Britain's Prime Minister Keir Starmer and Israel's President Isaac Herzog pose meet in 10 Downing Street on Wednesday. (AFP)
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Updated 10 September 2025
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UK PM Starmer condemned for meeting Israel’s Herzog ‘while children starve’

  • MP Stephen Flynn berates Keir Starmer for meeting Israel’s head of state 
  • Politicians question legality of allowing Israeli leader into the country amid genocide allegations

LONDON: British MPs berated UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer for hosting the Israeli president on Wednesday “while children starve” in Gaza.

Starmer met Isaac Herzog in London for talks despite dozens of politicians, including from his own party, questioning how he was allowed into the country. 

During prime minister’s questions in parliament, the Scottish National Party’s Westminster leader, Stephen Flynn, angrily condemned Starmer over the meeting.

“Gaza is a graveyard,” he said. “What does it say of this prime minister that he will harbor this man whilst children starve?”

The MP said that Starmer had welcomed into his home a man who “called for the collective punishment of the Palestinian people and who signed the artillery shells that destroyed their homes, their families and their friends.”

He said that Starmer was opting to meet Herzog rather than ending arms sales to Israel and extending sanctions against the country in response to its war that has killed tens of thousands of civilians. 

The prime minister responded, saying that he “would not give up on diplomacy” in trying to bring peace to the region.

The British government has been accused of failing to take meaningful measures agains Israel for the war, which many academics, observers and governments describe as a genocide.

Starmer has threatened to recognize a Palestinian state if Israel does not comply with certain conditions over the conflict. The UK has also sanctioned extremist members of the Israeli government and suspended arms exports licenses for certain weapons used in Gaza.

However, there are widespread calls across the political spectrum for stronger action.

Sixty MPs and Lords called on the government to deny Herzog entry to the UK and said that his visit risked the government being complicit in genocide in Gaza, under a UN treaty.

Green Party leader Zack Polanski accused Herzog of being “complicit while the Israeli government has engaged in committing genocide in Gaza.”

He said that the Israeli president should be met with “handcuffs not handshakes” when he arrived for his meeting.

Herzog has previously said that there are “no innocent civilians in Gaza” and “it is an entire nation that is responsible.”

In December 2023, he signed an artillery shell with the words “I rely on you” before it was fired into Gaza as part of the war that started in October 2023.


I want answers from my ex-husband, Gisele Pelicot tells AFP

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I want answers from my ex-husband, Gisele Pelicot tells AFP

  • Gisele Pelicot, the French woman who became a symbol in the global fight against sexual violence, told AFP why she wants to visit her ex-husband in jail and her joy at finding love again
PARIS: Gisele Pelicot, the French woman who became a symbol in the global fight against sexual violence, told AFP why she wants to visit her ex-husband in jail and her joy at finding love again.
In an interview ahead of the publication of her memoirs on Tuesday, she also said she hopes to inspire other rape victims to believe in a brighter future — and to change attitudes along the way.
Her book, titled “A Hymn to Life,” covers the full arc of her 50-year marriage which ended when she discovered that her husband had been repeatedly drugging her and inviting strangers over to their house to rape her.
It will be published in 22 languages.
The title of your book in French is “And the joy of living.” Have you found joy again?
“I’m doing better. After the trial (of her husband and 50 other men in 2024), I took stock of my life and today I am trying to rebuild on this field of ruins.
Despite all these ordeals, even in the darkest periods, I have always sought flashes of joy; I am looking toward the future, toward joy. I know this may surprise some who expect to see me in tatters, but I am determined to remain standing and dignified.”
Some describe you as an icon. Do you embrace that status?
“I do not use that word. I think my story has become a symbol. I know where I come from and who I am. It seems to me that we do not suspect the strength we have inside us until we are forced to draw on it, and that is also what I would like to say to victims.”
Why did you write this book?
“I needed to bear witness to my life journey, to address all those who supported me; it was a way of responding to them. Writing this book with (French author) Judith Perrignon, in whom I had complete trust, was both painful and fascinating.
Beyond the case itself, it retraces my life, the journey of three generations of women: my grandmother, my mother and myself. Their example explains my strength because I experienced tragedies very young. When you lose your mother at age nine, you grow up faster than others.”
Have you had professional psychological help to overcome your trauma?
“Of course, I could not get through this alone. How do you sort through 50 years of memories tainted by this series of crimes? I lived for half a century with Mr. Pelicot and I have no memory of the rapes, only the memory of happy days.
I cannot throw my whole life in the bin and tell myself that those years were nothing but a lie. If I did that, I’d collapse.”
At the end of the book, you announce your intention to visit Mr.Pelicot in prison. Why?
“I would like to do it for myself. That visit would be a stage in my reconstruction, an opportunity, for the first time since his arrest in November 2020, to confront him face to face.
How could he have done this to me? How could he have put our entire family through hell? What did he do to (our daughter) Caroline? He may not answer my questions, but I need to ask them.
For the moment, no date has been set for the visit. I do not think it will take place before the end of the year.”
In the book, you speak about your relationships with your three children. Where do they stand?
“It is wrong to think that such a tragedy brings a family together. It is impossible. Each of my children is now trying to rebuild as best they can.
Caroline’s suffering devastates me. She is in a state of anger that I do not share. And there is this doubt (about whether she was raped by her father) that condemns her to a perpetual hell.
I do not question her word, but I do not have the answers. Today, our relationship is calmer and I am happy about that. I will try to support her as best I can.”
Do you intend to remain a public figure?
“I am in my 74th year. I long for calm. I am not a radical feminist; I am a feminist in my own way. I know there is still a long way to go, despite progress on consent. I leave it to the younger generations to change this patriarchal society.
We can pass all the laws we want, but if we do not change mindsets, we will not succeed. That therefore begins above all with the education of our children. Parents must get involved.”
You are about to begin a tour to present your book. With what message?
“A message of hope. After hardship, you can once again allow yourself happiness and be happy. That is what I am doing. I am lucky enough to love again — it is magnificent. I think a life without love is a life without sunshine.”