Why I don’t trust the PSC
Yesterday (Saturday 29th July) I went on a march, in Birmingham (UK), in protest against Israel’s actions in Lebanon and Gaza. The event was organised by the Palestine Solidarity Campaign (PSC), about whom I have previously expressed doubts on this blog. Nevertheless, I felt it essential to protest at Israel’s brutal and disproportionate collective punishment of innocent Lebonese men, women and children.
My experience of previous pro-Palestinian rallies and demos has not been good. Those of them organised by the “Stop the War Coalition” (ie: the SWP and their new friends, the Muslim Brotherhood), have not been exactly pro-Palestinian, so much as anti-Israeli. At first, I was pleasantly surprised by the Birmingham event. For a start it was clearly organised by the PSC, with the SWP/Respect/Muslim Association of Britain/Muslim Brotherhood, nowhere to be seen: excellent!
The rally before the march was good: a Palestinian PSC speaker condemned Israel, saying “If you want to fight Hisbullah, then go after Hisbullah, not the people of Lebanon!” The same speaker called unequivocally for an immediate end to *all* attacks on civilians, whether Lebonese, Palestinian or Israeli. I had no hesitation in applauding this man’s speech.
Then Richard Burden MP (Labour: Birmingham Northfield) spoke, making many of the same points as the Palestinian guy who’d preceded him, but adding ” We all want a two state solution”. The crowd (about 200 of us) applauded, but I thought “actually, most of the organisers of this rally do *not* support a two states solution, Richard – whether you know that or not”.
My old sparring-partner Sue Blackwell spoke and, to be honest, I can’t recall exactly what she said; but – precisely because I can’t remember what she said- it can’t have been all that bad.
Then, just before we were about to set off on our march around the City Centre, a bunch of characters turned up, headed by a mullah in full Khomeinite gear – the full regalia of an Iranian clerical fascist. Behind him were about 50 young men carrying Hizbullah flags, pictures of Hassan Nasrallah and the Ayatola Khomeini, and carrying placards with the slogan “Israel’s dream: the world’s nightmare”.
A lot of people on the demo were clearly upset by the clerical fascists, and a female Yemeni work colleague of mine was hard at work telling people to ignore them. I was standing in the company of a group of Iranian political refugees, who were horrified by the picture of Khomeini, and some of them very nearly left the demo there and then. One of the Iranians identified the Mullah as an agent of the regime (why do they need agents, when they’ve got the SWP at their beck and call?).
But even so, I said to myself, you cannot blame the PSC for these interlopers. The PSC organisers were clearly not in a position to turn the Khomeneites away, and all they (the PSC)could do was to deny the fascists a platform and attempt to drown out their chants.
Except that leading Birmingham PSC’er Chris Khamis gave the mullah a microphone, and held the megaphone whilst he (the mullah) spouted his anti-semitic filth.
I was proud to be on a protest against Israel’s brutality in Lebanon and Gaza. but I didn’t like the company I was keeping.