Officials
declined to spell out exactly
what the Government might do
to put pressure on Umist.
However, the university, which
received £36.9 million in
public funds last
year. . . --The
Daily Telegraph, London,
campaigning for the firing of
an academic critic of
Israel |
More
fine, unbiassed reporting from Britain's
premier daily newspaper . .
. London, Sunday, 17 November 2002 Blair
vows to end dons' boycott of Israeli
scholars By Francis Elliott
and Catherine Milner TONY
Blair has told Britain's Chief Rabbi that
he will "do anything necessary" to stop
the academic boycott of Israeli scholars
at the University of Manchester Institute
of Science and Technology
(Umist). The Prime Minister told Jonathan
Sacks during a private meeting in
Downing Street that he was "appalled" by
evidence of discrimination on British
university campuses, according to his
aides. His comments -- his first on the issue
-- follow worldwide protests sparked by a
British academic's sacking of two Israeli
scholars from her highly respected
international journals. The dismissal by Mona Baker, a
professor at Umist, of Dr Miriam
Shlesinger and Prof Gideon
Toury because of their nationality
initially raised no public opposition from
within British universities. But when
The Telegraph revealed her actions
it led to a
fierce debate
in this country and abroad about attitudes
to Israel in British academia. An inquiry
by Umist into her actions has been in
progress since then. When Rabbi Sacks
raised the case, Mr Blair said its
findings had to "send a clear signal" that
so-called academic boycotts will not be
tolerated. Umist launched its inquiry into
Prof Baker's actions in July. A spokesman
for the university this week insisted
that the investigation was nearing
completion. Mr Blair's intervention
will increase pressure on the
university to remove the academic from
her post. "The Prime Minister is appalled by
discrimination against academics on the
grounds of their race or nationality. He
believes that universities must send a
clear signal that this will not be
tolerated," said a Downing Street
aide. A spokesman for the Prime Minister
confirmed that he had met Rabbi Sacks in
Number 10 on October 28 and that the issue
had been raised. Mr Blair is said to have
told the Chief Rabbi that he took the
matter "very seriously indeed". A senior
Labour Party figure said that the Prime
Minister had also offered to "do anything
necessary" to stop academic boycotts. Officials declined to spell out exactly
what the Government might do to put
pressure on Umist. However, the
university, which received £36.9
million in public funds last year, will be
acutely aware of the approaching review of
higher education funding, due to be
published in January. It will also need
official approval for plans to merge with
the University of Manchester to create
Britain's first super-university. The
timing of Mr Blair's intervention
[sic. The Chief
Rabbi's intervention] is
therefore clearly designed to exert
maximum leverage over the institution
which initially refused to take action
over the affair. Umist at first claimed that because the
journals from which Prof Baker had
dismissed the scholars -- The
Translator and Translation Studies
Abstracts -- did not belong to the
university it could not act. Prof Baker
justified her action by saying: "I deplore
the Israeli state. Miriam knew that was
how I felt and that they would have to go
because of the current situation." Umist was forced to back down, however,
after protests by academics from around
the world and Estelle Morris, the
then education secretary, who said that
such discrimination was "completely
unacceptable". A spokesman for the
university said last week: "There have
been reports that the case has been
dropped but that is not true. The
committee will return its verdict about
whether Mona Baker will be able to remain
in her post -- or not -- before
Christmas."
[sic. before
Hanukah?] Mr Blair's intervention will also be
taken as an implicit criticism of Oxford
University. The university last week
refused to make public the results of its
internal investigation into allegations
that Tom Paulin, a poet and
academic, told an Egyptian newspaper that
American-born Israeli settlers should be
shot dead. Mr Paulin, who lectures in English at
Hertford College, remains in his post.
Harvard University
[sic. Lawrence H
Summers, the Jewish president of
Harvard] this week cancelled a
lecture by him because the invitation had
caused "divisiveness and consternation" in
the prestigious American institution. Lord
Janner, of the Holocaust
Educational Trust (right),
welcomed Mr Blair's intervention and said
that it would be "very well received". He
added: "Academics should ask themselves
who is next to be boycotted." About 700 academics worldwide have
signalled their support for an academic
boycott of Israel. In Britain, the calls
for action have been led by Steven
Rose, an Open University
professor. Calls for such a boycott have been
supported by NATFHE, the lecturers' union,
while demands for a moratorium on the
European funding of Israeli institutions
have been backed by the Association of
University Teachers. ©
Copyright of Telegraph Group Limited
2002. -
Professor's
anti-Israeli tirade revives sacked
academics row
-
Government
warns Texas Business against Boycott of
Israel
-
UK
Scholars Debate Boycott of
Israel
-
Hadassah
Is Boycotting All Boycotts
-
Department
of what goes around, comes around:
Israeli fury at anti-Israel boycott:
British
Journals Oust 2 Israeli Scholars From
Their Boards
-
Harvard
President Sees Rise in Anti-Semitism on
Campus
-
German
press reports teacher jailed for
expressing doubts in private letter to
a Jewish historian: latter turned it
over to state political police
-
A
glitch in the Matrix -- CNN's skewed
reporting on the Middle East
-
Who
owns and controls the Polish press
today? Is it any different from the
situation in the rest of the
world?
-
The
former New York Times editor writes on
the alleged Jewish Bias of the
newspaper
-
Jeff
Jacoby in Boston Globe: A wave of Jew
bashing in Europe follows Ariel
Sharon's "self-defense" invasion of
Palestine
-
MSNBC
publishes astonishing list of US
journalists who back Israel without
qualification
-
Israeli
medical association (Dec 2001): OK to
break fingers of Palestinian prisoners
during interrogation
-
Stern
Gang: The Rich History of Jewish
Terrorism"
-
Jan
29, 2002: Nottingham University cancels
David Irving's address to Forum: 300
messages of support flood in to
students who invited him |
Mr
Irving's regret (Radical's Diary) |
previously: Outraged
opponents of free speech threatened
violence | Nottingham
students stood firm on invitation |
Outraged
Jewish Chronicle editorial |
Mr
Irving's Radical's Diary
|