Prime Minister's statement to the House Hamas attack
Mr Speaker, the attacks in Israel last weekend shocked the world.
Over 1,400 people murdered, one by one. Over 3,500 wounded. Almost
200 taken hostage. The elderly men, women, children, babies in arms
– murdered, mutilated, burned alive. We should call it by its name:
it was a pogrom. Mr Speaker, the families of some of the missing
are in the public gallery today. We called for the immediate
release of all hostages. And I say to them. We stand with
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Mr Speaker, the attacks in Israel last weekend shocked the world. Over 1,400 people murdered, one by one. Over 3,500 wounded. Almost 200 taken hostage. The elderly men, women, children, babies in arms – murdered, mutilated, burned alive. We should call it by its name: it was a pogrom. Mr Speaker, the families of some of the missing are in the public gallery today. We called for the immediate release of all hostages. And I say to them. We stand with you. We stand with Israel. The murdered and the missing come from over 30 countries – including the United Kingdom. The terrible nature of these attacks means it is proving difficult to identify many of the deceased. But with a heavy heart, I can inform the House that at least 6 British citizens were killed. A further 10 are missing, some of whom are feared to be among the dead. We are working with Israel to establish the facts as quickly as possible, and we are supporting the families who are suffering unimaginable pain. We are also helping British citizens who want to leave Israel. We have organised 8 flights so far, bringing out over 500 people, with more flights leaving today. We are working with neighbouring countries on land evacuations for our citizens in Gaza and the West Bank. I have spoken specifically to President Sisi about support civilians to leave Gaza via the Rafah border crossing – which at present remains closed. And we have a Border Force team in Egypt working with our Embassy to help citizens when they are able to cross. I will come back to the grave humanitarian situation in Gaza for a moment. But first, Mr Speaker I want to address the British Jewish community directly. As I said at Finchley United Synagogue last week and a Jewish school I visited this morning – we stand with you, now and always. This atrocity was an existential strike at the very idea of Israel as a safe homeland of the Jewish people. I understand why it has shaken you to your core. And I am sickened that antisemitic incidents have increased since the attacks. We are doing everything we can to protect you. We are providing an additional £3 million for the Community Security Trust to protect schools, synagogues, and other Jewish community buildings. And we are working with the police to ensure that hate crime and the glorification of terror is met with the full force of the law. I know the whole house will support this – and join me in saying unequivocally: We stand with the Jewish community. Mr Speaker, I also recognise that this is a moment of great anguish for British Muslim communities, who are also appalled by Hamas’ actions but fearful of the response. We must listen to these concerns with the same attentiveness. Hamas is using innocent Palestinian people as human shields – with the tragic loss of more than 2,600 Palestinian lives, including many children. We mourn the loss of every innocent life – civilians of every faith, every nationality who has been killed. And so let’s say it plainly: we stand with British Muslim communities too. Mr Speaker, Israel was founded not just as a homeland for the Jewish people, but as a guarantor of their security. To ensure that what happened to the Jewish people in the Holocaust could never happen again. Through its strength and resilience Israel gradually achieved some of that longed for security. Despite the strategic threats on their borders, including Hezbollah in the north, with Iran at their back. They normalised relations with the UAE and Bahrain through the Abraham Accords and moved towards normalising ties with Saudi Arabia.
Steps that not long ago were thought unthinkable. |