U.K. leader calls local ban on Israeli Maccabi Tel Aviv soccer fans “the wrong decision”

London — British Prime Minister Keir Starmer has criticized a local U.K. authority’s decision to ban fans of an Israeli soccer team from coming to support their side. Starmer called the move by authorities in Birmingham, England, to block Maccabi Tel Aviv fans from attending an upcoming game against the city’s Aston Villa team a misstep.

“This is the wrong decision. We will not tolerate antisemitism on our streets. The role of the police is to ensure all football fans can enjoy the game, without fear of violence or intimidation,” Starmer said in a social media post on Friday.

A safety advisory group made up of authorities who give advice on welfare, health and safety for events in Birmingham made the decision to ban traveling Maccabi Tel Aviv fans from attending the November 6 match earlier this week.

U.K. police authorities supported the decision after classifying the game as a “high risk” public event. 

The decision was made in line with “current intelligence and previous incidents, including violent clashes and hate crime offenses that occurred during the 2024 UEFA Europa League match between Ajax and Maccabi Tel-Aviv in Amsterdam,” said a statement Thursday from the West Midlands Police force, which covers Birmingham.

Following Starmer’s comments, West Midlands Police and Crime Commissioner Simon Foster asked the Safety Advisory Group to review its decision to ban the Maccabi Tel Aviv fans.

“Any decision or recommendation, is ultimately a matter for the Birmingham City Council SAG and the independent, objective and impartial, operational policing judgment, of West Midlands Police,” Foster said.

The violence last year in Amsterdam cited by West Midlands police, which happened against the backdrop of the war in Gaza, drew global attention. Maccabi fans were among hundreds to march through central Amsterdam demonstrating in support of Israel before a game against the Dutch team Ajax. During the marches, flares were lit and Palestinian flags hung on some streets were torn down amid chants of “death to the Arabs” by some Maccabi Tel Aviv fans.

Pro-Israel Maccabi fans stage demonstration in Amsterdam, at least ten arrests

Fans of the Israeli soccer team Maccabi Tel Aviv stage a pro-Israel demonstration at Dam Square in central Amsterdam, Netherlands, lighting flares and chanting slogans ahead of the UEFA Europa League match between Maccabi Tel Aviv and local team Ajax, Nov. 7, 2024.

Mouneb Taim/Anadolu/Getty


In the aftermath of that game, some local people in Amsterdam “actively sought out Israeli supporters to attack and assault them,” police authorities in the Netherlands said, sparking a furious reaction from the Israeli government. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu described the violence as a “premeditated antisemitic attack.” 

Sixty-two people were arrested and five injured amid the unrest, Dutch police said at the time. 

Maccabi Tel Aviv supporters do have a history of causing unrest at recent soccer games. A March report by an anti-racism group in Israel said the team’s fans were the most prolific in singing racist chants during games over the last league season, according to Israeli news outlet Ynet. 

The decision to block Israeli visiting supporters also came just weeks after a deadly terror attack on a synagogue in the northeast England city of Manchester. Two Jewish men were killed and three others seriously injured during the attack, which happened on Yom Kippur, the holiest day in the Jewish religious calendar. 

Police later said one of the two victims was likely killed by police gunfire as officers raced to stop the suspect, who first rammed his car into people and then attacked with a knife outside the synagogue. Officers shot and killed the suspect, who investigators later identified as 35-year-old Jihad Al-Shamie, a British citizen of Syrian descent. 

The ban on the Israeli soccer fans also comes in the wake of a suspected arson attack on a mosque in the town of Peacehaven, in southern Britain. Police said they are investigating that incident as a possible hate crime.

Birmingham, the U.K’s second largest city, has one of the largest Muslim populations in Britain. 

Source link

Visited 2 times, 2 visit(s) today

Related Article

'That's an easy one…': Trump predicts 'success' with Pakistan-Afghanistan war, says he has saved millions of lives - World News

‘That’s an easy one…’: Trump predicts ‘success’ with Pakistan-Afghanistan war, says he has saved millions of lives – World News

US President Donald Trump is no stranger to ‘ending’ international wars — having claimed credit for singlehandedly averting multiple global crises over the past year. The POTUS has now insisted that he could “easily” solve the ongoing Pakistan-Afghanistan ‘if’ he chose to intervene. “I do understand Pakistan attacked or there is an attack going on

Last year, 1,997 Indians were subject for forced removals by Canadian authorities, trailing only 3,683 Mexicans and far over the third largest cohort, 981 Colombians. (REUTERS)

Record number of Indians deported from Canada between Jan and Oct 2025

The number of Indian nationals forcibly removed from Canada this year is on track to surpass the record number that was logged in 2024. Last year, 1,997 Indians were subject for forced removals by Canadian authorities, trailing only 3,683 Mexicans and far over the third largest cohort, 981 Colombians. (REUTERS) Last year, 1,997 Indians were

A Ukrainian soldier crouches with a remote next to a quadcopter used to destroy other drones.

Ukraine’s cheap interceptor drones are rewriting the rules of war

About a year into Russia’s war, a Ukrainian drone instructor pitched what sounded to troops like science fiction: flying quadcopters into Moscow’s scout drones midair. The soldiers thought it was impossible. It would be too difficult to maneuver a quadcopter, or small drone, into another fast-moving target, they said. They joked that he’d been watching

President Donald Trump pictured speaking to reporters after arriving in West Palm Beach, Florida, on Friday.

Trump denies Ukraine Tomahawk missiles, urges both sides to ‘stop the war immediately’

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky failed to obtain Tomahawk missiles for strikes on Russia from a meeting with Donald Trump on Friday, with the US president later calling for both sides to cease fighting and accept current battle lines. Zelensky had traveled to Washington hoping to receive the long-range cruise missiles, which he believes could deliver

The Taliban government's statement comes even as peace talks are set to begin in Doha. (Reuters)

Afghanistan’s Taliban ‘reserves right to respond’ to Pakistani airstrikes

Even as Pakistan and Afghanistan gear up to meet in Doha today to broker a peace after days of fighting and air strike the Taliban Government said that Afghanistan reserves the right to respond to Pakistani airstrikes on its land. The Taliban government’s statement comes even as peace talks are set to begin in Doha.

There was no statement from Pakistan’s military, but the Hafiz Gul Bahadur group of Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) had claimed responsibility for the early Friday attack on Khaddi Fort in Mir Ali.(Reuters)

In fresh strikes, Pakistan targets terrorist hideouts in Afghanistan: Report

Pakistan launched fresh air strikes targeting terrorist hideouts in Afghanistan, casting a shadow over the expected talks in Doha amid a fragile ceasefire that had temporarily halted hostilities between the two sides. There was no statement from Pakistan’s military, but the Hafiz Gul Bahadur group of Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) had claimed responsibility for the early