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London police officer sparks outrage after suggesting swastikas should be ‘taken into context’ to Jewish woman

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Video of a police officer in London having a heated discussion with a woman about the offensiveness of swastikas has circulated across social media.

The video was taken on Saturday during a massive pro-Palestinian rally that the Metropolitan Police were monitoring. In the video, a visibly upset woman confronted the officer about an anti-Israeli participant who allegedly showed off a swastika.

The officer did not seem to agree that swastikas are offensive symbols that threaten public order. He cited the Public Order Act 2023, which he said outlines and limits what police handle at protests. 

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«Under what context is a swastika not disrupting public order?» the woman argued. She repeated her question multiple times.

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Police standing in London

Lines of police keep the Ceasefire Now protest and the pro-Israel counter demonstration apart on March 30, 2024, in London, England. (Guy Smallman/Getty Images)

«I haven’t said anything about it, that it is or it isn’t,» he replied. «Everything needs to be taken into context, doesn’t it?»

«Yeah, but it’s a context of a hateful march,» another woman chimed in, while the first woman shot back, «Why does a swastika need context?»

«Why is a swastika not immediately antisemitism?» the woman added. «Why does it need context? This is what I’m confused about. This isn’t even about Israel. In what context is a swastika not antisemitic and disruptive to public order?»

«I don’t have an in-depth knowledge of signs and symbols,» the officer said. «I know the swastika was used by the Nazi Party during their inception and their period of being in power in Germany.»

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Palestinian flags in London

Pro-Palestinian activists and supporters wave flags as they gather for a protest in Trafalgar Square in central London on March 30, 2024, calling for a ceasefire in the Israel/Hamas conflict.  (BENJAMIN CREMEL/AFP via Getty Images)

The two continued arguing before the officer acknowledged that some symbols produce «mass alarm.»

«Now, if you came up to me and you felt mass alarm and distressed about a symbol that someone was…,» he said before being interrupted.

«I’m extremely distressed. I’m very alarmed,» the woman responded.

On X, the Metropolitan Police posted a statement about the incident that implied the video had been taken out of context.

«The video is a short excerpt of what was a 10-minute conversation with an officer,» the response read. «During the full conversation, the officer establishes that the person the woman was concerned about had already been arrested for a public order offence in relation to a placard.»

Shot of anti-Israel demonstrators

Protestors on the Ceasefire now protest react to a pro-Israel counter demonstration on March 30, 2024 in London, England.  (Guy Smallman/Getty Images)

«The officer then offered to arrange for other officers to attend and accompany the woman to identify any other persons she was concerned about amongst the protestors, but after turning to speak to his supervisor, she then unfortunately left.»

After the video was posted, social media users criticized the police officer’s responses to the woman’s arguments. 

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«That officer is qualified to be an Ivy League university president,» one X user joked.

«Our police force have reached a new low,» a British commentator wrote.

«And his grandfather probably risked his life fighting the Nazis in World War II. What a shame,» another speculated.

Israeli tank

An Israeli soldier on top a tank on the border with the Gaza Strip, in southern Israel, Sunday, Sunday, March 17, 2024. (AP)

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Fox News Digital reached out to the Metropolitan Police for additional comment.



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Afghanistan’s only women-led radio station to resume operations after Taliban lifts suspension

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An Afghan radio station produced entirely by Afghan women will resume broadcasts after the Taliban lifted a suspension that was imposed over alleged cooperation with a foreign country’s TV channel.

Radio Begum launched on International Women’s Day in March 2021, just five months before the Taliban took control of Afghanistan during the chaotic withdrawal of U.S. and NATO troops from the region.

The station’s sister satellite channel, Begum TV, operates from France and broadcasts content on Afghanistan’s school curriculum from grades seven through 12.

The Taliban banned education for women and girls in the country after sixth grade.

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This picture taken on November 28, 2021, shows students attending a class on-air at Radio Begum in Kabul. (Getty Images)

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On Saturday, the Taliban’s Information and Culture Ministry said in a statement that Radio Begum had repeatedly requested permission to resume broadcasts.

The suspension was lifted after the station made commitments to Taliban officials, the ministry said.

Radio Begum agreed to conduct broadcasts «in accordance with the principles of journalism and the regulations of the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan, and to avoid any violations in the future,» the statement said. The ministry did not offer details on what those principles and regulations may be.

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Radio Begum

This picture taken on November 28, 2021, shows station director Saba Chaman, right, and her colleague working in a studio at Radio Begum in Kabul. (Getty Images)

The station confirmed it had been given permission to resume broadcasting, without providing additional details.

Taliban officials imposed the suspension after they raided the Kabul-based station on Feb. 4 and seized computers, hard drives and phones, and took into custody two male employees who do not hold any senior management positions, the outlet said in a statement at the time.

The Taliban have prohibited women from education, many fields of work and public spaces since they seized control of the country in the summer of 2021. Journalists, especially women, have lost their jobs as the Taliban control the media in the region.

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Students attending a class on-air at Radio Begum

This picture taken on November 28, 2021, shows students attending a class on-air at Radio Begum in Kabul. (Getty Images)

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Reporters without Borders ranked Afghanistan 178 out of 180 countries in the 2024 press freedom index, a dip from the year before when it ranked 152.

The ministry did not identify the TV channel it accused Radio Begum of working with, but its statement cited alleged collaboration with «foreign-sanctioned media outlets.»

The Associated Press contributed to this report.


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