Opposition to the anti-Israel Boycott,
Divestment and Sanctions (BDS) movement is growing in Great Britain, according
to the results of a new survey published on Friday.
The Populus poll —
commissioned by the Britain Israel Communications and Research Centre (BICOM) —
found that 51% of Britons agreed with the statement, “I do not boycott goods or
produce from Israel and find it difficult to see why others would single out
Israel to boycott given everything else that’s going on in the world,” up 8%
from last year. Only 12% of respondents disagreed with the statement.
Furthermore, according to the poll, 56% of
Britons believe a boycott of the Jewish state would hurt both Israelis and
Palestinians, up 9% from last year.
Asked whether Israel was a British ally, 57% of
respondents replied affirmatively — a 5% rise from last year — while 19% said
no.
Next year marks the 100th anniversary of the
issuing of the Balfour Declaration, in which the UK announced its support
for “the establishment in Palestine of a national home for the Jewish
people.” 43% of survey respondents said that this had been the right position
for the British government to take in 1917, while 18% disagreed.
Also, the poll found that 48% of Britons thought
“hating Israel and questioning its right to exist is antisemitic,” while 28%
disagreed.
“Our poll shows a very significant
shift against the idea of boycotting Israel,” BICOM CEO James Sorene said.
“The British sense of fair play is a clear theme in the poll as time and again
respondents reject singling out Israel, given everything else going on in the
world.”
Israeli Ambassador to the UK Mark Regev stated
the poll results “affirm the strong ties between our two countries. It is
encouraging that, more than ever, Britons view Israel as their strongest ally
in the region. Equally important, most people correctly believe that
demonization of Israel is, in fact, antisemitic, and must not be tolerated.”
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