Zarah Sultana asked the PM if we sold the missiles that killed Palestinian children. He wouldn’t answer.

On 26 May, Coventry South MP Zarah Sultana asked prime minister Boris Johnson to confirm that British-made weapons weren’t used in the recent airstrike that killed hundreds of Palestinians in Gaza. The prime minister was unable to confirm or deny the allegations. This came as foreign secretary Dominic Raab expressed his support for Israel and called for peace during his visit to the region. Meanwhile hundreds of activists protested outside an Israeli arms factory in Leicester.

A simple question demands a simple answer

On 21 May (local time), a ceasefire brought an end to Israel’s 11-day attack of the Gaza strip, which killed over 230 Palestinians, including 65 children. In spite of the ceasefire, the Israeli state’s illegal occupation and apartheid regime continues unabated. By 21 May, Israeli forces had already stormed Al-Aqsa mosque.

During Prime Minister’s Questions in the House of Commons on 26 May, MP Zarah Sultana held up an image of three Palestinian children who were killed in an Israeli airstrike. Sultana said:

The Israeli military murdered 63 other children and 245 Palestinians in its recent assault on Gaza. The call for Palestinian freedom has never been louder, but this Conservative government is complicit in its denial. It has approved more than £400m in arms to Israel since 2015.

She concluded:

So can the prime minister look me in the eye and tell me that British-made weapons or components weren’t used in the war crimes that killed these three children and hundreds of other Palestinians?

The prime minister was not able to answer Sultana’s simple question. In response, rapper Lowkey said:

Asa Winstanley added:

The Palestine Solidarity Campaign later shared:

Dominic Raab calls for peace

Sultana’s powerful question to the prime minister came during foreign secretary Raab’s visit to Palestine. One Twitter user commented:

On 26 May, Raab met with Palestinian and Israeli leaders. In meetings with Israeli officials, Raab confirmed the UK government’s support for “Israel’s right to self-defence”. He called for “lasting peace”, and celebrated “the flourishing” relationship between Britain and Israel. Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu thanked Boris Johnson for his “staunch and unwavering” support during Israel’s deadly bombardment of Gaza.

Berating Raab’s failure to condemn the Israeli state’s war crimes and apartheid regime, Palestine Solidarity Campaign (PSC) director Ben Jamal said:

It is clear that when Raab expresses unwavering support for Israel, what this translates to is unwavering support for violations of international law, the commission of war crimes and the sustenance and expansion of a system of apartheid.

Stop the War co-convener Lindsey German added:

Raab’s visit to Israel is to underline the British government’s support for its policies of siege and bombardment of Gaza, annexation of the West Bank and attacks on Palestinians in Jerusalem.

In spite of the UK government’s support for the Israeli state, the Palestinian solidarity movement continues to grow. Hundreds of protesters demonstrated outside an Israeli arms factory in Leicester on 26 May. Cambridge students have organised an open letter calling for the university to divest from companies complicit in Israel’s oppression of Palestinians. And we have seen nationwide protests in support of Palestinians’ struggle for independence.

Featured image via UK Parliament/YouTube

By Sophia Purdy-Moore

This post was originally published on The Canary.