Prime minister condemns ‘horrific antisemitic attack’ after four Jewish community ambulances set on fire

Keir Starmer has called for communities to “all stand together” in the face of an “horrific antisemitic attack”, which saw four Jewish community ambulances set on fire.

The Metropolitan Police confirmed the incident is being treated as an antisemitic hate crime, with CCTV showing three individuals setting light to an ambulance in the early hours of Monday morning,

Officers were called to Highfield Road in Golders Green at about 1.45am on Monday after receiving reports of a fire. The ambulances were run by Jewish charity Hatzola, which was established in 1979 and is run by volunteers, providing free medical transportation and emergency response to those living in north London.

The London fire brigade (LFB) said it had sent six fire engines and about 40 firefighters to the fire, which damaged four vehicles. Several cylinders on the vehicles exploded and caused windows to break in an adjacent block of flats, the LFB said. No injuries were initially reported.

Jewish community leaders condemned the attack, with the chief rabbi Ephraim Mirvis saying the targeting of the volunteer service was “particularly sickening”.

Investigators are working to identify who carried out the attack. It is understood to be too early to say if it was inspired by a particular group.

The prime minister said he had been in contact with Jewish community leaders and “it’s really important that we all stand together”.

He added:

double quotation markThis is a horrific antisemitic attack. And of course my thoughts, I think all of our thoughts, will be with those in the vicinity, the residents who are understandably very concerned, the Jewish community across the country deeply concerned.

I’ve already been in touch with community leaders this morning and will continue to do so during the day.

But antisemitism has no place in our society and it’s really important that we all stand together at a moment like this.

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Chris Osuh

Chris Osuh

Ministers have been urged to proscribe the Iranian Revolutionary Guard (IRGC) after reports that an Iran-linked group has claimed responsibility for an attack on four ambulances belonging to a Jewish charity paramedic service.

The Jewish Leadership Council, an umbrella group for some of the UK’s largest Jewish organisations, has called for “emergency legislation” that would designate the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps, which protects the country’s theocratic regime with a combination of ground troops, paramilitary, naval and air forces, cyber command, and liaison with proxy groups.

Ministers said they would draw up new laws to proscribe the IRGC in May. British Iranian campaigners have also urged the UK government to proscribe the IRGC, but it has yet to happen.

Joshua Cass, JLC’s public affairs officer, said: “It’s been almost nine months since the home secretary promised to implement Jonathan Hall KC’s recommendations to create a new power of proscription to cover state threats. We want to see emergency legislation introduced to do that immediately.

“Not just for the Jewish community, but because there’s this massive gap in our national security infrastructure that the Terrorism Act doesn’t cover when it comes to groups who are state-backed or state-funded, like the IRGC.”

Describing the attack as “horrific” and “gutwrenching”, Cass said the feeling in the Jewish community was that “it’s one thing after another at the moment”, with the belief that the ambulance station represented an “easy target” in the early hours at a time when high levels of security around Jewish communal buildings was common.

He added: “It can’t just be a case of just securing Jewish buildings anymore with physical security – society needs to take action and government needs to be part of this.”

The video claiming responsibility circulated on social media purports to be from the Iran-linked Harakat Ashab al-Yamin al-Islamia group, containing text in Hebrew, English and Arabic. The group has previously claimed responsibility for an attack on a synagogue in Belgium and an attack on a school in the Netherlands this month.

The Community Security Trust, which monitors security threats against jewish sites in the UK, said: “The antisemitic arson attack against Hatzola ambulances in Golders Green has obvious comparison to similar recent attacks in Belgium and the Netherlands.”

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