There is a huge argument among the British public about whether Israel's attack on Gaza can be categorised as genocide or whether that description is inflammatory and entirely wrong.
However, we now have an adjudication by the Independent Press Standards Organisation (Ipso) which in effect clears the path for journalists to describe the IDF's attack and destruction of Gaza as genocide.
To be clear, The Times newspaper has a short article on this with the headline: "Press clear to call Gaza genocide". The first paragraph reads: "News organisations are entitled to describe Israel's military campaign in Gaza as genocide, the press watchdog has ruled."
What happened is this. Ipso rejected a complaint against a Scottish newspaper. That paper used the word "genocide" in a headline. Ipso said that they were not in a position to adjudicate on the actions of Israel and therefore they did not uphold the complaint.
Of course, Jewish campaigners are incensed and rejected this finding as "laughable".
Jewish campaigners would argue that the allegation of genocide is unproven and that using the word promoted anti-Semitism.
Of course, it would but I think you will find that it is agreed that Benjamin Netanyahu's administration has caused a surge in anti-Semitism in the UK because of the destruction of Gaza which I would suggest the majority of people saw as unjustified, cruel and an act of genocide. I will remain neutral on this but I lean towards the genocide argument.
Jewish campaigners would say that the only body entitled to make a finding of genocide would be the International Court of Justice. This has not happened.
At the time of the complaint, the International Court of Justice was in the process of considering allegations of genocide brought against Israel.
Accordingly, Ipso came to the conclusion that "Absent a legal ruling to this effect, the committee was not in a position to determine whether the article was inaccurate, misleading or distorted on this point."
A spokesperson for the Campaign against Anti-Semitism, in an interview with the Daily Telegraph said: "This decision is laughable. Do people still not understand that repeatedly asserting that the Jewish state has committed genocide - when no independent and competent judicial body has made such a determination - contributes to the environment of hostility towards Jewish people."
Of course it does. That's a given I suspect. But it doesn't change the fact that this might be genocide and it certainly looks like it. The problem is not the description or the use of the word. The problem is Benjamin Netanyahu and his administration in deciding to flatten Gaza thereby killing tens of thousands of innocent civilians including children and even babies.
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