
Kneecap perform at Glastonbury despite ban calls
'Glastonbury, I'm a free man', said Liam O'Hanna, who appeared in court earlier this month accused of having displayed a Hezbollah flag while saying 'Up Hamas, Up Hezbollah' at a London concert last year. The Lebanese force Hezbollah and the Palestinian group Hamas are banned in the UK, and it is an offence to express support for them.
O'Hanna, known by his stage name Mo Chara, has denied the charge. 'This situation can be quite stressful but it's minimal compared to what the Palestinian people are (facing),' O'Hanna, wearing his trademark keffiyeh and black sunglasses told thousands of cheering supporters, many waving Palestinian flags. O'Hanna also gave 'a shout out' to Palestine Action Group, which interior minister Yvette Cooper announced last week would become a banned group under the Terrorism Act of 2000.
Fellow band member DJ Provai wore a t-shirt dedicated to the campaign group, whose prohibition comes after its activists broke into a British
Royal Air Force base and vandalized two planes. Before Kneecap took to the stage, rap punk duo Bob Vylan led the crowd in chants of 'Death, death to the IDF', a reference to the Zionist army. Later, Kneecap led the crowd chanting abuse directed at Starmer.
Formed in 2017, Kneecap is no stranger to controversy. To their fans they are daring provocateurs who stand up to the establishment; to their detractors they are dangerous extremists. Their Irish and English lyrics are filled with references to drugs, they repeatedly clashed with the UK's previous Conservative government and have vocally opposed British rule in Northern Ireland.
The group apologized this year after a 2023 video emerged appearing to show one singer calling for the death of British Conservative MPs. Two MPs have been murdered in Britain in the past nine years and many of them worry about their safety. But Kneecap deny the terrorism charge and say the video featuring the Hezbollah flag has been taken out of context. Asked whether he regretted waving it, and other comments caught on camera, Chara told the Guardian in an interview published Friday: 'Why should I regret it? It was a joke — we're playing characters.'
Since O'Hanna was charged, the group has been pulled from a slew of summer gigs, including a Scottish festival appearance and various performances in Germany. But Glastonbury organizers defied Starmer who had said it was not 'appropriate' for Kneecap to perform at Glastonbury, one of the country's biggest and most famous music festivals.
'People that don't like the politics of the event can go somewhere else,' Michael Eavis, co-founder of the festival said in an article published in a free newspaper for festivalgoers. Public broadcaster the BBC faced pressure not to air the concert. In statement Saturday, a spokesperson for the broadcaster said the performance would not be shown live but would likely be available on demand afterwards.
Opposition leader Kemi Badenoch had said the BBC should not show Kneecap, and 30 music industry bosses asked organizers to pull the band from the line-up, according to a letter leaked by DJ Toddla T, cited by the Guardian newspaper. In response, more than 100 musicians have signed a public letter in support of the group. – Agencies
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Kuwait Times
12 hours ago
- Kuwait Times
Viral vigilante patrols London streets for pickpockets
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Kuwait Times
17 hours ago
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Zionist entity revokes visas of Australian diplomats
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Kuwait Times
18 hours ago
- Kuwait Times
Hamas accepts Gaza truce plan
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A Zionist armored incursion into Gaza City could displace hundreds of thousands of people, many of whom have been uprooted multiple times during the war. Ahmed Mheisen, Palestinian shelter manager in Beit Lahiya, a war-devastated suburb abutting eastern Gaza City, said 995 families had departed the area in recent days for the south. With the Zionist offensive looming, Mheisen put the number of tents needed for emergency shelter at 1.5 million, saying the Zionist entity had allowed only 120,000 tents into the territory during a January-March ceasefire. The UN humanitarian office said last week 1.35 million people were already in need of emergency shelter items in Gaza. 'I am heading south because I need to ease my mental state,' Mousa Obaid, a Gaza City resident, told Reuters. 'I do not want to keep moving left and right endlessly. There is no life left, and as you can see, living conditions are hard, prices are high, and we have been without work for over a year and a half.' 'Existing tents where people are living (in the south) have worn out and won't protect people against rainwater. There are no new tents in Gaza because of the (Zionist) restrictions on aid at the border crossings,' Palestinian economist Mohammad Abu Jayyab told Reuters. He said some Gaza City families had begun renting property and shelters in the south and moved in their belongings. 'Some people learned from previous experience, and they don't want to be taken by surprise. Also, some think it is better to move earlier to find a space,' Abu Jayyab added. – Agencies