logo
Australia must combat antisemitism, but not simply defer to demands of some voices

Australia must combat antisemitism, but not simply defer to demands of some voices

The Guardian11-07-2025
Australians should be appalled by the rise in antisemitism, including arson, vandalism, assaults, abuse and threats. Every person in our country has the human right to live free from fear, racism and discrimination. Many positive steps have already been taken to address it. Some measures have gone too far, like the New South Wales government's law criminalising protest outside places of worship and disproportionate, blanket bans on certain protests in universities.
Australia's special envoy to combat antisemitism, Jillian Segal, also goes too far in some ways, and not far enough in others in her recently released plan.
Segal's plan goes too far in urging the widespread adoption of the definition of antisemitism prepared by the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance (IHRA) in 2016. The definition itself is innocuous enough, essentially addressing bias or hatred towards Jews. Eleven examples are then given to illustrate it.
There are three key problems with the IHRA approach. Firstly, it was intended to be a non-binding monitoring and awareness raising tool, not an operational definition for disciplining staff or students, cutting funding to universities or arts institutions, censoring the media or excluding immigrants – strategies which appear similar to the Trump Administration's. It is too vague and broad to operate as a binding instrument of enforcement and punishment. Even its key drafter, Kenneth Stern, opposed its use as a legal or regulatory tool, including in universities.
Secondly, the IHRA approach is not consistent with human rights and excessively infringes on legitimate freedom of expression. International law allows free speech to be limited where a person incites violence, or national, racial or religious hatred that constitutes incitement to discrimination, hostility or violence. United Nations human rights mechanisms and the world's leading human rights NGOs, such as Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch, have rejected the IHRA approach.
The real problem lies in some of the examples given to illustrate the IHRA definition, which the special envoy wants adopted in Australia even though they are not part of the definition. Many of the examples are not usually problematic, such as inciting violence, harmful stereotypes, collectively blaming Jews, Holocaust denial and 'blood libel' tropes. Even these can still be misused, as where mention of 'intifada' or wearing a kaffiyeh scarf as a symbol of resistance, regardless of context, is interpreted as violently antisemitic.
Other examples – particularly because of how they are weaponised against critics of Israel in practice – are controversial. Example 7, denying Jewish self-determination or claiming that Israel is a racist endeavour, can be invoked to silence, for example, legitimate discussion of a plural 'one state' solution to the conflict or lawful chants like 'from the river to the sea'. It can also be weaponised to crush critique of how Israel purports to exercise self-determination over land that does not belong to it, as well as Israeli practices of racial segregation or apartheid and religious nationalism.
Example 8 refers to applying double standards by requiring of Israel behaviour not expected or demanded of any other democratic nation. This example clearly conflates criticism of Israel with racism against Jews and does not necessarily have anything to do with antisemitism, although in some cases it could do so. It is also often a red herring. Israel is not generally expected to behave differently to other democracies. It is expected to respect the same international legal standards as other democracies. The unique nature of Israel's near-60 year occupation of Palestine, unresolved human rights issues stemming from its foundation in 1948 (including refugees, property and compensation), and the severity of Israel's violations of international law – Israel's choice – are what makes it a target of accountability efforts, including lawful boycott, divestment and sanctions.
Abstract definitions operate in the real world. The vaguer they are, the more they are susceptible to being instrumentalised for political goals. The United Nations human rights mechanisms, including my own, have documented the heavy repression of pro-Palestine speech, protests and organisations in western democracies, including the US, UK, Germany, France and Australia.
Personally, I have seen academic conferences and colleagues self-censoring for fear of falling foul of vague and overly broad policies and disciplinary procedures on antisemitism and protest. In some ways the pendulum has swung too far in the wrong direction. It has not been helped by orchestrated campaigns by pro-Israel advocacy groups to smear and bully Israel's critics, including through aggressive lawfare, and destroy their reputations and livelihoods.
The IHRA approach is divisive and controversial, including among Jews. This alone makes its adoption counter-productive, because it can never build the consensus necessary to unify national efforts to effectively combat antisemitism. There are better definitions available, including the Jerusalem Declaration on Antisemitism.
Separately, Segal's plan does not go far enough because in identifying the 'drivers' of antisemitism, it simplistically blames 'extremist ideologies', as if these mysteriously appeared out of thin air. There is no mention of a totally misguided but nonetheless structural driver of antisemitism – fury at Israel's profound violations of international law in Gaza. The upsurge in antisemitism in Australia clearly correlates with the 21 months of violence since the atrocious Hamas attack on Israel of 7 October 2023. People did not just inexplicably and without context decide to become more antisemitic in that period.
Israeli violations can never justify blaming and attacking Jewish Australians and do not help Palestinians. But the special envoy's plan will never be effective if it tackles only the symptoms and refuses to acknowledge let alone address a key driver.
The government must act in the best interests of all Australians when combating all forms of racism, including to defend free speech and human rights, and not simply genuflect to the incessant, excessive demands of some Jewish voices.
Ben Saul is Challis chair of international law at the University of Sydney and the United Nations Special Rapporteur on Human Rights and Counter-terrorism
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

First Nations group launches federal appeal to block construction of main Brisbane 2032 Olympics stadium
First Nations group launches federal appeal to block construction of main Brisbane 2032 Olympics stadium

The Guardian

time24 minutes ago

  • The Guardian

First Nations group launches federal appeal to block construction of main Brisbane 2032 Olympics stadium

A First Nations group has applied to halt construction of the main stadium planned for the 2032 Brisbane Olympics. The state and federal governments plan to spend $3.8bn on a 63,000-seat stadium at Victoria Park in inner-city Brisbane. It will host the opening and closing ceremonies and athletics events. The park will also contain a 25,000-seat national aquatic centre, a warmup track, and other infrastructure. Victoria Park is one of the most significant Indigenous sites in inner-city Brisbane, according to historian Ray Kerkhove. It served as the town camp for up to 1,500 Indigenous people, who were victims of at least one massacre, and is on a songline, he said earlier this year. It is also known as Barrambin. Sign up: AU Breaking News email In May Queensland parliament passed legislation on party lines exempting Games-related development from a number of state planning laws, including the Aboriginal Cultural Heritage Act, and from legal challenge. On Tuesday, the Yagara Magandjin Aboriginal Corporation (Ymac) lodged an application with the federal government for permanent legal protection of the park, under section 10 of the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Heritage Protection Act. The decision lies with the federal environment minister, Murray Watt. 'We know this is a place of great significance and history, not only for Yagara people, but for other First Nations and non-Aboriginal people as well,' said Ymac spokesperson and Yagarabul elder Gaja Kerry Charlton. The LNP leader, David Crisafulli, had promised not to build any new stadiums for the Olympics, and not to build one in Victoria Park, before last year's state election. It was also not mentioned during the May federal election campaign. Crisafulli apologised for breaking the election promise in March, saying the choice was between Victoria Park and a temporary facility in the city's south that wouldn't have proven suitable. Used as a golf course since 1931, Brisbane city council developed a master plan for the site in 2020, converting it back into a park. Local elders participated in a four-year consultation process for the scheme. The plan has been scrapped. Part of the park is heritage listed and the relevant department recommended in April that the protection be expanded to cover the entire area. May's legislation exempts Olympics development from the state Heritage Act. 'It was a complete shock when the premier came out with his stadium plans,' Charlton said. 'He said the park would be protected from stadiums; I thought the park was safe. Now the government wants to destroy it. We are very concerned there are ancient trees, artefacts and very important ecosystems existing there. There may be ancestral remains. Sign up to Breaking News Australia Get the most important news as it breaks after newsletter promotion 'We stand resolute in our responsibility to protect it.' The federal government threw its support behind the Olympic stadium plan last month, on condition that appropriate consultation was undertaken with stakeholders including First Nations groups. The deputy premier, Jarrod Bleijie, and the federal infrastructure minister, Catherine King, were contacted for comment. 'Once Victoria Park is gone, it's gone forever,' Yagara elder Uncle Steven said. 'Will photos be our only memory? Are we going to have to say to our children, our grandchildren: 'this is what your grandparents experienced, but it's not here for you any more?' 'We have so little left of our history, our culture, our social life that we cling to it. And we want to share that with non-Aboriginal people as well.' When built, the Victoria Park stadium will be Queensland's biggest stadium and will serve as the home of cricket and the Brisbane Lions AFL team.

Indigenous group lodges application for federal protection of Brisbane stadium site
Indigenous group lodges application for federal protection of Brisbane stadium site

Reuters

timean hour ago

  • Reuters

Indigenous group lodges application for federal protection of Brisbane stadium site

SYDNEY, Aug 5 (Reuters) - A group representing Brisbane's two Indigenous peoples lodged an application with the Australian federal government on Tuesday for the permanent protection of the site where the city plans to build the main stadium for the 2032 Olympics. The Yagara and Magandjin peoples want the inner city Victoria Park, known to them as Barrambin, to be protected for perpetuity under the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Heritage Protection Act as a "significant Aboriginal area". "Barrambin is living country, possessing sacred, ancient and significant relationships within our cultural heritage systems," elder Gaja Kerry Charlton said in a statement on behalf of the Yagara Magandjin Aboriginal Corporation (YMAC). "It was a complete shock when the Premier came out with his stadium plans ... I thought the park was safe. Now the government wants to destroy it. We are very concerned there are ancient trees, artefacts and very important eco-systems existing there. There may be ancestral remains. "We stand resolute in our responsibility to protect it." No one at the organising committee for the Games, or the Office for the Deputy Premier of Queensland Jarrod Bleijie, who is responsible for Olympic construction, was immediately available for comment. After years of political wrangling, Queensland Premier David Crisafulli announced in March that a 63,000-seat stadium would be constructed and Victoria Park's Centenary Pool rebuilt to provide a 25,000-seat aquatics centre for the Olympics. In June, Crisafulli's government enacted legislation to exempt the Olympic building projects from normal planning rules. The Save Victoria Park campaign, which released a shared statement with YMAC on Tuesday, said June's legislation was "unprecedented" and overrode existing acts of parliament on environmental protection and First Nations rights. "We estimate the majority of the parkland and hundreds of mature trees will now be sacrificed," Save Victoria Park spokesperson Sue Bremner said. "And as we face this profound and irreversible loss of cultural heritage and human rights, Olympic organisers continue to promote 2032 as being the first Games with a Reconciliation Action Plan. It is simply astounding." Organising committee President Andrew Liveris told Reuters last month that anyone who objected to the development would be heard, but that June's legislation was essential to keep the project on track to deliver the venues before 2032.

Top Australian judge is charged with the unthinkable after students make shocking discovery during lecture screen-share
Top Australian judge is charged with the unthinkable after students make shocking discovery during lecture screen-share

Daily Mail​

time2 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

Top Australian judge is charged with the unthinkable after students make shocking discovery during lecture screen-share

A former Justice accused of inadvertently sharing child abuse content with law students has been sacked from one of Australia's top universities. Former Fair Work Commission senior deputy president Justice Alan Boulton, 74, has been charged over material that was allegedly displayed during a lecture at Monash University's Melbourne CBD campus on February 5. The university referred the matter to Victoria Police, which seized multiple electronic devices during a raid on Boulton's inner-city Middle Park home a week later. He has since been charged with one count of possessing child abuse material as a Commonwealth offence and two counts of possessing child abuse material following a 'lengthy' investigation by detectives. Boulton will appear in Melbourne Magistrates' Court on Thursday. He was a senior fellow of the Faculty of Law at Monash University, regarded as one of Australia's most prestigious universities and ranked among the top 50 worldwide. Boulton was immediately suspended and removed from all teaching duties following the alleged incident. 'Monash University was made aware of concerns relating to an incident in February 2025, and referred the matter to Victoria Police,' a spokesperson told Daily Mail. 'We continue to support the ongoing investigation. 'The safety and wellbeing of our students, staff and broader community remains our highest priority.' Monash University continues to provide support services to affected students. It has also deleted a webpage about Boulton on its website. Boulton's decorated career in law both in Australia and overseas spans more than 45 years. The University of Sydney graduate first worked as a solicitor and then a lecturer at Canberra's Australian National University. In 1979, Boulton was appointed as the first legal officer for the Australian Council of Trade Unions by then-president Bob Hawke, who became Prime Minister several years later. He also had a stint with the International Labour Organisation in the Philippines, Indonesia and Timor-Leste, where he help draft modern labour laws and addressed the HIV/AIDS epidemic. At the Fair Work Commission, Boulton first served as deputy president 1989–93 and then as senior deputy president until 2015. He also previously served as Industrial Relations Commission of Victoria president. Boulton was appointed as an Officer of the Order of Australia (AO) in 2002 for 'distinguished service to industrial arbitration and labour relations.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store