London judge upholds U. of Southampton’s decision to cancel anti-Israel confab

The Administrative Court judge said the conference was canceled “in good faith” because the university did not believe it could adequately protect its students and staff.

Advertisement

(JTA) — A London judge accepted the University of Southampton’s decision to cancel a conference on Israel’s right to exist over security concerns.

On Tuesday, Judge Alice Robinson of the Administrative Court in London said the April 17-19 conference was canceled “in good faith” because the university did not believe it could adequately protect its students and staff.

Robinson rejected a request by event organizers seeking a judicial review of the cancellation late last month of the conference on International Law and the State of Israel.

The university said it had been warned that there was risk of a terror attack on the campus during the conference.

“This was obviously a very difficult decision for the university,” Robinson said. “Nobody could be in any doubt that there has been very careful scrutiny of all of the issues.”

The judge said there were no “arguable grounds” for challenging the decision.

The conference, which was described on the university’s website as “a ground-breaking historical event on the road towards justice and enduring peace in historic Palestine,” was denounced as one-sided by critics such as the Board of Deputies of British Jews and Conservative lawmakers Eric Pickles and Caroline Nokes.

A representative of the university said the decision was not a ban but a postponement, and that it needed more time to provide security in the face of an estimated 1,000 protesters, according to reports.

Recommended from JTA

Advertisement