
Richard Price,West Midlandsand
David Lumb,in Birmingham
BBCA community leader has been left “very disappointed and distressed” over claims Jewish representatives had agreed to the ban of Maccabi Tel Aviv supporters from a football match in Birmingham.
The Sunday Times reported West Midlands Police (WMP) Assistant Chief Constable Mike O’Hara had written to members of the Jewish community to apologise.
Asked repeatedly by MPs last week if Jewish community representatives had said they did not want Maccabi fans attending the Europa League tie with Aston Villa on 6 November, Mr O’Hara said “yes”.
A spokesperson for the force said he had not meant to imply that members of the Jewish community had agreed with the exclusion of the Israeli fans.
Ruth Jacobs, chair of Birmingham and West Midlands Jewish Community, said she had been “horrified” at the suggestion.
“We in the Jewish community could not imagine who from our community would have said such a thing – to have agreed to the ban,” she told the BBC.
She said police had not met anyone from the Jewish community before the ban was issued.
She explained that while the apology letter was “honest, and sincere”, trust and confidence in the police had been “undermined” for a lot of people in the Jewish community as a result of what the force asserted in the run up to the game.
‘Chief must go’
Meanwhile, policing minister Sarah Jones has declined to say whether she has confidence in the force’s leadership.
She told the Commons it was “clear” mistakes were made when Birmingham’s Safety Advisory Group (Sag) moved to bar Maccabi Tel Aviv supporters from the match.
Conservative MP Nick Timothy used an urgent question to summon Ms Jones to the despatch box, and said he thought Chief Constable Craig Guildford “must go”.
He said he feared WMP used artificial intelligence (AI) to come to its conclusions, relying on a false narrative that involved a made-up game between the Israeli team and West Ham in 2023.
“The police are accused of fabricating evidence to justify a predetermined outcome demanded by Islamists,” he said.
His Majesty’s Inspectorate of Constabulary and Fire and Rescue Services (HMICFRS) said it was looking into risk assessment advice provided to local safety advisory groups, and would hand its findings to the government by 31 March 2026.
HMICFRS will also provide a specific update on the intelligence gathered by WMP and the way it was used, by the end of this year.
BBC News
