Streeting demands answers from Herzog as British Green Party leader calls for Israeli president’s arrest during UK visit

Health Secretary Wes Streeting (L) demands answers from Isaac Herzog (C) as British Green Party leader Zack Polanski (R) calls for Israeli president’s arrest during UK visit this week. (AFP/File Photos)
Health Secretary Wes Streeting (L) demands answers from Isaac Herzog (C) as British Green Party leader Zack Polanski (R) calls for Israeli president’s arrest during UK visit this week. (AFP/File Photos)
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Updated 09 September 2025

Streeting demands answers from Herzog as British Green Party leader calls for Israeli president’s arrest during UK visit

Streeting demands answers from Herzog as British Green Party leader calls for Israeli president’s arrest during UK visit
  • Health Secretary Streeting appears to contradict former FM Lammy’s claim of no genocide in Gaza
  • Zack Polanski joins calls for ‘potential war criminal’ Herzog to be arrested over alleged war crimes in enclave

LONDON: Senior UK government ministers and MPs have clashed over whether Israel’s actions in Gaza amount to genocide ahead of Israeli President Isaac Herzog’s visit to London this week.

Health Secretary that Herzog “needs to answer the allegations of war crimes, of ethnic cleansing and of genocide that are being leveled at the government of Israel.”

Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer will hold talks with Herzog in Downing Street on Wednesday.

Streeting added: “I think he (Herzog) needs to explain how, when we have seen so much evidence of the atrocities being perpetrated by the Israeli Army, how he can possibly claim that the IDF is the most moral army in the world. I think he should explain that, if it is not the intent of the government of Israel to perpetrate genocide or ethnic cleansing, how on Earth does he think his Israeli government is going to achieve its stated aim of clearing Palestinians out of Gaza without the war crimes, without ethnic cleansing, or even without genocide?”

Streeting said he had spoken last week to British doctors who had worked in Gaza, receiving “the most harrowing eyewitness testimony, one saying for weeks no food was allowed into Gaza, not even for babies.”

He added that the Hamas attacks on Israel on Oct. 7, 2023, were “barbaric,” “immoral” and “inhumane” and that “not a single one of those atrocities and injustices committed on Oct. 7 can possibly be answered with a level of civilian, innocent loss and suffering that we’re seeing in Gaza, or indeed Israeli settler terrorism being perpetrated in the West Bank.”

The comments appear to contradict a letter from Deputy Prime Minister David Lammy, published on Tuesday, which stated that Israel had not committed genocide in Gaza.

The letter, sent last week before Lammy was replaced as foreign secretary, explained that the Genocide Convention defines genocide as acts committed with the specific “intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnic racial or religious group” and added: “The government has not concluded that Israel is acting with that intent.”

Lammy also criticized the “catastrophic humanitarian situation” in Gaza, writing: “The high civilian casualties, including women and children, and the extensive destruction in Gaza, are utterly appalling. Israel must do much more to prevent and alleviate the suffering that this conflict is causing.”

A Downing Street spokesman said the letter “reflects the UK’s position that we’ve not come to any conclusion as to whether genocide has or has not been committed in Gaza” and stressed that it is for the International Court of Justice to make such determinations.

Meanwhile, the new Green Party leader Zack Polanski during his UK visit, accusing him of being part of the “Israeli government engaged in an ongoing genocide.”

Polanski, who is Jewish, said: “Welcoming a potential war criminal to the UK is another demonstration of how this Labour government is implicated in the ongoing genocide in Gaza. It also serves as a brutal insult to those mourning the thousands of innocent lives lost and to hundreds of thousands of Palestinians facing ongoing violence and hunger.”

He added that refusing to detain Herzog “can be seen as a contravention of the Geneva Convention.”

More than 60 MPs wrote to Starmer and new Foreign Secretary Yvette Cooper asking whether Herzog’s visa is compatible with UK obligations under the Genocide Convention, noting the ICJ had determined Israel faces a “plausible risk of genocide” in Gaza.

Israel has denied that its actions amount to genocide.

The country struck and destroyed a high-rise building in Gaza City on Monday, claiming it was targeting Hamas observation posts, and maintains a naval blockade on the enclave.

It also confirmed it targeted Hamas leaders in the Qatari capital Doha on Tuesday, an attack widely condemned.

Meanwhile, Spain has banned ships and aircraft carrying weapons to Israel from its ports, describing the measures as antisemitic, though asserting that anyone participating directly in “genocide” in Gaza would be denied entry.

Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas visited Downing Street on Monday to discuss Gaza and the pledge by Starmer to recognize a Palestinian state at the UN General Assembly later this month if Israel does not change course.

A Downing Street spokesperson said both leaders agreed there would be “absolutely no role” for Hamas in future Palestinian governance.

They also discussed “the intolerable situation in Gaza” and the urgent need for a ceasefire, hostage releases, and humanitarian aid, with Starmer outlining “ongoing work with partners on a long-term solution … the only way to bring about enduring peace and stability for both Palestinians and Israelis.”


US warns it could force 20 percent flight cuts if shutdown continues

US warns it could force 20 percent flight cuts if shutdown continues
Updated 6 sec ago

US warns it could force 20 percent flight cuts if shutdown continues

US warns it could force 20 percent flight cuts if shutdown continues
  • The Trump administration has sought to ramp up pressure on Democrats in Congress to agree to a Republican plan to fund the federal government, which would allow it to reopen

WASHINGTON: US Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy warned Friday he could force airlines to cut up to 20 percent of flights if the government shutdown did not end, as US airlines on Friday scrambled to make unprecedented government-imposed reductions.
The Federal Aviation Administration instructed airlines to cut 4 percent of flights on Friday at 40 major airports because of the government shutdown. The cuts will rise to 10 percent by November 14.
Separately, air traffic controller absences on Friday forced the FAA to delay hundreds of flights at 10 airports including Atlanta, San Francisco, Houston, Phoenix, Washington, D.C., and Newark. By 7:30 p.m. ET (1130 GMT), there were more than 5,300 flight delays, according to FlightAware, a flight-tracking website.
At Reagan Washington National, delays were averaging four hours, while 17 percent of flights were canceled and nearly 40 percent delayed.
During the record 38-day government shutdown, 13,000 air traffic controllers and 50,000 security screeners have been forced to work without pay, leading to increased absenteeism. Many air traffic controllers were notified on Thursday that they would receive no pay for a second pay period next week.
The Trump administration has sought to ramp up pressure on Democrats in Congress to agree to a Republican plan to fund the federal government, which would allow it to reopen.
Raising the specter of dramatic air-travel disruptions is one such effort. Democrats contend Republicans are to blame for the shutdown because they refuse to negotiate over extending health insurance subsidies.
Duffy told reporters it was possible he could require 20 percent cuts in air traffic if things get worse and more controllers do not show up for work. “I assess the data,” Duffy said. “We’re going to make decisions based on what we see in the airspace.”
The cuts, which began at 6 a.m. ET (1100 GMT), include about 700 flights from the four largest carriers — American Airlines , Delta Air Lines, Southwest Airlines and United Airlines — and are set to rise to 6 percent on Tuesday and then 10 percent by November 14 if the shutdown does not end.
New York Governor Kathy Hochul posted a photo of an airport flight board filled with canceled flights. “The GOP shutdown has grounded America — just in time for the holidays!” she wrote.
Earlier this week, FAA Administrator Bryan Bedford said 20-40 percent of controllers were not showing up for work on any given day.

MORE CUTS WOULD BE ‘PROBLEMATIC’, AMERICAN AIRLINES SAYS
American Airlines CEO Robert Isom said on Friday he did not expect significant disruption for customers from government-ordered flight reductions initially, but warned that the impact would increase.
“This level of cancelation is going to grow over time and that’s something that is going to be problematic,” Isom told CNBC.
American told Reuters its 220 flight cancelations on Friday affected 12,000 passengers and the airline re-routed a majority of them within a few hours.
Fewer flights will be cut over the weekend as scheduled flight volumes decline.
United Airlines said half of affected customers were able to be rebooked within four hours of their original departure time. The airline canceled 184 flights on Friday and expected to cut 168 on Saturday and 158 on Sunday.
Duffy initially announced on Wednesday that flights would be reduced 10 percent on Friday. But the agency decided to phase in the cuts starting at 4 percent to make the move less disruptive, he said on Friday.
Duffy said safety data was behind the move, including incidents of planes not maintaining separation and ground incursions.
The FAA is restricting space launches, and authorities said they could cut up to 10 percent of private-plane flights at high-traffic airports. International flights are not affected by the move.