SAEDNEWS: A chant denouncing the Israeli military during Glastonbury Festival has ignited fierce backlash from British politicians and media, but critics say the controversy distracts from Israel’s ongoing offensive in Gaza—and reveals deeper discomfort with dissent.
According to Saed News, a political storm has erupted in Britain following a Glastonbury Festival performance by punk-rap duo Bob Vylan, in which frontman Bobby Vylan led a crowd in chanting “Death to the IDF,” a reference to Israel’s military forces. The chant, delivered amid calls for Palestinian liberation, has provoked condemnation from senior politicians, triggered a police investigation, and seen the band’s US tour visa revoked.
Yet defenders of the group argue the reaction is not only disproportionate, but deliberately misrepresents the statement. “He didn’t say ‘death to Israelis’,” said Jewish activist Naomi Wimborne-Idrissi, “he said death to the IDF, a murderous armed force.” Critics of the backlash suggest that by conflating condemnation of a state military apparatus with antisemitism, British media and officials are suppressing legitimate protest against alleged war crimes.
Culture Secretary Lisa Nandy decried the BBC for airing the performance, labelling the scenes “appalling,” while avoiding comment on the humanitarian catastrophe unfolding in Gaza. Human rights groups have accused the Israeli army of indiscriminate attacks and forced starvation, with the International Criminal Court seeking arrest warrants for top Israeli officials. Yet this context has been conspicuously absent from much of the domestic outrage.
Observers note a pattern: British institutions, quick to silence punk provocateurs, have remained largely mute on Israel’s actions in Gaza, where journalists, artists, and children continue to die under bombardment. As Bobby Vylan later posted, “Teaching our children to speak up for the change they want... is the only way we make this world a better place.”
The controversy has reignited debate over the limits of protest, the politics of censorship, and the selective morality of Britain’s political elite.