Pet Shop Boy: Israel is not an apartheid state

Rejecting call to cancel Tel Aviv show, singer notes Israel has ‘equality of rights for all its citizens both Jewish and Arab’

The Pet Shop Boys (photo credit: Courtesy)
The Pet Shop Boys (photo credit: Courtesy)

JERUSALEM (JTA) — Pet Shop Boys singer Neil Tennant defended his band’s decision to play Israel amid pressure to cancel the June 23 concert.

A statement by Tennant was posted on the British duo’s official website Sunday following the release of a poster showing them wearing sunglasses stamped with the captions “1 child killed every three days” and “2 kids caged every day.”

The poster was created by the Britain-based pro-Palestinian group Innovative Minds.

Tennant wrote, “I don’t agree with this comparison of Israel to apartheid-era South Africa. It’s a caricature. Israel has (in my opinion) some crude and cruel policies based on defense; it also has universal suffrage and equality of rights for all its citizens both Jewish and Arab.”

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He added: “In apartheid-era South Africa, artists could only play to segregated audiences; in Israel anyone who buys a ticket can attend a concert.

The Pet Shop Boys will perform at Nokia Stadium in Tel Aviv. They performed in Israel in 2009 and 1999.

The Israel concert is part of a European tour that this week sees the band play in the UK. From Israel, it flies on to Turkey, Sweden and Germany.

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