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'
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.”
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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