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Australian band backs UK artists on Palestinians

Kneecap and Bob Vylan shout pro-Palestinian and anti-Israeli army slogans during performances at Britain's Glastonbury music festival

Anadolu staff  | 30.06.2025 - Update : 30.06.2025
Australian band backs UK artists on Palestinians

ANKARA

Australian pub rock band Amyl and the Sniffers have expressed support for UK bands who shouted pro-Palestinian and anti-Israeli army slogans during performances at Britain's Glastonbury music festival, local media reported Monday.

In sharp criticism of the British media's “frenzied” response to Irish band Kneecap and punk-rap duo Bob Vylan's performances at the festival, the lead singer of Amyl and the Sniffers, Amy Taylor, took to social media and suggested there was a disconnect between public sentiment, governments and the media on the issue, local broadcaster SBS News reported.

Taylor's reaction followed her recent comments about the British and Australian governments not doing enough for Palestinians.

Vylan chanted "Death, death to the IDF" in reference to the Israel Defense Forces, the formal name of the Israeli military, during the performance on Saturday.

Without naming Bob Vylan or Kneecap, UK police said they are considering whether to launch an investigation

The chants were condemned by the Israeli embassy in the UK as "inflammatory and hateful rhetoric” while UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer labelled them "appalling hate speech.”

"The British media in a frenzee (sic) about Bob Vylan & Kneecap but artists all weekend at Glastonbury from pop to rock to punk to rap to DJs spoke up on stage & there were tonnes of (Palestinian) flags on every streamed set," Taylor wrote on Instagram.

"Trying to make it look like a couple of isolated incidents and a couple of 'bad bands' so that it appears the public isn't as anti-genocide as it is, and trying to make it look like Bob and Kneecap are one offs, instead of that the status quo has shifted majorly and that people are concerned and desperate for our govs to listen."

Earlier, Taylor was among several artists at Glastonbury who used their platform to criticize the British and Australian governments over their response to the treatment of Palestinians in Gaza.

"If we think about Palestine, then back home in Australia, we think about the Indigenous people there.

"We think about the fact that us as whiteys, we're the f---ing colonisers, and that's so disgusting," she said.

Elijah Hewson, the lead singer of Dublin band Inhaler and the son of U2 frontman Bono, and Irish singer Ciara Mary-Alice Thompson, known professionally as CMAT, were among the artists who spoke out on the issue at the festival.

At least 56,500 Palestinians have been killed in Israel’s genocidal war on the Gaza Strip since October 2023.

The Israeli army resumed its attacks on the Gaza Strip on March 18 and has since killed 6,175 people and injured 21,378 others, shattering a ceasefire and prisoner exchange agreement that took hold in January.

Last November, the International Criminal Court issued arrest warrants for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his former Defense Minister Yoav Gallant for war crimes and crimes against humanity in Gaza.

Israel also faces a genocide case at the International Court of Justice for its war on the enclave.

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