Tuesday, April 21, 2015

Live: Breaking news, traffic and travel across Teesside

The Gazette's live breaking news blog brings you regular updates, pictures, video, tweets and comments covering the latest Teesside and North Yorkshire traffic, travel, weather, crime and council news for today, Wednesday 22nd April, 2015.

You can contribute to the live blog by posting your comment below, and you can also tweet us @EveningGazette to share breaking news stories, pictures and opinions.

Our Teesside breaking news live blog begins at 07:00am every weekday and is updated throughout the day and into the evening.

#OnThisBoroDay 1997: Boro beat Chesterfield at the second time of asking to book another trip to Wembley

For the second time in nine days Boro put three past Chesterfield.

Thankfully, this time those goals came without reply on this day in 1997.

If Boro had underestimated the Spireites at all ahead of the FA Cup semi-final clash at Old Trafford, they’d learnt the hard way that the Second Division outfit weren’t going to go out of the famous competition without a fight.

Robson’s men wouldn’t make the same mistake at the second time of asking.

In truth, the replay never going to pull off the impossible task of entertaining the neutral in the fashion the first game had.

Not that that mattered. With games piling up thick and fast, the last thing Boro needed was another gruelling 120 minute slog.

Once Mikkel Beck had fired Boro into the lead after just 11 minutes, that never looked likely.

If the first game was an almighty scare, the second was a job well done, a professional display to see off the plucky underdogs.

“Tiredness doesn’t come into it - not when you’re streets ahead in class,” wrote Andrew Wilkinson in his Gazette match report.

“There was no signs of heavy legs or weary minds as Boro cruised to Wembley with confidence and style.

“Once Mikkel Beck had given Boro an early lead, the fans could sit back and bask in the knowledge they were Wembley bound for a second time.”

When Boro played a cup game, Ravanelli scored. Or so it seemed.

And the White Feather continued his remarkable record as he put the game beyond the reach of Chesterfield early in the second half.

Emerson capped it off with a stunning strike in the last minute. It was time to dig out the phone numbers of those London hotels again, Boro were going back to Wembley.

Not that there was any time for the players to celebrate. It’s not often a Thursday night is graced with a Premier League clash but Boro were in action again just two days later at Spurs, such was the hectic fixture programme they faced until the end of the season.

“The talk in the dressing room straight after the game was of White Hart Lane, not Wembley,” insisted Robson.

“That’s how important it is.”

Hemlington teenager caught with cannabis and 'tick list' avoids prison

Police officers chanced across a teenage drug dealer’s stash and customer list after smelling cannabis in his home.

Sidney Bashford, 19, said he was dealing weed to feed to own heavy habit after bags of the Class B drug were found in his home.

The home on Ellis Gardens, Hemlington, Middlesbrough was searched by police on August 21 last year.

Officers went to the address for an “unconnected purpose” and smelled cannabis inside, said prosecutor David Crook.

They found 31 bags of cannabis worth £310 ready for sale in a drawer under a television in the front bedroom, Teesside Crown Court heard today.

They also recovered £740 cash which has been forfeited for the Chief Constable to use in the fight against crime.

Bashford was not home but later surrendered at the police station. At first he stated the drugs were for his own personal use.

His phone revealed a “tick list” of 12 customers’ details with amounts ordered or owed, along with messages suggesting drug dealing.

He later confessed he bagged up the drugs to sell them in £10 deals.

Bashford admitted possession of a Class B drug with intent to supply - his first drugs conviction.

He said his main purpose was to fund his own use of cannabis.

Graham Brown, defending, said the young dad was described in a pre-sentence report as immature and easily led.

He said Bashford committed the crime partly to facilitate his “considerable use” of cannabis.

He added Bashford went into the Forces at 16 and came out because of the birth of his first child.

Mr Brown said: “We’ve not reached the last chance saloon for this defendant. He would like to get back into the Forces.”

Judge Peter Armstrong told Bashford: “This is your first offence involving drugs but it is a serious one.

“Any drug trafficking offence is a serious offence.

“You’d become addicted to use of cannabis. That’s something which it’s possible for you to deal with.

“You’ll have an incentive to do that by having a suspended sentence hanging over your head.

“You had the courage and good sense to admit matters at a very early stage and pleaded guilty tat the first opportunity. You’ll get full credit for that.”

He gave Bashford a six-month sentence in a young offenders’ institution suspended for two years with supervision and a thinking skills programme.

He said any breach of the sentence would be “effectively sending yourself to prison”.

Middlesbrough man harassed mum following sexual allegations against young boy

A mum moved home and saw her children taken into care after she was targeted with threats and abuse, a court heard.

Thomas Arthur Crutchley, 54, now admits his four-month harassment of a mother in the wake of sexual allegations against her young son was “disgusting”.

The boy was accused of a sexual offence against another boy. The matter was investigated but no further action was taken.

Prosecutor David Crook said: “From that point the defendant then engaged in a course of conduct against the child’s mother.

“He saw her and threatened to cut her son’s throat, to stab her daughter and to burn her alive.”

He uttered these frightening remarks in front of the young daughter, who was visibly upset and asked her mum whether he would stab her.

The girl was later taken into care, Teesside Crown Court heard today.

Mr Crook said Crutchley made more threats saying the mum would have to move house, leaving her scared and intimidated.

He went to her home and smashed her windows, for which magistrates ordered him to pay compensation and a fine.

When a police officer went to warn him about his behaviour, he slammed the door in her face.

The court was told he continued to shout verbal abuse at the mum, who cannot be named for legal reasons.

The victim feared what Crutchley would do, moved home and her son was also taken into care.

She said she felt vulnerable, angry, devastated, depressed and distressed. She struggled to sleep and underwent counselling and therapy.

She was concerned for her children’s safety and restricted her activities as she feared seeing Crutchley again.

Crutchley, from Middlesbrough, reacted to his arrest with abusive names referring to the mother and her son.

He later admitted harassment putting a person in fear of violence between June and October last year.

He has now undergone a change in attitude to his crime, the court was told.

Graham Brown, defending, said: “He’s realised this sort of behaviour is unacceptable.

“It was obviously at a time of great emotional strain.”

He disputed that the mum’s children being taken into care or her house move were solely down to Crutchley’s actions.

He added there had been no trouble since last October.

Judge Peter Armstrong said the court could not pass comment on the sexual allegations as they had not been tried.

He said: “These matters always divide opinion.

“The courts realise that and do their best to deal with these matters in as calm a way as can be done.

“It caused such heightened emotion... that you decided and started to take it out on the mother of this child.

“You over-reacted and you describe your own behaviour as disgusting.

“It’s unlikely that anything like this will happen again. This is out of character for you.”

He gave Crutchley a six-month prison sentence suspended for two years with a year’s supervision.

Crutchley was given an indefinite restraining order banning him from assaulting, threatening, intimidating, contacting, approaching, harassing, alarming, distressing, molesting or communicating with three people, or damaging their property.

A Teesside couple assaulted on a cruise ship while enjoying a holiday, a court heard

A Teesside couple were assaulted on a cruise ship while enjoying a holiday in the Mediterranean, a court heard.

The pensioners, a husband and wife from Middlesbrough, who were disabled, were on board the Thompson Celebration just off the coast of Lanzarote, when the alleged incident is said to have happened in January last year.

Graeme Finlay is standing trial for the two offences - wounding the man and inflicting grievous bodily harm on the woman.

The 53-year-old of Meadowside Quay Walk, Glasgow, had pleaded not guilty to the two counts at an earlier hearing.

Teesside Crown Court heard yesterday that the two victims had been enjoying their fifth night and were on their way back to their cabin when the alleged assault took place.

“We had got the lift down to our floor and I was walking with my crutch in one hand and two mugs of hot chocolate in the other,” said the male victim, now 70.

“My wife was in front and was holding the door open for me when I just spotted somebody out of the corner of my eye.

“I turned my head to the left and the next thing I knew, I was coming to on the floor with people around me.

“I was laid on the floor with my bad leg doubled up behind me and my crutch was down at my side.

“There was blood everywhere and I had a gash on my head.”

His wife told the court she was attacked when she tried to defend her husband.

“I saw this man punching him and I put my hand on his arm saying ‘stop it, you’re going to kill him’,” she said. “I then just felt something go across me and I hit the wall and slipped down and was unconscious.”

The female victim was later diagnosed with two broken vertebrae at James Cook University Hospital in Middlesbrough.

The court also heard that earlier in the evening, the couple had been sitting in one of the cruise ship’s restaurants with another couple when they were joined by a man unknown to them. He then left the table after a brief period of time.

Defending Finlay, Peter Kilgour said: “Didn’t he try to make conversation with the four of you and you completely ignored him?”

He went on to suggest the pair had been drunk which made them behave “out of character” and that a verbal altercation may have taken place.

The victims denied the allegations that they had been rude to the man.

Proceeding

Devolution debate highlights need for more and better jobs

More and better jobs must be the measure of success for a devolved North-east, a debate organised by Gazette sister paper The Journal has been told.

The regional devolution breakfast, in association with Developing Consensus, attracted more than 100 people from the worlds of business and politics to take part in a question-and-answer session with a panel of experts.

North East Combined Authority chair Simon Henig, CBI regional director Dianne Sharp, Fergus Trim, director of Broadoak Asset Management, Luke Raikes, research fellow at IPPR North and Jonathan Blackie, former regional director of the Government Office North East, discussed key themes and potential flash points around North East devolution.

Chaired by BBC North East and Cumbria’s political editor Richard Moss, the discussion covered the SNP surge, the possibility of a regional mayor and the need for greater spending on transport in the North-east.

There was also general agreement on the importance of presenting a united front to Westminster, and that devolution of powers to the North-east would be judged a success only if it improved the region’s economy.

Coun Henig said: “We have a lot of successes in this area – automotive, subsea, pharmaceuticals – and we need to enable them to grow.

“We all know there are key skill shortages. If we get that right it will help us to get to where we need to be.”

Mrs Sharp added: “Skills is a key area – integrating the skills we need. We have new business being created here, like the CPI and the clusters around it which generate great economic engines.

“I moved North from the South in the 1980s and built a career in manufacturing for 25 years, and we want more people to move here from the south.

“We need to get long term plans that everyone will invest in to see more people like me coming to the North-east.”

The event was organised at a time when boosting the Northern economy has been championed by all three main political parties.

But with extra powers going to Scotland to the north and Greater Manchester to the south, there are also concerns that the North East could be harmed by being left as other areas getting more control of their futures.

Questioned on whether the North-east needed new bodies or an elected mayor to provide leadership for the North-east, Mrs Sharp said: “I would like to see what we already have working better – realistically we’ll just end in another big debate about where the major should live?

“I love the North-east but I know we’re great at doing ourselves down. Rather than changing the deck-chairs, can we just get on and get working really well?

“We’ve all heard the stories and business does not believe it’s working well with the LEP and there’s a level of disharmony. We want to lock them all in a room and not let them out until they’re working nicely together.”

Mr Blackie said: “We can get terribly involved in structures, leadership models and so on, but what are the good quality jobs we can get by 2020 that we can not just sustain but build? Success is where we can create a better region.”

What have Mackenzie Thorpe, Ant and Dec, Paul Daniels and Adele Parks got in common?

Mackenzie Thorpe, Mark Benton and Paul Daniels are among the famous Teessiders backing an entrepreneur in her bid to win a national investment competition.

Within days of being made redundant from her job as a global events and marketing manager, Beverley Rose-Olmez, 48, had become the only Stockton entrant in the running for Richard Branson’s Pitch to Rich.

She wants to attract 500 votes by May 5 to take her fledgling business, Campaign Kick-off Workshops, to the next round - and so far she’s had support from a multitude of famous names.

Ant and Dec, speedway champ Gary Havelock, author Adele Parks, actor Mark Benton, Olympic champion Kat Copeland and artist Mackenzie Thorpe are among the people who have re-tweeted her details.

Beverley is using her 21 years of global marketing and events management knowledge to launch the business, which is a series of marketing workshops for managers across the world.

Workshops can be delivered via Skype, in-house, one-to-one or in a traditional group setting.

Beverley said: “I was in a permanent job that I loved - but sometimes things happen for a reason. I’d had my business idea in mind for a while. Lots of people can do digital marketing, I provide hard-to-find, specialist workshops based on advanced theory.”

Beverley has moved from Job Seekers Allowance to Enterprise Allowance delivered by Five Lamps, Thornaby, to help with her start-up and is also using its mentoring service to help develop a business plan.

She added: “I’ve had such amazing support so far from friends, family, business colleagues and the global business community, but I am desperate to get masses more votes to get me through to the semi finals.

“Business wise, I’ve already received over £3,000 worth of prospective sales enquiries, but it is about the votes at the moment, and if people are kind enough to support me by voting online, then I would also ask them to remember to confirm their vote by clicking the email link that they receive from Virgin Media Business.”

The 50 entrants with the highest number of votes for each of the three categories - Start-Up, New Things and Grow - will automatically go through to the semi-finals of the UK-wide competition.

Semi finalists will be revealed on May 19 and finalists will be announced on June 2.

The final pitches will be made to Richard Branson at a live finale event in London on June 26, where the ten best pitches will win a share of more than £1,000,000 in prizes.

Visit http://bit.ly/1G3UD4F to vote for Beverley.

Year-long A174 Parkway roadworks near completion - but council warn of more disruption to come

Just as motorists were looking forward to the end of year-long roadworks on the A174 a warning has been issued of more disruption to come.

The Highways Agency is due to complete £7.8m works on the A19 at the junction with the A174 Parkway by the end of the month.

Work began in May last year on the major scheme, which aims to relieve congestions at peak periods and cut journey times as well as boosting the economy and improving safety.

But, initially estimated to be completed by January, the roadworks have overrun, causing major delays on routes through Teesside.

With an end to the motoring misery finally in sight, Stockton Council has now warned drivers “may experience greater delays than usual” from its own scheme yet to be finished on the busy road.

The council’s own £3.3m ‘Pinch Point’ scheme, which also started last year, will complete the dualling of the A174 between the Parkway interchange and Thornaby Road, Thornaby.

Roadworks at the Thornaby A1044 junction with the A174 Parkway extension Roadworks at the Thornaby A1044 junction with the A174 Parkway extension

In addition UK Land has constructed a roundabout to connect the A174 with Fleck Way, on Teesside Industrial Estate.

In its weekly roadworks bulletin Stockton Council said: “As a result of changes to the traffic signal control at the A1044 Thornaby Road/A174 Parkway Extension junction and due to the ongoing road works, motorists may experience greater delays than usual until final surfacing works are carried out in May and new traffic signal detection loops are provided.

“Drivers are advised to find alternative routes at peak times if at all practicable.”

Richard McGuckin, Stockton Council’s head of economic development and growth, said: “This project is on budget and on track to be completed in May weather permitting.

“Over the coming weeks the final surfacing works will be taking place. This may cause some delays for motorists - we apologise for any inconvenience and are advising drivers to find alternative routes at peak times if possible.

“The dualling of the carriageway will help to ease traffic congestion and make journeys quicker and smoother for residents, visitors and people who work in the borough.

“This kind of strategic investment in our infrastructure is necessary so that we can adapt to the physical changes in our borough and keep traffic moving, which is vital to attracting new businesses, encouraging growth and boosting job opportunities.”

Roadworks at the Thornaby A1044 junction with the A174 Parkway extension Roadworks at the Thornaby A1044 junction with the A174 Parkway extension

As reported in February, major road improvements are planned for Ingleby Barwick after the council’s A174 Pinch Point scheme came in under budget.

The Government has given Stockton Council approval to keep around £300,000 in Government funding from the £3.3m Local Pinch Point Fund, which it will transfer to a separate scheme to dual Myton Way.

Sufism won’t solve Pakistan’s problems: Bina Shah

The annual festival to commemorate Madhu Lal Hussain in Lahore [AP]

Religiously motivated violence has steadily haunted Pakistan over the last 10 years, with the rise of militants and extremists who believe it’s their holy duty to wage war on non-Muslims. The latest horrific episode: The Lahore church suicide bombing on March 15 which killed 16 Christians; two Muslim bystanders were also lynched and burned to death by an angry mob in the aftermath of the bombing.

As the author of the novel “A Season For Martyrs”, which examines the fusion of Sufi tradition with the power structures of Sindh, I have watched with caution as western think-tanks have thrown up Sufism, the mystical branch of Islam with an emphasis on tolerance, peace, and love, as a means of combating this ideology of violence. Yet, I strongly believe that this is a misguided policy; using Sufism to counter religious terrorism is not the solution to Pakistan’s problems

Since 9/11, Pakistan has witnessed the weakening of state institutions, the confusion of political leadership, the uncertainty of whether or not to continue to nurture or disown the state’s “strategic assets”, that is, religious militants it has sponsored – and the relentless attacks by the Taliban and other militants against civilian, military, police, and minority targets.

Secularism as solution?

Many Pakistani liberals posit secularism as the solution: They theorise, or fantasise, that going back in time to erase the dictator General Zia-ul Haq’s Deobandi imprint on Pakistani society – in other words, to eliminate his Islamisation project from both the statute books and the annals of history – will ease Pakistan’s pain and bring this divided country back together again.

On the other hand, western think-tanks, ever concerned with the rise of militancy in Pakistan and its ramifications for western interests, decided that Sufism could be a means of countering hardline radicalism in the Muslim world.

A 2007 RAND report urged western governments to “harness” Sufism; similar reports emerged from the Heritage Foundation, the Libforall Foundation and the Nixon Center, supporting the idea that Sufism, with its “politically moderating” effect, could supplant Salafism, whose local expression in Pakistan is the Deobandi movement.

Muslim and other scholars hit back at this plan, calling it misguided. The peaceful Sufi/violent Salafi dichotomy, they argued, did not stand up to scrutiny; Sufism could be used as much to advocate violence as Salafism.

In Pakistan, even Barelvis, a moderate sect influenced by Sufism and opposed to Deobandism, have enacted or supported violence. The murder of Punjab Governor Salmaan Taseer was committed by Mumtaz Qadri, a Barelvi, in 2011; Barelvi clerics have rallied for his cause ever since.

For More:

http://bit.ly/1GeFRe8

Leaked emails reveal Hollywood execs at work for Israel

Hollywood Sign

Top Hollywood bosses enjoy a strong relationship with the Israeli government and various pro-Israel lobbying groups across the United States, according to a cache of Sony internal emails leaked to Wikileaks and published for the first time last week.

The emails reveal a dinner between Sony executives and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu; the presenter of American X-Factor chiding actress Natalie Portman aggressively for her views on Israel; meetings between top entertainment chiefs and the Israeli consulate-general; close ties between Sony’s Co-Chairperson and various pro-Israel lobbying groups; and film chiefs planning, in detail, a new documentary about the rise of anti-Semitism in Europe, about which the emails also reflect rising concern.

Amy Pascal, Co-Chairperson of Sony Pictures Entertainment from 2006 until 2015, was signed up to regular email updates on the security situation in Israel, from a right-wing pressure group called The Israel Project. The group was described by Jewish Daily Forward in 2010 as a Zionist group which, “Stokes Fear of Islam for Political Profit.” The Israel Project has been admonished by the more liberal pro-Israel lobby group J-Street for taking a pro-settler stance. The daily emails sent to Pascal by The Israel Project had subject lines like “Protect Israel from a Nuclear Iran”, “Fighting Anti-Israel Hate” and “Hamas Agrees to Ceasefire then Breaks It, Again”. Most of the emails, which were being sent as often as once a day, contained requests for financial donations.

Pascal also received an email from the Anti-Defamation League, an anti-Semitism watchdog with close links to the Israeli government, thanking her personally for being amongst eighteen entertainment executives whose names were displayed prominently in an ADL advert in Variety, The Jewish Journal, and The Hollywood Reporter. The advert quoted Golda Meir from 1957: “We can forgive them [the Palestinians] for killing our children. We cannot forgive them for forcing us to kill their children. We will only have peace with them when they love their children more than they hate us.” The quote was prefaced with additional commentary from ADL: “As talk turns to the future of Gaza, these haunting words of Golda Meir are as current as today’s headlines. She could have been talking about Hamas.”

Another leaked email exchange shows Pascal, who has since left Sony, being invited to “an intimate salon style discussion” at a J-Street supporter’s home, in August 2014. The email emphasised that a special guest would be in attendance, J-Street President Jeremy Ben-Ami. Pascal declined the invitation as she was on holiday in Vietnam, but responded, “I’m in for next steps and want to know how to get myself educated [sic].” J-Street bills itself as a “Pro-Israel, Pro-Peace” organisation and is regarded as the liberal element of the US pro-Israel lobby.

Another email that Pascal received and responded to shows an organisation called Creative Community for Peace, “a group of influential music execs… which battles the BDS movement… which tries to stop artists performing in Israel” reminding Pascal that they had taken her and her husband on a trip to Israel back in 2007.

“At that time,” wrote David Lonner, a top Hollywood executive and Advisory Board Member for CCP, “the war with Hezbollah had just ended and our community had exhibited a great deal of apathy and some ignorance on what Israel was up against.” Lonner added: “My hope in the end, was that if there was another crisis, we would not be silent. 7 years have passed since our trip and tragically we are in another crisis with Hamas.”

Lonner than claimed that CCP worked with Rihanna, Paul McCartney and Alicia Keys when international pressure nearly prevented them from playing concerts in Israel. The email asked for Pascal’s and her husband’s signatures on another appeal, this time to “support Israel” during the Toronto Film Festival. Pascal replied to the email, “Count on both us.” [sic]

Pascal and her husband Bernard Weintraub also received a personal invitation to attend a private event in September last year with the Israeli Consul-General, according to another email in the leaked archive. Held at the home of media lawyer and marketing tycoon Michael Kassan, the event was billed as “A Special Briefing on the Situation in Israel by David Siegel, Consul General of Israel in Los Angeles, and Jay Sanderson, President and CEO of The Jewish Federation of Greater Los Angeles.” The evening included “cocktails and hors d’oeuvres,” and guests were advised to wear “Business Casual Attire.”

Another top Sony executive, Michael Lynton, was also emailed by Israeli intelligence operative and veteran film producer Arnon Milchan, arranging for him to have an “intimate dinner” with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. The dinner was later held at Milchan’s private home in Malibu.

One of the most extraordinary exchanges in the leaked emails came as Hollywood executives discussed Ken Loach’s call for “a complete cultural boycott of Israel”. “Enough with this pathetic limousine liberals ignorant bs,” responded Ben Silverman, Executive Producer of hit shows like The Office, Ugly Betty and The Tudors.

Silverman then claimed that Gazans watching Loach’s films will “be lined up and shot in the street for doing so.” He asserted that anyone

“with a wife, daughter, mother or sister knows the evil anti woman rhetoric of the sharia Islamists and it is time to draw attention to the fact that you can have a voice and a choice in our democracies and you can have nothing but hate in their monarchies and dictatorships who thrive on censorship that would never allow their works to be shown. Let’s go gents. We can’t lie down. We must stand up.”

Hollywood star Natalie Portman is copied on the email. She complained that she doesn’t want her personal email address shared with a group of people she doesn’t know. Ryan Kavanaugh, a well-known producer, reported billionaire and Variety magazine’s 2011 “Showman of the Year,” then reproached her sarcastically.

“Sorry. You are right jews being slaughtered for their beliefs and cannes members calling for the boycott of anything Israel or Jewish is much much less important than your email address being shared with 20 of our peers who are trying to make a difference. my deepest apologies.

I know that you don’t care so I’ll leave it alone, but I had lunch yesterday with Israel consulate general who brought J street up to me. He was so perplexed confused and concerned when he heard you supported them that he begged me to connect you two. I told him how you felt, you didn’t want to hear from or speak to anyone who disagrees with your position. Three times he said “buts she’s Jewish and smart.”

Just thought you should know”

In another round-robin email, Hollywood executives discussed making a documentary about the recent resurgence in anti-Semitism. The well-respected independent film producer and agent Cassian Elwes suggested,

“How about we all club together and make a documentary about the rise of new anti-Semitism in Europe I would be willing to contribute and put time into it if others here would do the same. Between all of us I’m sure we could figure out a way to distribute it and get it into places like Cannes so we could have a response to guys like Loach. Perhaps we try to use it to rally support from film communities in Europe to help us distribute it there.”

Copied in on the email are dozens of Hollywood names, including Natalie Portman and fellow actress Scarlett Johansson, executives at Lionsgate Productions, MGM and Fox, X-Factor presenter and producer of “Keeping up with the Kardashians” Ryan Seacrest, and several high profile actors’ agents. One unidentified executive called the proposed documentary “A brilliant idea.” Also copied is Amy Pascal of Sony, who writes “Me too,” in response.

Jason Binn, the owner of luxury shopping website Gilt, then offered to promote the film to its nine million members and the three million readers of his luxury magazine DuJour.

Glenn Feig, owner of the entertainment law firm Reder and Feig, offered pro bono legal services for the planned documentary, before copying in his client Ram Bergman, producer of the upcoming Star Wars Episode VIII and Star Wars Episode IX, and the thriller Looper, which starred A-Listers Bruce Willis, Emily Blunt and Joseph Gordon-Levitt.

Also copied in on the email discussion about the upcoming film is Elliot Brandt, who was named in September 2014 as National Managing Director for the America Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC), a pro-Israel lobbying and political financing organisation. The emails reveal anxiety amongst the predominantly Jewish film executives regarding the rise of anti-Semitism.

One round-robin email, sent out by Bart Rosenblatt of Code Entertainment, is entitled “Too close to home.” It details a hate crime at Emory University in October 2014 in which swastikas were scrawled onto a Jewish fraternity house. Executives also emailed each other articles from The Guardian newspaper saying that anti-Semitism “was at its worse since the Nazis”, and an article claiming that Germany is now a no-go area for Jews.

Producer Ryan Kavanaugh wrote

“We can continue to be silent and pretend this isn’t happening because it is not in our country yet. We can ignore the anti-Semitism akin to pre ww2 Germany… now lining the streets of London, France, Germany and around the world. We all may think we’re protected here in the free US. We are not. It had now hit our doorstep and yet we remain silent?”

Another producer, Ron Rotholz, argued that

“many lines are being crossed … it’s a new reality for us. The tacit and subtle recognition of Hamas as a legitimate government with legitimate policies and a legitimate charter, by Western governments is a hate crime on a global scale”

Rotholz also called out the UK’s National Union of Students:

“In the UK as you well know there has been a shocking rise in anti-Israel and anti-Semitism on university campuses here, both in terms of faculty and students and student orgs such as the potent and powerful NUS ( Natl Union of Students which holds great weight within the natl. Labour Party ).

The NUS has a long history of anti-Israel leadership and policy and their rhetoric and policies have become much more aggressive in the last year or so … The intimidation of Jewish students, and those who support Israel in UK universities both by administrators, faculty and students is widespread, commonplace and alarming … it’s a dire situation and quite shocking in a nation which prides itself on tolerance and civility.”

Those working on the anti-Semitism documentary also discussed who should present the film. One producer said that the project would need “a really good director who on the face of it doesn’t seem completely biased, so that we can show something that gets the message across without making it seem like propaganda.”

Organisers also planned to lean heavily on European institutions to make the film, anticipating good support. One executive wrote,

“I think we will get full cooperation from the impt media in europe, the eu, the current conservative govt. in the uk, the current govt in france, angela merkel in germany, many academics ( def at Oxford, Cambridge, LSE ) and of course, major jewish orgs in the uk france germany and in most eu countries … This documentary is an essential tool for spreading our message.”

Please follow on Twitter @AlastairSloan for more updates.

Source: MAAN