News

Biden condemns antisemitism after swastika found in State Department lift

The etching has been removed and an investigation has been launched

July 28, 2021 17:01
Joe Biden GettyImages-1267438518.jpg
WILMINGTON, DELAWARE - AUGUST 20: Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden delivers his acceptance speech on the fourth night of the Democratic National Convention from the Chase Center on August 20, 2020 in Wilmington, Delaware. The convention, which was once expected to draw 50,000 people to Milwaukee, Wisconsin, is now taking place virtually due to the coronavirus pandemic. (Photo by Win McNamee/Getty Images)
1 min read

US President Joe Biden has condemned antisemitism after a swastika was found carved into the wall of a State Department lift on Monday. 

Reacting to coverage of the incident, Mr Biden tweeted on Wednesday that antisemitism had “no place in the State Department, in my Administration or anywhere in the world.”

“It’s up to all of us to give hate no safe harbor and stand up to bigotry wherever we find it,” he wrote.

The incident is being investigated and the etching has been removed, US Secretary of State Antony Blinken said in a statement on Tuesday.

Mr Blinken, who is the stepson of a Shoah survivor, said the incident served as a painful reminder that “antisemitism isn't a relic of the past.”

"It's still a force in the world, including close to home. And it's abhorrent. It has no place in the United States, at the State Department or anywhere else. 

“And we must be relentless in standing up and rejecting it,” he said on Twitter.

The total number of antisemitic incidents reported to the Anti-Defamation League across the US last year dipped slightly compared to 2019 but remained high at 2,024.

The figure is the third highest recorded by the ADL since it began tracking incidents in 1979

More from News

More from News