The police are commenced by the criminal investigation of Bob Vylan and Kneecap Glastonbury collections

On Saturday, the performances of Bob Vylan and Kneecap in Glastonbert have launched a criminal investigation on Saturday, Avon and Somerset police said.

Force said he had appointed a senior detection to investigate whether any comments made by any act were criminal after reviewing the footage.

It was added to the statement: “This was currently recorded as a public order event until our inquiries are at an early stage.”

Speaking in Parliament on Monday after the report, Cultural Secretary Lisa Nandy broadcast the scenes “Mistromatic and Unacceptable”.

The police did not specify in which part of the Bob Vylan or Kneecap collection would be criminal.

It comes after the BBC said she had to distract the live broadcast of Bob Vylan’s performance, during which the band’s singer Pascal Robinson-Foster, who performs in the name Bobby Vylan, led the Death, Death IDF singing IDF. [Israel Defense Forces]”.

These comments received criticism of both the English Punk-Rap duo and the BBC for directly describing their performance.

The corporation said she would “look at our advice on direct events so that we can be sure that the teams are clear when it is acceptable to keep the production in the air” and the notes made through the performance anti -Semitic.

Lisa Nandy told parliamentarians that she immediately called the BBC CEO after the collection was broadcast.

She said that there are exceptional questions, including why the channel was “not immediately cut”, why it was broadcast directly “, taking into account other actions within a few weeks before the festival” and what was done with the right diligence before deciding to add Bob Vylan to TV.

“When people and community law and security are at risk, and when the national broadcaster does not comply with its standards, we will intervene,” she added, “she said, and said she would continue to talk to the BBC in the coming days.

Previously, the BBC broadcast said that the BBC “clearly has questions that needs to be answered” through its coverage, and the government questioned why the comments were directly displayed.

The organizers of Glastonbury said they were “terrified” with comments that “crossed the line”.

On Sunday, Robinson-Foster responded to disputes on Instagram, writing “I said what I said” and defending political activism without detecting his comment on stage.

Since then, both members of Bob Vylan, who later began to travel to America this year, have been eliminated by US visas.

Deputy Secretary of US State Christopher Landau wrote x: “Foreigners glorifying violence and hatred are not welcome to visitors of our country.”

In response, Bobbie Vylan on Monday posted a video on social media, where he said politicians should be “completely ashamed” of where their “allegiance is lying”.

“First of all, it was Kneecap, now we are two,” he said.

“Despite the fact that it was said, the call to end the slaughter of the innocent is never wrong. For Israeli civilians, realize that this anger is not directed at you, and don’t let your government convince you that a call against the army is an invitation to people.

“Keir, Kemi and others, I will get you later.”

Avon and the Somerset Police also confirmed that the criminal investigation would evaluate the performance of Kneecap Glastonber.

The Irish language rap group is known as the Palestinian and political comments during their direct shows and has caused controversy in the past.

Liam ó Hannaidh, a member of the band, who performs in the name of Mo Chara, was accused of a terrorist crime for the alleged ban on the banned terrorist organization Hezbollah. He denied the accusation.

Although the Kneecap performance was not a direct flow, the BBC later uploaded the basically unreserved version of the set to its Glastonbury’s most important BBC IPlayer page.

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