Prominent British historian, David Starkey, has said that “there will be book burning next” as he launched a controversial attack on Black Lives Matter (BLM) as having “the same values as ISIS (Daesh*)”
Mr Starkey, 75, made the remarks in an interview with The Telegraph, his first since he was publicly savaged for saying that the trans-Atlantic slave trade was not genocide.
“Slavery was not genocide, otherwise there wouldn’t be so many damn blacks in Africa or Britain, would there?” He said on June 30.
Mr Starkey later issued an apology, saying that his “bad mistake” had cost him “every distinction and honour acquired in a long career.”
“I am very sorry for it and I apologise unreservedly for the offence it caused,” he added at the time.
Following outcry among some sectors of the British public over that comment - including from the former Chancellor Sajid Javid - Mr Starkey resigned his honorary fellowship at Cambridge University. Canterbury Christ Church University also canceled his position as a visiting professor, and Lancaster University binned his honorary degree, slamming his comment as “abhorrent.”