Tortured by Iran, trolled at home: academic Kylie Moore-Gilbert hits out at vicious attacks
STEPHEN RICE - APRIL 2, 2021
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Since walking free from the hellhole of Iran’s brutal Evin Prison four months ago, Australian academic Kylie Moore-Gilbert has had to face a new trauma — a vicious online trolling by sacked university professor Tim Anderson, who claims that she was an Israeli spy and helped organise “repeated terrorist murders”.
Dr Anderson, a far-left “anti-imperialist” who once flew to Syria for an audience with President Bashar al Assad, has been prominent in pushing Tehran’s unsupported claims that Dr Moore-Gilbert was a Mossad agent and has posted propaganda videos that allege her “missions” included spying on the Iranian nuclear program.
But now Dr Moore-Gilbert has had enough.
The Melbourne University lecturer in Islamic Studies has hit back, labelling Dr Anderson an “Iran puppet and conspiracy theory zealot” fired for “peddling the propaganda” of regimes such as Syrian President Bashar al Assad.
“He is clearly just a mouthpiece for these regimes,” Dr Moore-Gilbert told The Weekend Australian. “It’s not just him; there’s quite a few useful idiots in Western countries who are happy to do a deal with these guys.
“I honestly don’t see any logical explanation for his fixation on me, that months after my release he’s still tweeting about me the same propagandistic stuff that was released by the regime. He’s been told he has to promote that narrative and he’s doing his job.”
Dr Moore-Gilbert no longer sees the posts: she has blocked Dr Anderson, and some of his more aggressive followers.
The 33-year-old was released from jail late last year after being held in the notorious Evin Prison for more than two years on trumped-up charges of spying.
Dr Anderson, a political economy lecturer, was sacked by Sydney University in 2019 after a series of misconduct findings that included posting an image that featured a Nazi swastika superimposed on the Israeli flag and sharing a photograph of one of his PhD students wearing a badge that said “death to Israel” and “curse the Jews”.
Dr Anderson may be an outlier in academia, and even on the radical left, but he has more than 30,000 Twitter followers. He describes himself as director of the Centre for Counter Hegemonic Studies and says he was “sacked from the University of Sydney for offending Israeli killers”.
He is appealing his dismissal in the Federal Court in what’s set to become a test case on the limits of academic freedom. His appeal is backed by the National Tertiary Education Union, which argues “cancel culture” led to his axing.
Dr Moore-Gilbert doesn’t buy it. “I think in all universities it’s a fireable offence,” she said. “I mean, if you replaced comments about Jews with comments about any other minority group — Muslims, African-Australians, homosexual people — there would be a huge outcry about it.
“I don’t see why making anti-Semitic remarks should be any different. It’s a violation of the university’s policies and he’s violating his employment contract by making such remarks and therefore, as would I or any academic, should expect that they would take disciplinary action against you.
“We are, as academics, tasked with conducting research and teaching that is informed by data, and informed by the facts, and the kind of narratives that this guy’s promoting do not at all appear to me to be informed by any research basis or factual basis that an academic would be speaking from.”
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