THE JEWISH CHRONICLE – British Transport Police (BTP) has bowed to public pressure by withdrawing a poster that critics claimed echoed Nazi propaganda.
The anti-terrorism banner, which in recent days has been pasted on billboards across British railway stations, was part of the force’s new “See It. Say It. Sorted.” campaign, encouraging the public to report suspicious behaviour.
![]()
A copy went up at Liverpool Street Station, a short distance away from a statue commemorating the Kindertransport refugees who fled to Britain from the Nazis before World War Two.
On its website, the BTP said the series of posters was intended to “help build a more vigilant network on railways across the country and raise awareness of the vital role the public can play in keeping themselves and others safe”.
One poster shows a suspicious-looking man with dark hair, long beard and a hooked nose, with a young woman in the background. The caption reads: “See it. Say it. Sorted. Are they wearing a big coat to hide something?”
In recent days angry commuters took to social media to express their disgust at the poster’s message, with some using the hashtag #takethemdown.
Some criticised the advert for demonising foreigners, while others compared the male figure with that used in a poster for The Eternal Jew exhibition, staged by the Nazis in 1937.
The sight appalled Susie Symes, chairwoman of the Museum of Immigration, who wrote in The Guardian: “This campaign, launched by rail minister Paul Maynard, was approved by the Department for Transport and the British Transport Police.
What a failure of their Holocaust education and racism awareness, that no one who signed this off realised how shocking the posters are.”