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© Andrew Kelly / ReutersA woman waves an Israeli flag.
A British lawmaker who described Israel as an "apartheid state" whose future is in doubt after "inflicting atrocities on Palestinians" was suspended by his party on Thursday.

David Ward, a member of the Liberal Democrats, the smaller grouping in Britain's two-party coalition government, was reprimanded after making a series of remarks about Israel.

He refused to apologise after sending a message on Twitter on Saturday which read: "Am I wrong or are am I right? At long last the #Zionists are losing the battle - how long can the #apartheid State of #Israel last?"

Earlier this year, the 60-year-old wrote on his website that he was "saddened that the Jews, who suffered unbelievable levels of persecution during the Holocaust, could within a few years of liberation from the death camps, be inflicting atrocities on Palestinians".

The Holocaust Educational Trust, a charity that aims to educate young people about the Nazis' murder of six million Jews, described his comments as "sickening and unacceptable".

Liberal Democrat leader Nick Clegg and chief whip Alistair Carmichael, in charge of party discipline, met Ward on Wednesday. Carmichael said Ward had caused considerable offence.

They decided to "withdraw the whip" from Ward until Sept. 13, meaning he is effectively expelled from the parliamentary party and must sit as an independent until the sanction ends.

Ward was not immediately available to comment.

The Board of Deputies of British Jews, a charity that promotes religious and civil rights, said the punishment was a "token empty gesture". Parliament breaks for the summer on Friday to return on Sept. 2, cutting the length of Ward's penalty.

A former college lecturer and local government official, Ward was elected in 2010 to represent a district in Bradford, a northern English city that has a large Muslim population.