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KNEECAP accuse UK government of “silencing” them by last-minute funding block

Rephrase my A Belfast rap trio called KNEECAP have accused the UK government of attempting to “silence” them after a last-minute funding block.

READ MORE: Campaigners speak out against the criminalisation of rap lyrics: “If you’re Black, and you rap, then you’re in a gang”

The accusation against the UK government comes after they blocked the group from receiving British Phonographic Industry (BPI) funding award – issued under the Music Export Growth Scheme (MEGS) to support the expansion of bands in global markets.
According to the group, the decision may have been due to their provocative 2019 tour poster, which they allege “pissed off the Tories”.
“We’ve just been informed that our application to the ‘Music Export Growth Scheme’ (MEGS) was independently approved and signed off by the selection board. It was then blocked directly by the British Government who overruled the independent selection board,” KNEECAP shared on X/Twitter.
“We’re told that our 2019 Farewell to the Union poster pissed off the Tories. Once again the British government is trying to silence voices from West Belfast – once again it will fail!”

KNEECAP STATEMENT
We’ve been blocked from receiving significant music funding because a Tory Minister doesn’t like our art.
F*ck the Tories pic.twitter.com/xWWUdGNj5l
— KNEECAP (@KNEECAPCEOL) February 8, 2024

The scheme is funded by the Department for Business and Trade (DBT), and the Department for Culture, Media & Sport (DCMS), with investment from the UK recorded music industry. The trio applied with the aim of receiving support for the costs related to touring and live stage production in the US.
Responding to the block, a British government spokesperson said it was “hardly surprising” it had blocked the award given the group’s political opposition to the United Kingdom (via Irish Times).
Similarly, Kemi Badenoch, a spokesperson for the UK’s Business and Trade Secretary, said: “We fully support freedom of speech, but it’s hardly surprising that we don’t want to hand out UK taxpayers’ money to people that oppose the United Kingdom itself.”
However, the BPI – which represents the UK recorded music industry, organises the BRIT Awards and the Mercury Prize, and co-owns the UK Official Charts – has expressed its “disappointment” in the government’s decision.
“As the delivery partner of MEGS on behalf of the UK music industry, the BPI is disappointed at the government’s decision not to approve a grant to the band Kneecap after our independent selection board had voted for it as part of the latest round of funding applications,” a spokesperson told Irish Times.
Kneecap pose for a photo during their tour. CREDIT: Conor Kinahan/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images
“The public funding element of the scheme makes it appropriate for colleagues in government to have a say on any grants awarded by the MEGS Board, and it has been their decision alone to decline the app for better SEO. 

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