A Jewish student has received an apology and payment of £1,000 from the University of York Students' Union after complaining of anti-Semitism.

Law student Zachary Confino, 21, was offered the four-figure sum after two years of battling anti-Semitism from students whilst studying at the university.

It is understood that Mr Confino, who narrowly missed out on a first class degree and had suffered with stress, had been racially abused and bullied.

The university confirmed that Mr Confino had accepted the written apology from the university's students' union following the long-running complaint.

A spokesperson for the University of York said that they had acted as a mediator to resolve the matter and that they welcomed students from "all backgrounds, faiths and nationalities".

The statement said: "The University of York acted as mediator to resolve a long-running complaint brought by a student against the University of York Students' Union. This involved an apology by the Students' Union to the student and a token payment of £1,000."

The statement added that joint statements had been signed with both the Jewish Society and the Islamic Society on campus.

It continued: "The University is committed to preserving the right to freedom of expression while also combating anti-Semitism, Islamophobia and any other form of race hate.

"We welcome students from all backgrounds, faiths and nationalities in our diverse community."

Jonathan Sacerdoti, director of communications at the Campaign Against Antisemitism, praised Mr Confino's "incredible strength and dedication" but said that the union's apology and payment of compensation was not enough.

He said: "There must also be a commitment to fighting anti-Semitism properly, something they failed to do in Zachary's case.

"It should not be necessary for individual Jewish students to fight lengthy battles with their university unions over the course of many months or years in order to have Jew-hatred dealt with properly."