logo
Hundreds to face arrest at protest against Palestine Action terror ban

Hundreds to face arrest at protest against Palestine Action terror ban

Powys County Times21 hours ago
Hundreds of people are expected to risk arrest as they descend on London to show support for Palestine Action in defiance of its ban as a terror group.
The Metropolitan Police said it has drawn officers in from other forces to help form a 'significant policing presence' in the capital as it faces a busy weekend of protests.
More than 500 people are expected to hold up placards supporting the proscribed group in Parliament Square, after organisers Defend Our Juries announced earlier this week the event would go ahead.
The ban means that membership of, or support for, Palestine Action is a criminal offence punishable by up to 14 years in prison, under the Terrorism Act 2000.
It comes days after the first three people to be charged with supporting the group in England and Wales were named.
Jeremy Shippam, 71, Judit Murray, also 71, and Fiona Maclean, 53, have all been charged with displaying an article in a public place, arousing reasonable suspicion that they are a supporter of a proscribed organisation after their attendance at a previous demonstration last month.
More than 200 people have been arrested in the wave of Defend Our Juries protests across the UK since the ban was implemented by Home Secretary Yvette Cooper last month.
Deputy Assistant Commissioner Ade Adelekan said: 'The Met is very experienced at dealing with large-scale protests, including where the protest activity crosses into criminality, requiring arrests.
'While we will not go into the specific details of our plan, the public can be assured that we will have the resources and processes in place to respond to any eventuality.
'Anyone showing support for Palestine Action can expect to be arrested. I would once again urge people to consider the seriousness of that outcome.
'An arrest under the Terrorism Act can have very real long-term implications – from travel, to employment, to finances. Also, as we have seen this week, it is very likely an arrest in these circumstances will lead to a charge.'
Two marches organised by the Palestine Coalition and pro-Israeli group Stop the Hate, respectively, will also be held on consecutive days in central London.
The coalition's supporters will march from Russell Square to Whitehall followed by an assembly with speeches.
Public order conditions have been imposed on the march which means it must not form or begin before noon, protesters must not deviate from or stop to form assemblies along the agreed route and the protest must end by 5.30pm, the Met said.
Other major events in London this weekend include the Community Shield match between Liverpool and Crystal Palace at Wembley, which will require sizeable police resources.
'This is going to be a particularly busy few days in London with many simultaneous protests and events that will require a significant policing presence,' Mr Adelekan said.
'I'm grateful not just to the Met officers who will be working incredibly hard over the coming days but to those colleagues from other forces who have been deployed to London to support us.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

The demonisation of Israeli ‘settlers'
The demonisation of Israeli ‘settlers'

Spectator

time3 hours ago

  • Spectator

The demonisation of Israeli ‘settlers'

In the UK today, hold the wrong view and you're cast as beyond the pale. Brexiteers are bigots. If you oppose mass immigration, you're a far right racist. Among parts of the political class and commentariat, these labels are considered the consensus. The political and media establishment have crafted a narrative in which dissent from liberal orthodoxy is indistinguishable from moral degeneracy. And it's not just in Britain. Remember when Hillary Clinton branded swathes of Americans a basket of deplorables? Many who find themselves on the receiving end of this treatment, often working-class, politically moderate folk, are stunned to discover that their legitimate fears have been transmuted into hate by those unwilling to hear them. Israel's most demonised group may well be the 'settlers'. Britain's own Foreign Secretary David Lammy has frequently demonised them, calling their behaviour 'abhorrent', and the current British government has focused repeatedly on settlers as a useful tool to openly criticise Israel as the major obstacle to peace. For many years, within Israel they have been treated by similar elites not as citizens with arguments but as extremists to be condemned. Their intentions are questioned. Their stories ignored. Their presence framed as a national embarrassment. Those Israelis expelled from Gaza in 2005 know this dynamic well. For decades, they were flattened into a caricature: dangerous religious fanatics, enemies of peace, the one-dimensional villains in a geopolitical morality play. But while the demonisation of those we disagree with is easy, it is also dangerous and unhelpful. It replaces analysis with outrage and renders complex problems unsolvable by pretending they are simple. If the Gaza settlers had truly been the sole obstacle to peace, then peace should have followed their removal. But only 20 years after Israel's unilateral disengagement from the Gaza Strip, that illusion lies in ruins. Over 8,000 Israelis were expelled from their homes, their communities razed, their lives uprooted by the very state they believed they were defending. The land they left behind was seized by Hamas, and within mere weeks rockets began to fall on Israeli towns. Withdrawal was supposed to help end the conflict. Instead, it shifted its axis, and set the stage for possibly the darkest days in Israel's history. The Gaza disengagement was conceived as a strategic reset. It was meant to reduce friction, ease international pressure, and create space for a political solution. In practice, it was read by Israel's enemies as a surrender. Many of the settlers of Gush Katif in the Gaza Strip said so at the time. They warned that abandoning Gaza unilaterally would embolden terrorists, demoralise Israeli society, and create a power vacuum certain to be filled by Hamas. They were right. And they were ignored. As in Britain's own simmering culture war, these debates within Israel have long been raw and deeply personal. Some argued that settlers were the front line, protecting not only themselves but the neighbouring kibbutzim and towns of the Gaza envelope. Once unknown outside Israel but today symbols of destruction wrought by Palestinian terrorists, communities like Be'eri, Nahal Oz, and Kfar Aza, dismissed that logic. They claimed the settlers were the source of the danger, not the shield from it. They protested their presence, demanded their removal, and celebrated disengagement as a path to calm. Eighteen years on, the Palestinian barbarity of 7 October delivered clarity, but far too late. The same kibbutzim that rejected the settlers' role as guardians became the primary targets of Hamas's most brutal assault. Entire families were butchered. Hundreds were abducted. The border was breached with appalling ease. What the settlers had claimed, that their presence was a form of defence, was no longer abstract. It had become painfully real. Yet today, political memories have shrunk, and 20 years seems now like a lifetime ago. Much of Israeli society has woken up to realise that the issue of Jewish settlement is not simple or binary. So how did settlers become the bogeymen of Israeli society? There is a wider cultural shift that must be acknowledged. In Israel's early years, the pioneering ideal was firmly associated with the political left. The kibbutz movement represented sacrifice, collectivism, and national purpose. It was admired both at home and abroad, especially in Britain, where young volunteers travelled to join what they saw as a moral experiment in shared destiny. But over time, as the global left lost its affection for Israel and the Israeli left lost its grip on power, that pioneering ethos migrated. Today, it lives, uneasily, in the settler movement, which is often religious, often nationalist, and often scorned by the very societies that once romanticised Zionist pioneering. This shift has not only alienated the international left. It has distorted the moral lens through which the conflict is viewed. For many in the Arab world, all Israelis are 'settlers'. To them, Tel Aviv is no less illegitimate than Gush Katif or Itamar. That language has now taken hold in the West, particularly among activists with no roots in the region but with absolute certainty in their politics. The word 'settler' has become a slur, emptied of context and weaponised with abandon, even by our own Foreign Office. But facts remain. After the disengagement, Hamas took over. It didn't build hospitals or universities, but terror tunnels, rocket factories, and arsenals. It diverted international aid into military infrastructure and hoarded millions of pounds of cash underground. And it made its intentions explicit: not coexistence, but annihilation. What began with the evacuation of Gaza's 'settlers' ended in the massacre of civilians. The arc is not incidental. That is why to many Israelis today, surrender is no longer an option. But to the settlers of Gush Katif, the surrender happened 20 years ago. And it happened not through negotiation, but through unilateral withdrawal under fire. It took just one month for Gaza to become a launchpad for terror. It took 18 years for the rest of Israel to understand what the settlers already knew. How long, then, before Britain widens its view? The demonisation of settlers has prevented many from seeing this clearly. Like Brexit voters or immigration sceptics in Britain, they were condemned not for being wrong, but for being unfashionable. Elements of their beliefs and actions were and are ugly or unacceptable. But in matters of national survival, fashion is a poor guide. Twenty years on, we know that disengagement from Gaza was not the end of the conflict, but the beginning of a war waged with increasing boldness against a nation that dared to believe land for peace was still a plausible formula.

Hellbent on arrest, more than 360 activists of outlawed Palestine Action goad police to detain them - at cost of up to £3million for taxpayers
Hellbent on arrest, more than 360 activists of outlawed Palestine Action goad police to detain them - at cost of up to £3million for taxpayers

Daily Mail​

time5 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

Hellbent on arrest, more than 360 activists of outlawed Palestine Action goad police to detain them - at cost of up to £3million for taxpayers

Militant protesters were accused of a 'colossal' waste of millions of pounds of taxpayers' money after more than 360 deliberately forced police to arrest them by brandishing signs supporting the outlawed group Palestine Action. During a day of chaos and farce, Left-wing activists swamped Parliament Square in London today in support of the organisation, which was proscribed by the Government last month as a terrorist group. Hundreds held placards declaring 'I oppose genocide. I support Palestine Action' in deliberate acts of law-breaking designed to overwhelm police resources and the courts. By 6pm police had arrested 365 people for supporting a proscribed organisation and seven others, including five for assaulting police officers. More than 850 officers were deployed on the huge operation, including 120 drafted in to bolster the Met from Wales, Lancashire, Greater Manchester and Cheshire. Officers endured a torrent of abuse as they made arrests, with demonstrators screaming 'shame on you', 'terrorists' and 'fascist scum'. Violent scuffles broke out as officers attempted to lead those arrested away. The Met said that none of its officers was seriously injured. Shadow Home Secretary Chris Philp estimated that the police operation and subsequent legal costs to prosecute those arrested, including court time and legal aid, could cost taxpayers up to £3 million. The cost comes on top of the more than £53 million that the Met has already spent policing pro-Palestine protests in central London since the October 7 attacks against Israel in 2023. Speaking to The Mail on Sunday, Mr Philp said: 'When you take into account the policing costs today and how much lengthy prosecutions and court processes will cost, the final bill for today's idiotic stunt could be as much as £3 million. This is money that could have been spent catching drug dealers, gang members, phone thieves and shoplifters. 'Those supporting a banned organisation should feel the full force of the law. Palestine Action is a violent group that seeks to impose its views on others through force. They smash up property, vandalise RAF planes and have even attacked a police officer with a sledgehammer. 'Those illegally supporting Palestine Action are supporting political violence.' To prevent London's police cells from being overwhelmed, the Met established a so-called 'prisoner- processing point' in nearby King Charles Street. Under three gazebos, arrested activists were asked for their names and addresses and had their fingerprints taken. They were then bailed and told to return to a police station at a future date. Some, however, immediately returned to the protest on Parliament Square and were re-arrested for breaching their bail conditions. Richard Roques, 69, from London, was among the first to be arrested on the edge of Parliament Square. He had brought a placard with the words 'I support' written on it. At 1pm he added the words 'Palestine Action', prompting his arrest minutes later. At 1.53pm he was arrested for a second time for returning to the protest and allegedly breaching his bail conditions. Moazzam Beg, a former Guantanamo Bay detainee, was also among those arrested yesterday afternoon. He had been detained by US authorities between 2002 and 2005 before his release without charge. The protest began at 1pm today when hundreds of activists sat down and silently held the illegal placards. Defend Our Juries, which organised yesterday's protest, claimed that between 600 and 700 protested by holding the signs. The Met, however, said that, while between 500 and 600 people were in Parliament Square 'many were onlookers, media or people not holding placards'. First to be arrested was William Hancock from Kingston upon Thames. Speaking to the MoS, he said: 'I had a sign that said I support Palestine Action.' He was followed by Ian Mursell, 73, from Battersea, whose arrest was witnessed by his son Phillip. Designer Theresa Jordan, 45, said she would refuse to co-operate with police as she was led away. At 2.17pm seven officers arrested a blind man in a wheelchair who told the MoS his name was 'Mike'. Dozens of protesters followed the officers chanting 'no justice, no peace, no fascist police'. One woman screamed 'you are f****** disgusting, you are fascist scum' at the officers. Some activists said they had previously been arrested while demonstrating for eco-militant groups such as Just Stop Oil. There were also ugly scenes on Whitehall as those arrested were led – and in some cases carried by their arms and legs – to the temporary processing centre, with a hostile crowd pushing and shoving officers. A middle-aged man was pushed to the ground by officers as he fought against them. Another march, organised by separate group the Palestine Coalition, assembled on Whitehall. The Met said one person had been arrested. Legislation to proscribe Palestine Action made it a criminal offence to show support for the organisation, carrying a prison sentence of up to 14 years. Home Secretary Yvette Cooper said tonight: 'Palestine Action was proscribed based on strong security advice following serious attacks the group has committed, involving violence, significant injuries and extensive criminal damage.' arrested or is in the process of being arrested.'

UK police arrest more than 466 at protest for banned Palestine Action group
UK police arrest more than 466 at protest for banned Palestine Action group

Reuters

time5 hours ago

  • Reuters

UK police arrest more than 466 at protest for banned Palestine Action group

LONDON, Aug 9 (Reuters) - London's Metropolitan Police arrested more than 466 people at a protest on Saturday against Britain's decision to ban the group Palestine Action, the force said. British lawmakers banned Palestine Action under anti-terrorism legislation in July after some of its members broke into a Royal Air Force base and damaged planes as part of a series of protests. The group accuses Britain's government of complicity in what it says are Israeli war crimes in Gaza. Protesters, some wearing black and white Palestinian scarves and waving Palestinian flags, chanted "hands off Gaza", and held placards with the message "I oppose genocide. I support Palestine Action", video taken by Reuters at the scene showed. Israel has faced accusations of genocide at the International Court of Justice and from human rights groups over its devastating military assault in Gaza. Israel denies the accusations and casts its offensive as self-defense after a deadly October 2023 attack by Palestinian Hamas militants. The Reuters video showed demonstrators who had gathered in Parliament Square by the Houses of Parliament being carried away by police. The crowd chanted "shame on you" at the police. In a post on X, the police force said it had arrested 466 people for supporting a proscribed organisation. It also arrested eight people for other offences including five arrests for assaults on officers. The police said no one was seriously injured. The ban makes it a crime to be a member of Palestine Action, carrying a maximum sentence of 14 years in prison. The co-founder of the group, Huda Ammori, last week won a bid to bring a legal challenge against the ban.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store