logo
Police arrest 466 people over Palestine Action support at protest

Police arrest 466 people over Palestine Action support at protest

Hundreds attended Saturday's demonstration in Parliament Square, organised by Defend Our Juries, with the Metropolitan Police warning it would arrest anyone expressing support for Palestine Action.
In an update posted on X on Saturday evening, Scotland Yard said 466 people had been arrested for supporting the group as of 9pm.
A further eight arrests were made for other offences, including five for assaults on officers. None were seriously injured, the force added.
The Met earlier said the detained protesters were taken to prisoner processing points in the Westminster area, and those whose details could be confirmed were bailed, with conditions not to attend any further protest in support of Palestine Action.
Hundreds gathered in Parliament Square (Stefan Rousseau/PA)
Those whose details were refused, or could not be verified, were taken to custody suites across London.
Charity Amnesty International described the mass arrests under UK terrorism law as 'deeply concerning'.
The crowd, sat on the grass inside Parliament Square, could be seen writing 'I oppose genocide, I support Palestine Action' on white placards at 1pm, with the vast majority remaining silent.
Several demonstrators carrying placards that read 'Palestine Action terrorises Britain while Hamas hides in hospitals, schools and mosques', briefly walked along the crowd before being led away by police officers.
Other clusters of protesters who were not holding placards gathered around the Mahatma Gandhi and Nelson Mandela statues in the square singing pro-Palestinian chants.
Arrest update: Parliament Square and Whitehall are clear.
As of 9pm, 466 people had been arrested for showing support for Palestine Action.
There were a further eight arrests for other offences including five assaults on officers.
This will be the final update of the day. pic.twitter.com/9V5pgh6CVF
— Metropolitan Police (@metpoliceuk) August 9, 2025
Officers were holding individual demonstrators sat on the edge of the grass before escorting them through swelling crowds to police vans parked on the edge of the square.
A separate group of officers attended a protester lying next to the fenced-off Emmeline Pankhurst statue.
They later began arresting protesters sat in the middle of Parliament Square.
The officers lifted the protesters – some sitting and some lying flat – off the ground before escorting them away.
A woman is detained by police in Parliament Square (Stefan Rousseau/PA)
Onlookers applauded the protesters and shouted 'Shame on you' at the police making arrests.
Protesters who were still sat in the middle of Parliament Square stood up together at 2pm and held their placards in the air.
One person was also arrested at a separate Palestine Coalition march, which set off from Russell Square heading to Whitehall via Aldwych and the Strand.
The arrest was 'for a placard showing support for Palestine Action', Scotland Yard said.
Protesters held signs in support of Palestine Action (Stefan Rousseau/PA)
Membership of, or support for, Palestine Action is a criminal offence punishable by up to 14 years in prison under the Terrorism Act 2000.
Earlier this week, the first three people to be charged with supporting Palestine Action in England and Wales were named.
Jeremy Shippam, 71, Judit Murray, 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.
Hundreds 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.
People were seen lying on the ground during the protest (Stefan Rousseau/PA)
Home Secretary Yvette Cooper thanked police in London and across the country for their work to ensure peaceful protests, and officers' 'continued dedication in responding to support for a proscribed organisation'.
She said: 'The right to protest is one we protect fiercely but this is very different from displaying support for this one specific and narrow, proscribed organisation. Palestine Action was proscribed based on strong security advice following serious attacks the group has committed, involving violence, significant injuries and extensive criminal damage.
'It also follows an assessment from the joint terrorism assessment centre that the group prepares for terrorism, as well as concerning information referencing plans and ideas for further attacks, the details of which cannot yet be publicly reported due to ongoing legal proceedings.
'Many people may not yet know the reality of this organisation, but the assessments are very clear, this is not a non-violent organisation. UK national security and public safety must always be our top priority.
'Their actions are not about the horrific suffering in the Middle East and do not reflect or represent the thousands of people across the country who are exercising their rights to protest peacefully.'
Sacha Deshmukh, chief executive of Amnesty International UK, said: 'The protesters in Parliament Square were not inciting violence and it is entirely disproportionate to the point of absurdity to be treating them as terrorists.
'We have long criticised UK terrorism law for being excessively broad and vaguely worded and a threat to freedom of expression. These arrests demonstrate that our concerns were justified.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Hermer to decide on Palestine Action terror charges
Hermer to decide on Palestine Action terror charges

Telegraph

time7 minutes ago

  • Telegraph

Hermer to decide on Palestine Action terror charges

Lord Hermer will be given the final say over whether to prosecute hundreds of protesters arrested for supporting Palestine Action. The Attorney General has the power to approve or block further action against the demonstrators under the Terrorism Act after they were caught carrying placards in support of a proscribed group. The Metropolitan Police said 532 people had been arrested at a demonstration in Westminster on Saturday that was designed to overwhelm the criminal justice system. All but one of the arrests took place on Parliament Square, where hundreds of protesters gathered carrying placards that read: 'I oppose genocide. I support Palestine Action.' The Met said the average age of those arrested was 54 and that more than 100 people hauled away by police were over 70. Officers arrested 263 men, 261 women and eight people who either defined themselves as non-binary or did not disclose their gender. The detained protesters included Moazzam Begg, a former Guantanamo Bay detainee who was once accused of being a member of al-Qaeda. He was released from US custody in 2005 following pressure from the UK Government and later received a settlement after suing the British authorities for alleged complicity in his detention. Anyone found guilty of supporting or gathering support for a proscribed organisation faces a maximum of six months imprisonment and a possible £5,000 fine. Just being arrested is enough to stop someone travelling to the US or working in education. Charges brought under the Terrorism Act must first be approved by the Attorney General, acting in his capacity as the Government's most senior lawyer rather than in a political capacity. Robert Jenrick, the shadow justice secretary, told The Telegraph: 'If lawbreakers supporting a prescribed terrorist group aren't prosecuted, it will be the clearest example yet of two-tier justice under Two-Tier Keir. 'Lord Hermer needs to enforce the law, not pander to activists he's sympathetic to.' All those arrested on Saturday were taken to a processing centre in the Westminster area before being bailed. The Met said the sheer number of people detained made it impossible to track whether anyone released on bail returned to Parliament Square to continue protesting. It is understood that the CPS has established a special unit to process files on Palestine Action protesters because of the number of arrests. Last week, the first three charges were brought in relation to supporting the group, which was proscribed as a terrorist organisation by the Home Office in June after spray-painting an RAF transport aircraft at an air base in Oxfordshire. Protests in support of Palestine Action have been organised by Defend Our Juries, a campaign group that is trying to overturn the proscription with mass civil disobedience. A spokesman for Defend Our Juries said on Sunday that the number of arrests was an 'embarrassment for the Home Secretary, who must now justify this absurd waste of police resources' by bringing terror charges against people 'for holding a sign'. 'It's clear that ordinary people are refusing to be silenced by this authoritarian crackdown on our fundamental freedoms,' said the spokesman. 'The growing mass defiance shows this ban cannot be meaningfully enforced, and it will ultimately have to be scrapped.'

The logistical challenge of Palestine Action
The logistical challenge of Palestine Action

Telegraph

time7 minutes ago

  • Telegraph

The logistical challenge of Palestine Action

The arrest of over 500 protesters in London at the weekend for supporting the proscribed group Palestine Action poses a major logistical challenge for the courts. Thousands of cases are already stuck in a backlog that has built up since the pandemic, with trials often set for years ahead. In addition, the prisons are full to bursting, so much so that criminals are being let out even earlier than normal to free up places. If these demonstrations, ostensibly in favour of free speech, continue in the weeks ahead how will the system cope? There is an argument that Palestine Action should not have been designated a terror group in the first place. It does not conform to the usual description of an organisation intent on killing innocent people and forcing policy change through fear. There are many, mostly on the Left but not exclusively so, who consider the ban to have been excessive. But this issue was thrashed out in Parliament, where MPs and peers agreed with the Government's assertion that it met the criteria for proscription. This followed an attack that inflicted damage on two RAF aircraft. Yvette Cooper, the Home Secretary, has said that PA is not 'non-violent' and that more information about its malign intentions would be revealed in future court cases. The fact remains that those who consider themselves martyrs for free speech are breaking the law and should suffer the consequences of doing so. Courts managed to act swiftly against rioters last summer following the Southport murders and can do so again. If they have to sit over August and round the clock, so be it; the logjams in the system must not be an excuse for law-breaking to go unpunished. Moreover, if the Government is serious (which we doubt) about removing foreign criminals the moment they are convicted that will free up spaces in our jails. To do that however, ministers will need to resile from Article 8 of the European Convention on Human Rights which allows criminals to stay even when the courts have ordered their deportation on the grounds that they have family in this country. Furthermore, will the offender's home country take them back and, if so, impose the punishment they faced in the UK or let them get away with criminal behaviour? The Government managed to extract some supportive headlines for its plan; but will it really see it through, or is this just the hot air of high summer?

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