logo
The surgeon's daughter who campaigned against hummus at university: Meet Palestine Action's VERY middle-class leader who has swapped targets from chickpea dip to RAF war planes

The surgeon's daughter who campaigned against hummus at university: Meet Palestine Action's VERY middle-class leader who has swapped targets from chickpea dip to RAF war planes

Daily Mail​3 hours ago

The middle-class daughter of a top NHS surgeon who campaigned against hummus at university has been revealed as the leader of Palestine Action.
Huda Ammori, a former campaigner at the Palestine Solidarity Campaign, founded the controversial group alongside Richard Barnard, 51, a former member of Extinction Rebellion, in 2020.
The 31-year-old was born in Bolton to a Palestinian father, a surgeon, and an Iraqi mother. She later went on to graduate from the University of Manchester with an international business and finance degree.
Despite her middle class roots, Ms Ammori quickly became captivated by student activism during her time at the prestigious institution - even getting a brand of hummus banned from the campus shop.
The then-student, who had spotted 'Sabra' hummus, half-owned by a company who invest in Israeli 's military forces, was on sale, launched a tireless campaign that eventually saw the chickpea dip successfully blacklisted.
Now, she leads the militant Palestine Action movement. Over the past five years, the group have claimed responsibility for vandalised buildings, ram-raided factories and, most recently, even infiltrated Britain's largest RAF base, damaging two military planes.
Having posted footage online showing two people inside the base at RAF Brize Norton, the group are now set to be proscribed by Home Secretary Yvette Cooper, meaning it will be a criminal offence to belong to or support Palestine Action.
Ms Ammori first had a political awakening in 2016, after receiving a surprising call from her mother in 2016 insisting that she join the Labour Party.
A graduate from the University of Manchester, Ms Ammori quickly became captivated by student activism during her time at the prestigious institution - even campaigning to get a brand of hummus banned from the campus shop
Describing such demand as initially 'confusing', she wrote in The New Arab: 'Coming from my Iraqi mother, this qas quite confusing given that Tony Blair, under the Labour government, led the invasion and destruction of Iraq'.
However, for both Ms Ammori and other pro-Palestine activists, the election of Jeremy Corbyn as leader of the Labour Party offered, they believed, a 'renewal of hope'.
But such hope was ultimately to be short lived. Following Corbyn's defeat in the 2019 general election, Ms Ammori said she quickly abandoned any 'asking and begging' of government bodies for help with her activist plight.
Instead, she formed a new militant movement with Mr Barnard, a raised Catholic who once belonged to a Christian anarchist group called the Catholic Worker.
He has, according to the magazine Prospect, almost 30 tattoos, including Benedictine mottos, an Irish Republican slogan, 'freedom' in Arabic and 'all cops are bastards'.
Ms Ammori, who said previously that her Palestinian great-grandfather was killed by British soldiers in the 1936 u[rising, has never been deterred by the risk of jail time as a result of the group's extreme behaviour.
Highlighting her fearless nature, she told the publication: 'When you do these types of actions, you do it with an understanding that you could end up in prison'.
Having claimed responsibility for more than 300 incidents at government buildings, universities and British-based defence sites, amongst numerous others, some of the group's most fierce activists have indeed been imprisoned for their protests.
Shocking footage shared by the group showed protesters storming across the RAF runway in Oxfordshire on electric scooters. The activists are then seen spraying red paint into the turbine engines of the air-to-air refuelling tankers which the RAF say are 'vital for enhancing the operational reach and flexibility of Britain's military air power'
On Friday, bodycam footage was uploaded online which showed two of the group's activists infiltrating Britain's largest RAF base and spraying red paint into the engines of two Airbus Voyager aircraft before escaping without being caught.
The shocking video showed protesters storming across the RAF runway in Oxfordshire on electric scooters.
The activists are then seen spraying red paint into the turbine engines of the air-to-air refueling tankers which the RAF say are 'vital for enhancing the operational reach and flexibility of Britain's military air power'.
Palestine Action claimed to have used repurposed fire extinguishers to spray the paint, while they say they caused further damage with crowbars.
They said that the damage to the planes at Brize Norton was deliberately undertaken as it is the base 'where flights leave daily for RAF Akrotiri in Cyprus' - the base used for military operations in the Middle East.
In response to the shocking incident, Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer condemned the footage, stating in a post on X: 'The act of vandalism committed at RAF Brize Norton is disgraceful.
'Our Armed Forces represent the very best of Britain and put their lives on the line for us every day.
'It is our responsibility to support those who defend us.'
Meanwhile, opposition leader Kemi Badenoch said: 'The security breach at Brize Norton is deeply concerning.
'This is not lawful protest, it is politically-motivated criminality. We must stop tolerating terrorist or extremist groups that seek to undermine our society. The full force of the law must come down on those responsible.'
A security review has been launched across all UK military bases and the incident is currently being investigated by counter terror police.
The Home Secretary, who hopes to proscribe the organisation, has the power to do so under the Terrorism Act of 2000 if she believes it is 'concerned in terrorism'.
Proscription will require Ms Cooper to lay an order in Parliament, which must then be debated and approved by both MPs and peers.
A spokesperson for Palestine Action accused the UK of failing to meet its obligation to prevent or punish genocide.
The spokesperson said: 'When our government fails to uphold their moral and legal obligations, it is the responsibility of ordinary citizens to take direct action.
'The terrorists are the ones committing a genocide, not those who break the tools used to commit it.'
Some 81 organisations have been proscribed under the 2000 Act, including Islamist terrorist groups such as Hamas and al Qaida, far-right groups such as National Action, and Russian private military company Wagner Group.
Another 14 organisations connected with Northern Ireland are also banned under previous legislation, including the IRA and UDA.
In August last year, five Palestine Action activists who caused over £1million worth of damages at a weapons factory in Glasgow, were jailed for a total of five years and two months.
Stuart Bretherton, 25, Eva Simmons, 25, Calum Lacy, 23, Erica Hygate, 23 and Sumaya Javaid, 22, scaled the Thales UK building in Glasgow's Govan on June 1 2022 and staged a demonstration on its roof.
The five protestors unfurled banners and erected flags and ignited pyrotechnics, while two remained at the building overnight and glued themselves to the roof after refusing to engage with police.
A total of £1,130,783 of damage was caused and the premises were shut due to safety concerns.
Bretherton, of Kilmacolm, Inverclyde, Simmons, of London, Lacy of Edinburgh as well as Hygate and Javaid of Birmingham, pleaded guilty to conducting themselves in a disorderly manner.
Hygate separately pleaded guilty to a vandalism charge, while Javaid also pleaded to behaving in a threatening or abusive manner.
All but Javaid received 12 month sentences while she was jailed for 14 months.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Why the ‘individual conscience vote' of MPs had its own assisted death last week
Why the ‘individual conscience vote' of MPs had its own assisted death last week

The Independent

time16 minutes ago

  • The Independent

Why the ‘individual conscience vote' of MPs had its own assisted death last week

Two votes in the Commons split by four days laid the ground for a seismic shift in British social policy making last week one of the most significant in the modern history of Parliament. But while the votes on abortion (Tuesday) and assisted dying (Friday) were officially matters of individual conscience the evidence from both suggests that the UK is now closer than ever to a US-style party politicisation of moral issues. If you vote Labour or Lib Dem you are much more likely to get a pro-choice MP, if you vote Conservative or Reform you are more likely to get a pro-life MP. This is not an accident, it is increasingly by design. How parties voted on life and death On Tuesday the decriminalisation of abortion up to birth amendment to the Crime and Policing Bill laid down by Labour Gower MP Tonia Antoniazzi won by 379 to 137. Of this 291 Labour MPs voted in favour and just 25 against while 63 Lib Dems were in favour and just two against. On the other side 92 Tory MPs voted against and just four in favour. Another four abstained by voting in both lobbies. No Reform MPs supported and four voted against. The split is not as stark on Friday's assisted dying vote but nevertheless reveals a trend. Kim Leadbeater 's bill had the support of 224 fellow Labour MPs with 160 against and 56 Lib Dems with 15 against. On the other side the Tories split 92 against to 20 in favour while Reform were three against and two in favour. Kemi Badenoch put a two line whip on the abortion vote rather than allowing a completely free vote. This indicated a party position without the threat of disciplinary action which would come with a three line whip. But, remarkably, after the abortion vote senior Tories were complaining that Ms Badenoch had not withdrawn the whip of the four MPs who voted for decriminalisation. It was different in 1967 The last time the UK saw Parliament vote on such seismic social change was back in 1967 with Liberal MP David Steel 's abortion legislation and Labour MP Leo Abse's Sexual Offences Act which decriminalised homosexuality. In both those cases parties split down the middle on conscience votes which saw the odd alliance of rightwing Tory MP Enoch Powell and leftwing Labour MP Tony Benn coming together to support legalising homosexuality. The Ed Miliband effect The erosion of the conscience vote in the UK has actually come more from a hardening of positions from progressive leftwing parties in Britain and exacerbated by the so-called culture wars. In 2012 Ed Miliband imposed a three-line whip on gay marriage on Labour MPs. LGBTQ+ matters ended there as something of individual conscience for the first time. Then in 2019 former MP Roger Godsiff was dropped as a Labour candidate for supporting parents in his Birmingham constituency who were protesting over primary school children being taught about same-sex relationships. This year we see Reform UK banning LGBTQ+ flags from county halls where they have taken control of the council and attempting to purge councils of diversity, equity and inclusion officers and policies. While abortion officially remained a matter of conscience a comment by the now home secretary Yvette Cooper in 2017 about Jacob Rees-Mogg being unfit to be a party leader because of his views on abortion was enlightening. What has happened over a number of years is that the majority of socially conservative, mostly Catholic tradition in Labour has been removed through selection processes. David Campanale versus the Lib Dems An ongoing legal case involving the Liberal Democrats and one of its former candidates has highlighted an apparent major shift in British politics to the party politicisation of conscience issues. Former BBC journalist David Campanale was kicked out as the candidate for Sutton ahead of the last election because, he claims, of his Christian beliefs. According to documents presented in the case, Luke Taylor, who replaced him as the candidate, is alleged to have claimed that 'the party of past prominent Liberal Democrats with Christian beliefs, such as Shirley Williams and Charles Kennedy, was 'over', and that he and others were building a 'secular party' which would have no place for Christians expecting to 'hold to their religious or conscientious opinions'. Mr Taylor was the teller for the votes in favour of the abortion amendment on Tuesday, who also described the assisted dying vote, which he supported, as a good way to 'neatly bookend the week.' If Mr Campanale wins his case it will for the first time provide evidence that selection is taking place on conscience issues as well as other matters. The Lib Dems have denied the claims and pointed out that their leader Sr Ed Davey goes to church. But the Christian Lib Dems including former deputy leader Simon Hughes have voiced concerns and the party has been condemned by two bishops. and a former Archbishop of Canterbury. Added to that Tim Farron, who voted against abortion and assisted dying last week, was ousted as leader over his Christian beliefs in 2017. During the assisted dying vote a number of supporters of the bill suggested that religious belief had no place in deciding such issues. A real departure from conscience. But a brand of conservatism is emerging in the UK which openly embraces traditional Christian values. Reflecting on the assisted dying vote, Tory MP Danny Kruger, a leading opponent of the bill, said: 'If we are to withstand our enemies, bring our society together, and tame the technium (somehow ensure that human values govern the new age of machines), we are going to need values that are up to the job. 'I don't think humanist atheism or progressive liberalism or whatever the new religion should be called, is up to it. Christianity is. Only Christianity is.' A warning from America In America, the conscience vote rapidly became more party-politicised as a result of the Roe vs Wade abortion ruling in in 1973. Social conservatives gradually began to take over the Republicans on the right and social progressives the Democrats. It has played out ferociously in the selection of Supreme Court justices, who recently in effect overturned Roe v Wade with a conservative majority. The most interesting US development is the way that a man like Donald Trump, previously ambiguous over abortion, has adopted a strong anti-abortion line to please his base. This played out in the 2022 midterms to the detriment of the Republicans with the Democrats using the threat to abortion rights to great effect. But it did little to help Kamala Harris in 2024. What that shows though is that parties with very strong views one way or the other can be elected largely on economic grounds but bring with them a great deal of baggage on conscience issues. After this week some would argue the same thing has happened in the opposite direction in the UK.

EU review ‘paints grim picture' of Israel's actions in Gaza, Irish premier says
EU review ‘paints grim picture' of Israel's actions in Gaza, Irish premier says

Western Telegraph

time17 minutes ago

  • Western Telegraph

EU review ‘paints grim picture' of Israel's actions in Gaza, Irish premier says

The Taoiseach said the report highlights the restriction of food and medicines into Gaza, which he said 'amounts to the use of starvation as a method of war'. The EU-Israel Association Agreement is being reviewed after a dozen EU member states backed it last month. The unpublished report has found that there are 'indications' Israel could be in breach of its human rights obligations under the agreement, according to several media outlets. Reacting on Saturday, Mr Martin welcomed the 'substantive and important' report on Israel's compliance with its human rights obligations under the EU-Israel deal. He said Ireland had 'long argued' that clauses on human rights in the EU's international agreement 'have to be respected' and should prompt 'serious consequences' when they are not. Back in February 2024, Ireland and Spain jointly called for an urgent review of whether Israel had breached its human rights obligations in the trade agreement. A majority of EU countries did not back the review until last month, prompted by a proposal from The Netherlands. The shift came amid Israel's months-long blockade of Gaza, which has accelerated fears of a famine. A new Israeli and US-backed aid system has been marred by violence. Israel's 20-month military campaign in the the Palestinian enclave has killed an estimated 55,000 people and injured thousands more, according to Gaza's health ministry. Mr Martin said: 'I very much welcome the substantive and important report of the EU's High Representative for Human Rights on Israel's compliance with its human rights obligations under the EU-Israel Association Agreement. 'Bringing together the reports and analysis of serious, credible and reliable sources – including the International Court of Justice, the UN's Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights, the UN Secretary General's Special Representative for Children and Armed Conflict and others – it paints a clear and grim picture of a sustained and deliberate failure by Israel to adhere to its international obligations, especially in Gaza but also in the West Bank. 'It highlights a continued restriction of food, medicines, medical equipment, and other vital supplies into Gaza that amount to collective punishment of the civilian population, that amounts to the use of starvation as a method of war. 'It describes an unprecedented level of killing and injury of civilians in Gaza resulting from indiscriminate attacks without proportion or precaution, as well as attacks on hospitals, forced mass displacements and the killing of journalists. All of this with a persistent lack of accountability. 'In the West Bank, it reports sustained oppression of the Palestinian population, including through state and settler violence, the appropriation of land, and the use of detention as a form of collective punishment.' He added: 'We will now work with partners to follow up on this important report with concrete steps, and I will be discussing it with my colleagues in the European Council when we meet next week.'

Arrest after suspicious device thrown into Belfast Islamic Center during evening prayers
Arrest after suspicious device thrown into Belfast Islamic Center during evening prayers

The Independent

time22 minutes ago

  • The Independent

Arrest after suspicious device thrown into Belfast Islamic Center during evening prayers

Police are investigating a suspected hate crime after a viable device was thrown through a window of the Belfast Islamic Centre during evening prayer. The incident, which occurred while worshippers were inside, led to the cordoning off of the scene overnight, with the public advised to avoid the area. Local politicians have swiftly condemned the "cowardly" attack, emphasising that individuals should feel secure in their places of worship. Northern Ireland Secretary Hilary Benn expressed his deep concern, calling the act "shameful". 'Hatred of this sort has no place in Northern Ireland. If anyone has any information about this, please contact the PSNI,' he said. Police said they attended a security alert on University Road in south Belfast on Friday night after receiving a report at around 10.10pm. A 34-year-old man was arrested under the Terrorism Act and is being held in custody. 'Police received a report at approximately 10.10pm on Friday 20th June that an object had been thrown through a window at a property in the University Road area of the city,' Assistant Chief Constable Anthony McNally said. 'Officers attended and carried out a search of the building where a suspicious device was discovered. 'Ammunition technical officers attended and examined the object which was determined as viable and has since been removed for forensic examination. 'A 34-year-old man was arrested under the Terrorism Act at the scene and remains in police custody at this time. It is important to stress that, while the suspect has been arrested under the Terrorism Act, the motive for the attack has not yet been established. 'Detectives from serious crime branch are currently working at pace and are exploring a number of potential motivating factors including the possibility that this is a hate crime. 'At this time, no other persons are being sought in connection with the attack.' Alliance MLA for South Belfast Paula Bradshaw condemned the attack, which she said did 'not reflect the diversity of south Belfast in 2025'. 'This attack was again designed to cause fear among people inside the centre, who were at prayer at the time. 'Nevertheless, I am thankful for the intervention of a nearby passer-by and for the work of the police. Those were much more reflective of the true spirit of Belfast, where most people rejoice in diversity. 'I would like to express my solidarity with all those who were evacuated and my thanks to all those who worked to ensure their safety.' Sinn Fein MLA Deirdre Hargey said 'no-one should ever feel unsafe in their place of worship'. 'Acts like these, fuelled by hate, spread fear and division, and target people who have come to our communities to build a life and call this place home. 'It's vital that all political leaders speak out and stand united against this disgusting behaviour.' Green Party councillor Aine Groogan condemned the attack as a 'cowardly and vicious act'. 'I am horrified to hear about the attack on the Islamic Centre during evening prayers,' she said. 'I want to pay tribute to the courageous passer-by who intervened and prevented what could have been a far more tragic outcome. 'It is terrifying to consider what might have happened and I sincerely hope that all those present are recovering from this traumatic ordeal.' She added: 'This attack is yet another reminder of the very real danger faced by our Islamic community. The recent rise in racist hate and violence on our streets is a shameful stain on our society. 'We must all take responsibility for actively challenging racism, misinformation and bigotry wherever it appears before someone is seriously hurt. 'I urge those politicians who continue to hide behind the notion of so-called 'legitimate concerns' around migration to reflect on the consequences of their words. 'Such narratives are as disingenuous as they are dangerous. They help foster a culture in which hate can thrive. Frankly, they should know better.' Anyone who was in the area at the time or who may have information is being asked to contact authorities on 101, quoting reference number 1808 20/06/25. A report can also be submitted online using the non-emergency reporting form on the PSNI website, or people can contact Crimestoppers anonymously on 0800 555 111 or online.

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