logo
Watch: ‘Two-tier police' threaten to charge Jewish man for waving Israeli flag at Palestine Action protest

Watch: ‘Two-tier police' threaten to charge Jewish man for waving Israeli flag at Palestine Action protest

Telegraph10 hours ago

The Metropolitan Police has been accused of 'two-tier' policing after threatening to charge a Jewish man for waving an Israeli flag at a Palestine Action demonstration.
The pro-Palestinian protest group clashed with police in Trafalgar Square on Monday, with 13 arrested after violence flared within the crowd of 500 activists.
But the Met was accused of 'two-tier' justice over the actions of its officers after two Jewish counter-protesters had to hide inside a double-decker bus as the 'mob' outside chanted 'Zionist scum'.
Footage shared with The Telegraph showed police warning them that 'waving an Israeli flag' could be a breach of the peace.
Isaac Grand, 22, and another Jewish man, 28, who declined to be named, accused the Met of 'two-tier policing' over the threat.
Mr Grand said: 'It was a clear case of two-tier policing. A hostile mob surrounded the vehicle, shouting abuse and threatening me – but instead of protecting me or arresting those responsible, the police threatened me with a public order offence.'
Mr Grand and his friend started their two-person counter-demonstration against the group, which is soon to be proscribed as a terrorist group, by waving the Israeli flag.
Using a megaphone, Mr Grand's companion told the crowd: 'Ban the IRGC [Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps]. Rape is not resistance. Terrorist supporters off our streets. Am Yisrael Chai [the people of Israel live], now and forever.'
But when the hostile crowd surrounded the pair and chanted 'Zionist scum!', they had to board a nearby double-decker that had been blocked by the protest.
As they were taken to the bus, the two men shouted and swore back at the pro-Palestine protesters who were chanting slurs at them.
Footage on board filmed by Mr Grand, a trainee barrister, shows him being told by a Met officer: 'You are creating a breach of the peace.'
Mr Grand replied: 'What did I do, officer?' to which he replied: 'You're waving an Israeli flag.'
'Not a criminal offence'
When asked by Mr Grand if it was a criminal offence, the officer said: 'No it's not. But it is now... look at them protesting for Palestine.'
Mr Grand argued that he had merely exercised his rights to free speech and protest.
The officer then said: 'Yeah, yeah, but there's a time and a place, isn't there?'
He went on to say: 'You're perfectly within your right to protest, but I'm not going to let two rival protest groups clash, yeah? That's why you're on here [the bus].'
Later, Mr Grand told The Telegraph that the fracas was provoked when 'a young man from the crowd grabbed the flag', with his companion adding that the crowd had attempted 'to topple us to the ground'.
His companion said: 'I'm sure it would have devolved into a much worse situation had the police not got there so quickly.'
Mr Grand continued: 'At that point the bus was surrounded by this big Palestinian mob. It was terrifying.
'We had already been harassed, then they grabbed our flag, now we were trapped on this bus. It didn't seem like the police had any control over the situation. It seems to be almost anarchy at these protests.
'It's simply terrifying to exercise your rights to freedom of protest. You can't have an opinion in this country. The Met Police won't let you.'
He said that he intends to make a complaint about the officers' conduct.
It is understood that officers were seeking to protect the Jewish men from danger and recognised the risks of releasing them into the crowd alone.
The men left the protest unharmed on foot with a policeman escorting them, whom they thanked when they parted ways.
A Met Police spokesman said: 'This was a challenging protest which saw 13 arrests and a number of officers assaulted.
'Protesters surrounded police officers on multiple occasions and when two counter protesters started waving an Israeli flag and shouting on a megaphone, they surrounded them too.
'Officers intervened to protect the two men. They were held on an out of service bus for their own safety and not because they had committed a crime. When it was safe to do so, officers escorted them out of the area.
'As the officer explained at the time, the men had every right to protest, but it was unwise for two people to walk into a crowd of 500 people with opposing views and not expect a confrontation to follow. Had the situation been reversed with 500 pro-Israel supporters and two pro-Palestinian, the officers would have done the same thing.'
Series of accusations
The Met has been plagued with accusations of so-called 'two-tier' policing in recent years.
The Telegraph revealed earlier this month that a Jewish man was charged for holding a placard mocking Hezbollah's leader at a pro-Palestine protest in London after police claimed that the sign could cause 'distress' to terrorist sympathisers. The charges were later dropped.
At the same protest, Mohammad al-Mail, a pro-Palestinian activist, had shouted, 'I like an organisation that starts with H' through a megaphone at an anti-Israel protest last year. He was arrested but never charged.
Last year the Met admitted that it had made mistakes in its handling of pro-Palestine protests, with Matt Twist, the assistant commissioner, saying the force 'didn't get everything right'. However, he rejected accusations of two-tier policing, claiming that the force had an 'infinite number of tiers'.
The protest began at midday on Monday and swelled to a crowd of approximately 500 people, including masked protesters. Demonstrators played pro-IRA folk songs and the pro-Hamas red triangle symbol was stuck to a traffic light.
Supporters of Palestine Action, who are suspected of maliciously damaging two aircraft at RAF Brize Norton on Friday, had been planning to protest outside Parliament.
But they were forced to change the venue for the gathering at the 11th hour after Scotland Yard imposed an exclusion zone around Parliament Square and Whitehall.
Instead they gathered in Trafalgar Square with some protesters blocking traffic by sitting in the road, others waving Palestine flags and some singing the controversial chant: 'From the river to the sea, Palestine will be free.'
The Met said its officers 'faced violence' from the crowd when they went to 'speak to three individuals whose behaviour was arousing suspicion'.
A spokesman said six people were arrested for assaulting an emergency worker and two were arrested for obstructing an officer carrying out his duty. Four people who refused to move when the protest came to an end at 3pm were arrested for breaching public order conditions.
Another person was arrested on suspicion of a racially aggravated public order offence after they were heard shouting racial abuse.
Proscribed as terrorist organisation
During the rally, Yvette Cooper, the Home Secretary, told Parliament that Palestine Action would be proscribed as a terrorist organisation, alongside the likes of Hamas, Hezbollah and Islamic State, within weeks.
The Home Secretary's decision to proscribe Palestine Action is set to make membership and support for the protest group illegal.
Palestine Action has staged a series of demonstrations in recent months, including spraying the London offices of Allianz Insurance with red paint over its alleged links to Elbit, an Israeli defence company, and vandalising Donald Trump's Turnberry golf course in South Ayrshire.
A spokesman for Campaign Against Antisemitism said the latest incident was 'emblematic of the kind of intimidation and thuggish tactics that we have all come to expect from Palestine activists'.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

FTSE 100 underperforms despite Iran-Israel hope
FTSE 100 underperforms despite Iran-Israel hope

The Independent

time29 minutes ago

  • The Independent

FTSE 100 underperforms despite Iran-Israel hope

Stocks in London closed higher on Tuesday amid a fragile ceasefire between Iran and Israel, although early blue-chip gains were pegged back as oil majors and gold miners fell back. The FTSE 100 index closed up just 0.95 points at 8,758.99. It had earlier traded as high as 8,831.90. The FTSE 250 ended 205.25 points higher, 1.0%, at 21,326.20, and the AIM All-Share rose 3.25 points, 0.4%, at 762.54. In European equities on Tuesday, the Cac 40 in Paris closed up 1.1%, and the Dax 40 in Frankfurt ended 1.6% higher. US President Donald Trump said the truce between Iran and Israel was in effect a day after Tehran struck at a US base in Qatar, a move that came after US strikes on Iranian nuclear facilities. Israel struck Iran despite a warning from Mr Trump not to retaliate against an alleged Iranian breach of a ceasefire, but said it would refrain from further attacks. Iranian state television denied the country had violated the truce. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's office said his forces had hit a radar station near Tehran but would not launch any more assaults after a conversation with the US president. The ceasefire saw the oil price slump, dragging FTSE 100-listed BP and Shell down 4.8% and 3.6% respectively. On Tuesday, Brent oil traded sharply lower at 68.08 dollars a barrel, down from 76.39 dollars on Monday. Gold was quoted lower at 3,314.07 dollars an ounce against 3,387.65 dollars. Gold miner Endeavour Mining declined 5.8% while Fresnillo fell 2.5%. In contrast, airlines easyJet and British Airways owner IAG both climbed 6.4% on hopes for lower fuel costs and reduced travel disruption. On Wall Street, markets were higher at the time of the London close on Tuesday. The Dow Jones Industrial Average was up 1.0%, the S&P 500 was 0.9% higher, and the Nasdaq Composite gained 1.3%. Federal Reserve chairman Jerome Powell told Congress that the central bank can afford to wait for the impact of tariffs before deciding on further interest rate cuts – despite Mr Trump's calls to do so. The Fed has a duty to prevent a spike in prices from becoming an 'ongoing inflation problem', Mr Powell told the House Committee on Financial Services. 'For the time being, we are well positioned to wait to learn more about the likely course of the economy before considering any adjustments to our policy stance,' he added. His reiteration that the Fed can wait to lower rates comes after two Fed officials – Christopher Waller and Michelle Bowman – recently expressed openness to cuts as early as July. Hours before Mr Powell's testimony, Mr Trump again urged him to slash rates, saying these should be 'at least two to three points lower' given that inflation remains benign. Worries about possible tariffs were reflected in a drop in US consumer confidence figures. The Conference Board's consumer confidence index dropped by 5.4 points this month to 93.0, from 98.4 in May. 'Consumer confidence weakened in June, erasing almost half of May's sharp gains,' said Stephanie Guichard, a senior economist at the Conference Board. She added that the decline was 'broad-based', with consumers' assessments of current conditions and expectations of the future contributing to the deterioration. Mr Trump's sweeping tariffs are still at the forefront for consumers, and 'were frequently associated with concerns about their negative impacts on the economy and prices', Ms Guichard added. The yield on the US 10-year Treasury was 4.30%, down from 4.31%. The yield on the US 30-year Treasury was 4.85%, up from 4.84%. In the UK, Bank of England interest rate-setter Megan Greene warned that recent rises in inflation could prove longer-lasting than forecast, leaving policymakers in an 'uncomfortable place'. In a speech at the National Institute of Economic & Social Research, Monetary Policy Committee member Megan Greene said stubborn inflation of around 3.5% for the rest of the year could keep fuelling wage rises and price hikes in the UK. She said food prices have 'surprised consistently to the upside', adding that the Israel-Iran conflict could also push up inflation by putting pressure on oil prices. 'I worry about the near-term profile for inflation this year, which in my view now resembles more of a plateau than a hump,' she said. The pound was quoted up at 1.3621 dollars at the time of the London equities close on Tuesday, compared with 1.3501 dollars on Monday. Bunzl gave back strong early gains, closing up 0.2%, after backing full-year guidance. The London-based distribution and outsourcing company said revenue is expected to be 4% higher in the six months to June 30 than the previous year, at constant exchange rates, and up to 1% higher at actual exchange rates. Revenue was £5.71 billion in the six months ending on June 30 2024. Growth at constant exchange rates is expected to be driven by acquisitions, net of disposals, and with broadly flat underlying revenue over the period. Peel Hunt said the statement is likely to be 'well received' after the shock warning earlier in the year. 'It looks increasingly like it was 'one and done', and the focus can now return to the long-term attractions of the compounding model.' In April, shares in Bunzl slumped after it lowered guidance and paused its share buyback programme amid weaker-than-expected trading. Cruise operator Carnival jumped 11% as it reported its highest-ever second quarter operating results, and said it expects to continue to take its results higher over time. In the three months to the end of May, Carnival reported net income of 565 million dollars, multiplied from 92 million dollars a year earlier. Revenue rose 9.5% to 6.33 billion dollars from 5.78 billion dollars. On The Beach advanced 5.9% as RBC Capital Markets started coverage with an 'outperform' rating. The broker believes On the Beach can continue to take market share from 'legacy tour operators' in its core beach holidays market and grow its 'city break proposition'. The biggest risers on the FTSE 100 were JD Sports, up 4.7p at 76.5p, IAG, up 19.7p at 328.4p, easyJet, up 32.2p at 538.8p, Barclays, up 14.2p at 332.9p, and Intermediate Capital Group, up 70.0p at 1,980.0p. The biggest fallers were Endeavour Mining, down 144.0p at 2,212.0p, BP, down 18.4p at 367.9p, BAE Systems, down 79.0p at 1,801.0p, Shell, down 99.5p at 2,584.5p, and Glencore, down 10.3p at 275.1p.

Vengeful husband paid neighbour £1,500 to organise assassination of his ex-wife after she divorced him, court told
Vengeful husband paid neighbour £1,500 to organise assassination of his ex-wife after she divorced him, court told

Daily Mail​

time32 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Vengeful husband paid neighbour £1,500 to organise assassination of his ex-wife after she divorced him, court told

A vengeful husband paid a neighbour £1,500 to organise the assassination of his ex-wife after she divorced him, a court heard. Paul Lewis, 54, allegedly plotted to hire the hitman to execute his estranged wife of 10 years, Joanne Atkinson-Lewis, over divorce proceedings two years earlier. Former steelworker Lewis is accused of handing neighbour Dominique Saunders, 35, the £1,500 cash 'in good faith' to arrange the assassination. A court heard Saunders told Lewis there were photos and GoPro footage of the murder - and Lewis repeatedly asked to see it. But Lewis was stunned when weeks later he saw Joanne 'still breathing' at a nearby beach. Prosecutor William Hughes KC said police were called after Lewis allegedly confessed the murder plot to his son Kieran and his girlfriend Sydney West. Mr Hughes said: 'During a conversation Mr Lewis accepted that he entered into an agreement with Mr Saunders to arrange for his ex-wife to be killed. 'Kieran Lewis asked his father: "Have you put a hit out on Joanne?". 'Mr Lewis apparently broke down crying and nodded at his son acknowledging that he had made such an agreement.' Merthyr Tydfil Crown Court heard Miss West then confronted Saunders at his flat - and told him to return the money. But Saunders allegedly told her he 'had already given the money to someone else and couldn't give the money back.' Mr Hughes said Miss West asked Lewis: 'Do you understand you have paid someone to take someone's mother away? Paul Lewis replied 'yeah I know'.' Son Kieran called police who uncovered the alleged hitman plot in messages between the two men who lived in the same block of flats in Swansea. Mr Hughes said the messages revealed: 'Mr Lewis entered into an agreement in which he paid Mr Saunders £1,500 which the prosecution say was a fee to arrange for the killing of Joanne Atkinson-Lewis.' Mr Hughes said financial information showed Lewis withdrew £1,500 from his bank in Swansea and on the same day Saunders deposited a sum of £1,300 into his own account. Messages between the two men in the following days showed Lewis repeatedly saying he had given Saunders £1,500 'in good faith' and demanding to 'see the Go Pro' showing the alleged hit had been carried out. One message from Saunders read: 'Death becomes her.' The jury was told Lewis later messaged Saunders to say he had 'seen Joanne on Aberavon Prom and she was ok.' Saunders replied: 'Are you 99 per cent sure?' Lewis said: 'I am 100 per cent sure.' A day later Lewis messaged his neighbour again saying: 'I want her out.' Mr Hughes said the two men fell out after Lewis believed he had been scammed of his money and failed to collect Saunders from the airport following a holiday. One message from Saunders said: 'You mad or what? How have I scammed you? The bloke got your money to do work. I ain't got a thing so tell me how I scammed you.' Lewis replied: 'She is still breathing. Your story keeps changing. You said there were pictures on your phone, then it was on the GoPro. 'I've not even seen the pictures you're a liar.' Mr Hughes said: 'Those series of messages clearly demonstrate, we, say, Mr Lewis and Mr Saunders entered into a criminal agreement where Mr Lewis agreed to pay and did pay Mr Saunders £1,500 to facilitate the murder of Joanne Atkinson-Lewis. 'A reasonable interpretation is that Mr Saunders led Mr Lewis to believe he had paid a hitman to carry out the act and he had photographs on his phone or on his GoPro device. 'However once Paul Lewis saw his ex-wife was still alive and breathing on Aberavon Beach he realised the criminal agreement he made with Dominque Saunders hadn't been carried out.' The two men, both of Swansea, deny conspiracy to commit murder. The trial before judge Mr Justice Nicklin continues at Merthyr Tydfil Crown Court.

Police ‘very concerned' for 14-year-old missing for almost two weeks
Police ‘very concerned' for 14-year-old missing for almost two weeks

The Independent

time34 minutes ago

  • The Independent

Police ‘very concerned' for 14-year-old missing for almost two weeks

Police have said they are 'very concerned' for the wellbeing of a 14-year-old girl who disappeared from west London last week. Aaliyah Ekedi-Morrow was reported missing from the Ladbroke Grove area on Wednesday afternoon. She was last seen at 2:35pm, wearing her school uniform which includes a black blazer, a white shirt, a black skirt and a black and pink striped tie, the Metropolitan Police said. Detective Inspector William Peel said: 'Due to Aaliyah's age and the period of time she has been away from home we remain very concerned for her wellbeing. 'I urge anyone including Aaliyah's friends and family, who may have seen her or have information concerning her safety and whereabouts to please get in touch with police as soon as possible.' Police described her as having a slim build and light brown hair that she often wears in a bun. It added that she is also known to visit the Dollis Hill area. Anyone with information can call police on 101 or tweet @MetCC quoting CAD: 8071/11JUNE or contact the Missing People charity on 116 000.

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