Yvette Cooper defends arrest of more than 500 people after Palestine Action protests
The home secretary said protesters over the weekend may have been objecting to the group being proscribed as a terror group because they "don't know the full nature of this organisation".
Ms Cooper said that could be due to reporting restrictions on court hearings "while serious prosecutions are underway".
Politics latest:
A total of on suspicion of supporting a proscribed organisation contrary to Section 13 of the Terrorism Act 2000.
Around half of them (259) were aged 60 and above - including almost 100 people who were in their 70s.
The Met Police said it was the largest number of arrests it had made related to a single operation in at least the past decade.
Ms Cooper added: "Proscription is not about protest around Palestine or Gaza, where we had tens of thousands of people protesting lawfully just this weekend about some of the horrendous events that we've seen in the Middle East."
She said members of Palestine Action have carried out violent attacks causing injuries and involving weapons and smoke bombs "causing panic among innocent people" and major criminal damage against national security infrastructure.
The home secretary added there had been "clear security assessments and advice" before Palestine Action was proscribed as a terror organisation in July.
Human rights group about the arrests this weekend.
Its UK chief executive, Sacha Deshmukh, 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.
"Instead of criminalising peaceful demonstrators, the government should be focusing on taking immediate and unequivocal action to put a stop to Israel's genocide and ending any risk of UK complicity in it."
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