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UK pensioner, student arrested for backing Palestine Action

UK pensioner, student arrested for backing Palestine Action

Bangkok Post07-08-2025
LONDON — Pensioner Marji Mansfield never imagined she would end up suspected of terrorism for protesting against the banning of a pro-Palestinian group.
But the British grandmother was arrested on July 5 for joining a demonstration in support of Palestine Action just days after it was added to the United Kingdom (UK) government's list of proscribed organisations.
"It's a terrible shock to be accused of potentially being a terrorist," said Mansfield, 68, who described herself as a "proud grandmother" of seven.
She "was never politically interested," the former banking consultant from the southern town of Chichester told Agence France-Presse (AFP). "I just worked hard, raised my family, lived an ordinary life."
In early July, the UK government banned Palestine Action under the UK's Terrorism Act, after activists broke into an air force base in England and damaged two aircraft.
Since then, the campaign group Defend Our Juries has organised protests around the country to challenge the ban, described as "disproportionate" by the United Nations rights chief.
More than 200 people have been arrested, according to Tim Crosland, a member of Defend Our Juries. They risk prison sentences of up to 14 years.
British police on Thursday said they had charged two men and a woman over the July 5 protest, adding that they were sending files on the 26 other people arrested that day to prosecutors.
A new demonstration in support of the group, which was founded in 2020, is planned on Saturday in London. Organisers expect at least 500 people to turn up, and police have warned all demonstrators could face arrest.
People "don't know what the nature of this group is," interior minister Yvette Cooper has said, claiming that "this is not a non-violent group".
But Palestine Action co-founder Huda Ammori has launched a court bid to overturn the ban and a hearing is set for November.
Some 52 scholars, including well-known authors Tariq Ali and Naomi Klein, backed the bid in an open letter published in Thursday's Guardian, calling the ban an attack on "fundamental freedoms of expression, association, assembly and protest."
'Not terrorists'
Mansfield has long supported the Palestinian people, but the start of the current war, sparked by Hamas's attacks on Israel on Oct 7, 2023, galvanised her into action.
"When it started happening again ... it was the most horrible feeling, that children's homes were being blown up, that their schools were being destroyed," she said.
Hamas's October 2023 attack on southern Israel resulted in the deaths of 1,219 people, mostly civilians, according to an AFP tally based on official figures.
Israel's subsequent campaign to eradicate the Palestinian militant group in Gaza has killed more than 60,000 people, also mostly civilians, according to figures from the Hamas-run territory's health ministry, which are deemed reliable by the United Nations.
For Mansfield, the Palestine Action ban was the final straw, fuelling her feelings that the government was silencing her political views.
The night before attending the July demonstration, Mansfield said she was "terrified". But she did not change her mind.
Images on British media showed her being moved by several police officers after she refused to get up from the pavement. An 83-year-old woman was by her side.
Mansfield spent 12 hours in custody, and is now banned from parts of London, meaning she cannot visit some museums with her grandchildren as she would like to do.
"It was just ordinary people," said Mansfield. "We came from all backgrounds ... we're not terrorists."
'Civil liberties'
Alice Clark, a 49-year-old doctor, also does not regret attending the protest where she was arrested in London on July 19.
"Nobody wants to be arrested. I just feel that there's a responsibility," said Clark, who also accused the government of undermining "our civil liberties".
Cooper said the ban on Palestine Action was "based on detailed security assessments and security advice".
The ban says the group's "methods have become more aggressive" by encouraging members to carry out attacks which have already caused millions of pounds in damage.
But Clark, a former volunteer for medical charity Doctors Without Borders, said she felt "growing disgust and horror" at the images of starving children in Gaza.
The 12 hours in custody after her arrest were a shock. If convicted, she risks losing her licence to practice medicine.
"There were points where I was close to tears. But I think just remembering why I was doing it kind of helped me keep calm," said Clark.
History student Zahra Ali, 18, was also arrested on July 19, before being released under supervision. None of the three women has been charged.
She is also appalled by the scenes from Gaza.
AFP.
Imagining herself in prison at 18 is "a big thing," but "if people who are in their 80s can do it, then I can do it," Ali said.
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A difference of opinion
A difference of opinion

Bangkok Post

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A difference of opinion

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British man faces mob attack after wheelie stunt injures Thai woman
British man faces mob attack after wheelie stunt injures Thai woman

Bangkok Post

time2 days ago

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British man faces mob attack after wheelie stunt injures Thai woman

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Mob attacks British man after wheelie stunt injures Thai woman
Mob attacks British man after wheelie stunt injures Thai woman

Bangkok Post

time2 days ago

  • Bangkok Post

Mob attacks British man after wheelie stunt injures Thai woman

A British man was injured in an angry mob attack after allegedly performing a wheelie on an electric dirt bike and crashing into a Thai woman's motorcycle in Pattaya late Wednesday, resulting in serious injuries. The crash happened around 11.06pm on Soi Bongkot 8 in Bang Lamung district. Rescuers found a pink Honda Scoopy lying damaged in the middle of the road, with its rider, identified only as Jurairat, suffering a head injury and severe lacerations. The rescue team performed CPR before rushing the 49-year-old woman to a hospital. According to witnesses, they saw the British rider performing a wheelie before losing control and slamming into the woman's motorcycle. However, witnesses said that the injured man blamed Ms Jurairat for the collision. rescuers provided first aid. proceedings for all parties.

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