
High Court to hear bid to challenge Palestine Action ban
The ban means that membership of, or support for, the direct action group is now a criminal offence punishable by up to 14 years in prison, under the Terrorism Act 2000.
The Government is opposing the bid for the legal challenge to be allowed to proceed, with the hearing before Mr Justice Chamberlain due to begin at 10.30am on Monday at the Royal Courts of Justice.
Ms Cooper announced plans to proscribe Palestine Action on June 23, stating that the vandalism of the two planes, which police said caused an estimated £7 million of damage, was 'disgraceful'.
Four people – Amy Gardiner-Gibson, 29, Jony Cink, 24, Daniel Jeronymides-Norie, 36, and Lewis Chiaramello, 22 – have all been charged in connection with the incident, and are due to face trial in early 2027.
Protesters outside the Royal Courts of Justice on The Strand, central London, earlier in July (Lucy North/PA)
Since the ban came into force, dozens of people have been arrested at protests in cities including London, Manchester and Cardiff, including an 83-year-old reverend.
At the hearing earlier this month, Raza Husain KC, for Ms Ammori, said the proscription was an 'ill-considered, discriminatory and authoritarian abuse of statutory power'.
He also said that the Home Office 'has still not sufficiently articulated or evidenced a national security reason that proscription should be brought into effect now'.
Blinne Ni Ghralaigh KC, also representing Ms Ammori, told the court that the harm caused by the ban would be 'far-reaching' and could cause 'irreparable harm to large numbers of members of the public', including causing some to 'self-censor'.
Ben Watson KC, for the Home Office, said Palestine Action could challenge the Home Secretary's decision at the Proscribed Organisations Appeal Commission (POAC), a specialist tribunal, rather than at the High Court.
Mr Justice Chamberlain said that an assessment on whether to ban the group had been made as early as March, and 'preceded' the incident at RAF Brize Norton.
Dismissing the bid for a temporary block, the judge said that the 'harm which would ensue' if a block was not ordered was 'insufficient to outweigh the strong public interest in maintaining the order in force'.
He added that some of the 'consequences feared by the claimant' were 'overstated'.
At a late-night Court of Appeal hearing, the Lady Chief Justice Baroness Carr, Lord Justice Lewis and Lord Justice Edis threw out a bid to challenge the High Court's decision, finding that there was 'no real prospect of a successful appeal'.

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BBC News
6 minutes ago
- BBC News
Palestine Action ban 'abuse of power', court told
The government's banning of Palestine Action as a terrorist organisation has the hallmarks of an authoritarian "abuse of power", the High Court has for the group's co-founder told a senior judge that the proscription of Palestine Action had made the UK an international outlier and placed legitimate protesters at risk of being criminalised if they speak out over the war in Ammori is asking the High Court for permission to directly and swiftly challenge Home Secretary Yvette Cooper's ban on the ban means that membership or support for Palestine Action is a crime under terrorism legislation that can lead to up to 14 years in jail. More than 170 people have been arrested since the ban under the Terrorism Act of 2000 was Action has engaged in activities that have predominantly targeted arms companies since the start of the current war in announced the ban, later approved by Parliament, after activists broke into RAF Brize Norton in Oxfordshire and allegedly caused some £7 million of damage to two RAF planes, which the organisation said were used to provide support to the Israeli military.A series of criminal prosecutions relating to incidents between 2022 and 2024 are currently before courts. Four people accused of the Brize Norton incident face trial more than a year from Husain KC, for Ms Ammori, told Mr Justice Chamberlain on Monday that the home secretary's ban was unlawful and she should be allowed to challenge it."The proscription of Palestine Action is repugnant to the tradition of the common law and contrary to the European Convention on Human Rights," he said."The decision is so extreme as to render the UK an international outlier. The decision to proscribe Palestine Action had the hallmarks of an authoritarian and blatant abuse of power." Ms Ammori's lawyers said the ban was having a "chilling effect" on legitimate of the people arrested since the ban had been holding signs reading: "I oppose genocide, I support Palestine Action".The court was told that one man in Leeds had been detained under terrorism powers for holding up a copy of an item in the satirical magazine Private Eye which had lampooned the another case, a 77-year-old woman from Keighley, West Yorkshire, was held over a placard that read: "I support NON-VIOLENT PALESTINE ACTION to oppose VIOLENCE AND GENOCIDE."Blinne Ní Ghrálaigh KC, also for Ms Ammori, added: "Dozens and dozens of people have been arrested for protesting, seated and mostly silent protest. Your task is to decide whether these are proportionate restrictions on free speech."The court heard that the government's internal assessment of Palestine Action, drawn up by the secret Joint Terrorism Analysis Centre inside MI5, had concluded that the majority of its activity did not cross the legal threshold for a the UK's legal definition of terrorism also encompasses the use of serious criminal damage to advance a cause. Speaking to BBC News ahead of the hearing, Cooper said the decision to proscribe the group was not aimed at restricting free speech."This is not about protesting or campaigning, be it about Palestine or about anything else," she said."This is instead, just about a particular organisation where there have been a series of violent attacks against national security targets and also have involved injuries and intimidation to people as well.""That is very different from both protest normal criminal law as well."Her lawyers told the court that Palestine Action had an alternative route to appeal a ban by going to a special court that would be set up just to deal with the added that if police had made mistakes in who had been arrested, that was not a reason to overturn the Justice Chamberlain said that he will give his ruling on 30 July.

The National
15 minutes ago
- The National
2 women charged over 'breaching arms factory' released on bail
One woman, aged 34, and another, aged 42, were charged with malicious mischief, "aggravated by reason of having a terrorist connection". The 42-year-old woman was also charged under the Road Traffic Act. This too was "aggravated by reason of having a terrorist connection", the charges stated. READ MORE: Banning Palestine Action an 'abuse of power', High Court told The third woman arrested in connection with the incident was charged with malicious mischief, and her application for bail continues into Tuesday. She will appear at Edinburgh Sheriff Court then. The incident at Leonardo took place earlier this month. The group Shut Down Leonardo claimed it was making components for F-35 fighter jets but the defence company says it does not directly supply equipment to Israel. READ MORE: Three men arrested under Terrorism Act after national Palestine demo in Edinburgh Protesters gathered outside [[Edinburgh]] Sheriff Court, where the three women appeared on Monday. One held a sign saying: '20,000 children killed! Labour's action helps Israel murder them'. Banners were also displayed for the pressure group Campaign Against Arms Trade and people waved Palestinian flags outside the court in Chambers Street in the capital. Leonardo produces weapons for the Israeli military including guns used in the maritime blockade of Gaza and its wholly-owned subsidiary RADA Electronic Industries makes software which supports the country's 'Iron Fist' system which provided cover for tanks used in the ground invasion and levelling of [[Gaza]], according to the Who Profits Research Centre.

The National
31 minutes ago
- The National
3 men, 78, 60, 58, arrested for 'Palestine Action support' in Edinburgh
The men, aged 78, 60, and 58, were all arrested in Edinburgh. The 78-year-old is known to have worn a T-shirt reading, "Genocide in Palestine, time to take action" at a protest on Saturday, and the 58-year-old held a sign near the Scottish Parliament on Monday. At Saturday's national demonstration in Edinburgh against the UK Government and the media's complicity in the genocide in Gaza, a group of activists wore T-shirts stating "Genocide in Palestine, time to take action" at the end of the rally. READ MORE: 'Time to take action': What it was like at the national Palestine demo in Edinburgh Officers were in attendance, but no arrests were made at the time. A Police Scotland spokesperson said: 'On Monday, 21 July 2025, two men, aged 78 and 60 years, were arrested under the Terrorism Act 2000 for showing support for a proscribed organisation at a protest in [[Edinburgh]] on Saturday, 19 July 2025 .' A later update states: "Three men have been arrested in Edinburgh under the Terrorism Act 2000 for showing support for a proscribed organisation. "Around 1.30pm on Monday, 21 July 2025, a 58-year-old man was arrested by officers in the vicinity of the Scottish Parliament for displaying a sign showing support for a proscribed organisation. "Reports will be submitted to the Procurator Fiscal." According to Defend Our Juries, the total of arrests to have taken place in the aftermath of the proscription of Palestine Action to nearly 200 within a fortnight in the UK and about 280 altogether, including the 80 arrested as part of a solidarity action in the Hague on July 5. Last year, the total number of terrorism related arrests in the UK was 248. There have also been 14 raids of sign-holders' private homes in Cardiff, Leeds, and Bradford. In Scotland, Sean Clerkin, 64, was arrested and has been charged under the Terrorism Act, after he displayed a placard stating "Genocide in Palestine, Time to Take Action". A 55-year-old man was also charged in Glasgow last week under suspicion of terror offences for wearing a T-shirt allegedly showing support for Palestine Action.