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FREEDOM OF SPEECH

Arrests at protests supporting UK's Palestine Action


A protester is detained by Met Police officers at a rally in support of Palestine Action after the British government announced the group’s ban, in London on June 23, 2025. (Credit: AFP)

A wave of protests in support of the banned group Palestine Action is underway in cities and towns across the U.K. ahead of a key court case next week.

Some 47 people were arrested Thursday in London as dozens gathered outside the justice ministry brandishing banners saying "I oppose genocide. I support Palestine Action."

If they are charged and sentenced under U.K. terrorism laws, they could risk up to six months in prison for holding such banners.

There were demonstrations in about 20 towns and cities on Tuesday with about 142 people being arrested out of 240 demonstrators, the protest organizers Defend Our Juries said.

More than 2,000 people have been arrested since Palestine Action was proscribed in July as a terrorist group, making it illegal to voice or show any support for them.

The government accuses the group of carrying out acts of vandalism on Israel-linked sites, including an air force base.

The group was added to a U.K. blacklist which also includes groups such as Hamas and Hezbollah. 

On Thursday, London police announced that 120 people had been charged for supporting the group after taking part in an Aug. 9 protest in the British capital. So far 254 people have been charged, it added.

The group's co-founder Huda Ammori is due to challenge the ban on Palestine Action during a three-day trial against the interior ministry starting on Tuesday, Nov. 25.

Threat to freedom of speech

Critics, including the United Nations and campaign groups such as Amnesty International and Greenpeace, have condemned the ban as legal overreach and a threat to freedom of speech.

Elizabeth, a 54-year-old doctor, told AFP she was taking part in Thursday's protest "to support Palestine and Palestine Action."

"And also to protest against the government, which is turning out to be more of an authoritarian government than a democratic one," she said.

"I'm afraid that there will come a time, very soon, where there won't be any civil liberty."

Six people who are on trial accused of breaking into an Israel-based defense firm's U.K. site last year and causing more than £1 million of damage with sledgehammers appeared in a U.K. court on Monday. 

A group of around two dozen protesters, holding banners and Palestinian flags, gathered outside the court on Monday, with their shouts of "Free Palestine" audible inside the courtroom ahead of the start of the trial.

According to Defend Our Juries, six jailed activists linked to Palestine Action have launched a hunger strike calling to be released on bail and demanding the group be de-proscribed.

A wave of protests in support of the banned group Palestine Action is underway in cities and towns across the U.K. ahead of a key court case next week.Some 47 people were arrested Thursday in London as dozens gathered outside the justice ministry brandishing banners saying "I oppose genocide. I support Palestine Action."If they are charged and sentenced under U.K. terrorism laws, they could risk up to six months in prison for holding such banners.There were demonstrations in about 20 towns and cities on Tuesday with about 142 people being arrested out of 240 demonstrators, the protest organizers Defend Our Juries said.More than 2,000 people have been arrested since Palestine Action was proscribed in July as a terrorist group, making it illegal to voice or show any support for them.The government accuses the group of carrying...