Almost 900 arrested at central London Palestine Action protest
857 were arrested for showing support for a proscribed group, while 33 people were arrested for assaulting police officers and other public order offences. Picture: Jeff Moore/PA
Almost 900 demonstrators were arrested at a central London rally protesting against the banning of Palestine Action as a terror group, the Metropolitan Police has said.
An estimated 1,500 took part in the protest in Parliament Square, Westminster, on Saturday and the force condemned the âintolerableâ abuse it claims its officers suffered.
But organisers, campaign group Defend Our Juries (DOJ), insisted the rally was âthe picture of peaceful protestâ, with attendees sitting and holding signs, and called on new UK home secretary Shabana Mahmood to drop the âunenforceableâ ban.
A total of 890 people were arrested, with 857 arrests made for showing support for a proscribed group, while 33 people were arrested for assaulting police officers and other public order offences.
Deputy Assistant Commissioner Claire Smart said: âThe violence we encountered during the operation was co-ordinated and carried out by a group of people, many wearing masks to conceal their identity, intent on creating as much disorder as possible. Many of those individuals have now been arrested and we have begun securing charges.
âThe contrast between this demonstration and the other protests we policed yesterday, including the Palestine Coalition march attended by around 20,000 people, was stark.
âYou can express your support for a cause without committing an offence under the Terrorism Act or descending into violence and disorder, and many thousands of people do that in London every week.
âWe have a duty to enforce the law without fear or favour. If you advertise that you are intending to commit a crime, we have no option but to respond accordingly.â
In response to the final arrest numbers, a DoJ spokesperson said: âThe fact that 857 out of 1,500 were arrested and that this took 11 hours, makes a mockery of the ban on Palestine Action and shows once again that it is impossible to enforce.
âRather than arrest thousands more ordinary citizens, from vicars and priests, war veterans and descendants of Holocaust survivors to retired teachers and healthcare workers, who are predominantly elderly and many disabled, the new Home Secretary must rethink what is becoming Labourâs poll tax moment, which is making the UK the subject of condemnation and ridicule around the world.
âRegarding the Metâs false claims smearing the protesters, this is simply a desperate attempt to deflect from the embarrassment caused to Sir Mark Rowley after he pledged the Met would arrest every person who held a sign saying âI oppose genocide. I support Palestine Actionâ.â
On Sunday, UK defence secretary John Healey said Ms Mahmood will be âjust as toughâ on Palestine Action as her Home Office predecessor, Yvette Cooper, who moved to the UK foreign office as part of Keir Starmerâs wide-ranging Cabinet reshuffle on Friday.
Asked whether there would be a shift in government policy on the group, Mr Healey said: âI expect Shabana Mahmood to be just as tough as Yvette Cooper and I expect her to defend the decision the Governmentâs taken on Palestine Action, because of what some of its members are responsible for and were planning.â
âIf we want to avoid a two-tier policing and justice system in this country, when people break the law, there have to be consequences,â he told Sky Newsâs .
âThatâs what was happening yesterday, and I, we, almost everybody shares the agony when we see the images from Gaza, the anguish when we see the man-made starvation, and for people who want to voice their concern and protest, I applaud them.
âBut that does not require them to link it to support for Palestine Action, a proscribed group.â
Protesters also gathered for separate demonstrations in Belfast and Edinburgh on Saturday, and Police Scotland said two men, aged 67 and 82, were arrested and charged with terror offences while a third man, 63, was charged with a hate crime following protests.
Palestine Action was banned as a terror organisation in July after the group claimed responsibility for an action in which two Voyager planes were damaged at RAF Brize Norton on June 20.
The UK home office is set to appeal against the High Court ruling allowing Palestine Actionâs co-founder, Huda Ammori, to proceed with a legal challenge against the UK government over the groupâs ban.





