Viral clip shows London police ‘assaulting’ pro-Palestine activist

A video has surfaced online appearing to show a pro-Palestine campaigner being violently arrested by London’s Metropolitan Police. (Screesnhot/X/@SiddiqiSyed)
A video has surfaced online appearing to show a pro-Palestine campaigner being violently arrested by London’s Metropolitan Police. (Screesnhot/X/@SiddiqiSyed)
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Updated 13 July 2024
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Viral clip shows London police ‘assaulting’ pro-Palestine activist

Viral clip shows London police ‘assaulting’ pro-Palestine activist
  • Man punched in head multiple times as group of officers stage arrest
  • Ex-Labour Party staffer condemns ‘level of violence’ seen in footage

LONDON: A video has surfaced online appearing to show a pro-Palestine campaigner being violently arrested by London’s Metropolitan Police.

The clip, which was met with angered reaction across social media, follows a series of policing controversies in the UK capital amid weekly pro-Palestine rallies.

In the video, a man is seen protesting his arrest as he stands next to a convertible bearing a large Palestinian flag and a sign saying: “Free Palestine. Stop Gaza genocide.”

A group of officers drag the man to the ground, punching him in the head as he shouts: “I haven’t done nothing. I haven’t done nothing.”

The clip was filmed in the borough of Tower Hamlets, home to a large Muslim community.

Halima Khan, a former Labour Party staffer who ran as a parliamentary candidate in the UK general election last week, condemned the violence seen in the footage.

“The level of violence by the hands of the London Metropolitan Police in East London, for just waving the flag of Palestine. Are we Britain or are we Israel,” she wrote on X.

Other users responded to Khan’s post, criticizing the Met officers for their conduct. One said: “I am tired of answering that question. Is our police force trained in Israel? The Itamar Ben-Gvir school of policing.”

Another said: “There should be charges against that officer — you can clearly see his rage. That man didn’t do anything.”

The officer in question, who is seen in the clip throwing multiple punches at the activist’s head, was accused by another X user of wanting to cause “maximum damage” as part of a “premeditated” attack.

The Met Police, in an online statement, denied that the man was arrested for having a Palestinian flag.

Superintendent Brittany Clarke said: “We’re aware of the video and commentary online following an incident that took place in Whitechapel Road ... A PCSO (police community support officer) requested urgent assistance from officer colleagues. A man was arrested for assault on police and is in custody at this time.”

Clarke added that the Met’s Directorate of Professional Standards is reviewing the footage and body-worn camera videos from the officers involved.

“I can assure local people that we are understanding of their concerns and that we will be working to establish the circumstances,” she said.

The controversy is the latest to beset the Met Police, after the force was accused of using heavy-handed tactics to clamp down on the weekly pro-Palestine rallies that have taken place in London since last October.


Man jailed in UK for threatening to burn down mosques and kill Muslim worshippers

Man jailed in UK for threatening to burn down mosques and kill Muslim worshippers
Updated 16 August 2024
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Man jailed in UK for threatening to burn down mosques and kill Muslim worshippers

Man jailed in UK for threatening to burn down mosques and kill Muslim worshippers
  • lake Hindry, who was sentenced to two and a half years in prison after pleading guilty to all charges, called fives separate moques

LONDON: A man in the UK was jailed on Friday for threatening to burn down five mosques and kill Muslim leaders and worshippers inside the buildings.

Blake Hindry, who was sentenced to two and a half years in prison after pleading guilty to all charges, called fives separate moques in London and threatened to set fire to them, it was revealed.

During the calls made on Aug. 5, he also said that he would kill everyone inside the buildings. He was arrested three days later, the BBC reported.

The Metropolitan Police said that it “worked around the clock” to trace the calls to Hindry and hoped that justice would be served for communities who felt threatened by an upsurge in right-wing violence, which has targeted migrants and members of the Muslim community.

“We understand that Muslim communities have felt particularly concerned for their safety following the violent disorder and criminality the country has seen in recent weeks,” Metropolitan Police commander Louise Puddefoot said in a statement.

“Our teams continue to investigate all offenses committed during this period of disorder as we work hard to build trust and confidence in communities,” she said.

The riots — the worst in the UK since 2011 — erupted after a knife attack that killed three girls during a dance class on July 29 in Southport.

False rumors spread on social media that the suspect was a Muslim asylum seeker sparked anger and unrest, with anti-immigration riots raging for more than a week, leading to more than 1,000 arrests.

Also on Friday, British police charged an 18-year-old man and a 19-year-old woman with terrorism offenses after an investigation into suspected extreme right-wing terrorism activity.


Ukraine army chief says Kursk offensive ‘has advanced’

Ukraine army chief says Kursk offensive ‘has advanced’
Updated 16 August 2024
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Ukraine army chief says Kursk offensive ‘has advanced’

Ukraine army chief says Kursk offensive ‘has advanced’
  • Syrsky said that fighting continued along the entire front line and that he hoped to take “many prisoners“

KYIV: The head of the Ukrainian military Oleksandr Syrsky said Friday that the offensive in Russia’s Kursk region had advanced further.
“The troops of the offensive group continue to fight and have advanced in some areas from one to three kilometers toward the enemy,” Syrsky told President Volodymyr Zelensky in a video posted on social media.
Syrsky said that fighting continued along the entire front line and that he hoped to take “many prisoners” from a battle ongoing in the village of Mala Loknya, about 13 kilometers (8 miles) from the border.
Ukraine launched a surprise offensive across the border 10 days ago and Kyiv claims to have taken control of more than 80 settlements.


Belarus pardons 30 prisoners sentenced for protests: presidency

Belarus pardons 30 prisoners sentenced for protests: presidency
Updated 16 August 2024
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Belarus pardons 30 prisoners sentenced for protests: presidency

Belarus pardons 30 prisoners sentenced for protests: presidency
  • Lukashenko “signed a decree pardoning 30 people convicted for crimes related to protests,” the statement said
  • Those pardoned are 14 women and 16 men, the site added: “Some of them have serious illnesses“

WARSAW: Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko on Friday pardoned 30 prisoners convicted over protests, the presidential website said.
Lukashenko “signed a decree pardoning 30 people convicted for crimes related to protests,” the statement said, without giving names.
Those pardoned are 14 women and 16 men, the site added: “Some of them have serious illnesses. There are people of retirement age.”
All those pardoned “admitted guilt, sincerely repented for what they did and committed to a law-abiding way of life,” the statement added.
Moscow-ally Lukashenko crushed mass pro-democracy protests after an election on August 9, 2020, in which the government was widely condemned for having allegedly falsified results.
Leading rights group Viasna estimates Belarus has around 1,400 political prisoners. Thousands more people have fled the country.
In July, 18 political prisoners were amnestied or released on exchange, according to Viasna.
Lukashenko last month pardoned a German man, Rico Krieger, sentenced to death on espionage charges, who was exchanged in a large-scale prisoner swap involving the United States and Russia.


Most suspects in a 2023 anti-Christian rampage in Pakistan are still at large, a rights group says

Most suspects in a 2023 anti-Christian rampage in Pakistan are still at large, a rights group says
Updated 16 August 2024
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Most suspects in a 2023 anti-Christian rampage in Pakistan are still at large, a rights group says

Most suspects in a 2023 anti-Christian rampage in Pakistan are still at large, a rights group says
  • “More than 90 percent of the suspects of the attack in Jaranwala, in Punjab’s Faisalabad district, are still at large,” Amnesty International said
  • The violence erupted after Muslims alleged that they saw a local Christian and his friend desecrating pages from a Qur’an

MULTAN, Pakistan: Most of the suspects in a rampage last year against minority Christians in eastern Pakistan over alleged blasphemy are not in custody and authorities have failed to deliver justice to the victims, a human rights group said Friday.
“More than 90 percent of the suspects of the attack in Jaranwala, in Punjab’s Faisalabad district, are still at large,” Amnesty International said in a statement on the anniversary of one of Pakistan’s worst attacks on Christians, in which churches and homes of Christians were destroyed.
The violence erupted after Muslims alleged that they saw a local Christian and his friend desecrating pages from a Qur’an. The attack drew nationwide condemnation. No one died, as terrified Christians quickly fled to safer places.
Amnesty International said it obtained its information from police after filing a Right to Information Request. It said of the 5,213 accused, 380 were arrested and 4,833 were still at large. It said of those who were arrested, 228 were released on bail and 77 others had the charges against them dropped.
It said trials of the suspects have not started and about 40 percent of victims who lost property are still awaiting government compensation.
Abid Khan, the regional police chief, said investigators have referred the cases of suspects linked to the violence to an anti-terrorism court, and their trial was expected to start soon.
“Despite the authorities’ assurances of accountability, the grossly inadequate action has allowed a climate of impunity for the perpetrators of the Jaranwala violence,” Babu Ram Pant, Amnesty International’s deputy regional director for South Asia, said in the statement.
Blasphemy accusations are common in Pakistan. Under its laws, anyone found guilty of insulting Islam or Islamic religious figures can be sentenced to death. While authorities have yet to carry out any death sentences for blasphemy, often just the accusation can spark riots and incite mobs to violence, lynching and killings.
Yaqoob Yousaf, a priest in Jaranwala, told The Associated Press on Friday that most of the suspects in the attacks had been freed. He said attacks on Christians on false accusations are continuing and that Christians are “still living in a state of fear” in various parts of the country.


Poland denies involvement in Nord Stream sabotage

Poland denies involvement in Nord Stream sabotage
Updated 16 August 2024
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Poland denies involvement in Nord Stream sabotage

Poland denies involvement in Nord Stream sabotage
  • “Poland did not take part in anything. It has to be said clearly that this is a lie,” the minister, Krzysztof Gawkowski, said
  • Gawkowski was speaking after former German intelligence chief August Hanning accused Poland of working with Ukraine on the sabotage

WARSAW: A Polish deputy prime minister on Friday denied his country’s involvement in the sabotage of the Nord Stream gas pipelines in the Baltic Sea in September 2022.
“Poland did not take part in anything. It has to be said clearly that this is a lie,” the minister, Krzysztof Gawkowski, told TV channel Polsat News.
Gawkowski was speaking after former German intelligence chief August Hanning, who held the post between 1998 and 2005, accused Poland of working with Ukraine on the sabotage.
Kyiv has also strongly denied any role.
“It looks like it was a Ukrainian team that acted, according to the results of the investigation,” Hanning said in an interview with the Die Welt daily.
“It is quite obvious that Polish authorities were involved,” he said, calling for Germany to demand compensation from Kyiv and Warsaw.
Gawkowski firmly denied the accusation.
“I think this is Russian disinformation resonating through the words of German politicians,” he said.
“Either they are acting under the influence” of Moscow “or they know that this will lead to divisions between NATO member states,” he said.
Polish prosecutors on Wednesday told AFP they had received an arrest warrant issued by Berlin for a Ukrainian diver residing in Poland accused of involvement in the blasts.
But Warsaw said he left the country before he could be detained.
On Thursday, Ukraine said the accusation of its involvement was “absolute nonsense” after a detailed report in the Wall Street Journal.
Nord Stream’s twin gas pipelines, which ran from Russia to Germany under the Baltic Sea, came under intense scrutiny when Moscow invaded Ukraine in February 2022.
Several large gas leaks were discovered emanating from the pipelines in September 2022, with seismic institutes recording underwater explosions just before.