UK police arrest more than 70 protesters for allegedly supporting banned Palestine Action group

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Updated 13 July 2025
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UK police arrest more than 70 protesters for allegedly supporting banned Palestine Action group

UK police arrest more than 70 protesters for allegedly supporting banned Palestine Action group
  • Protest marked second consecutive weekend of arrests over alleged references to the proscribed organization

LONDON: More than 70 people were arrested Saturday at protests in the UK against the Palestine Action group being proscribed a terrorist organization by the British government following a break-in and vandalism at a Royal Air Force base.

In London, the Metropolitan Police arrested 42 people during a protest in Parliament Square. All but one of the arrests were for showing support for a proscribed organization, which police have said includes chanting, wearing clothing or displaying articles such as flags, signs or logos. Another person was arrested for common assault.

Sixteen more arrests were made in Manchester, according to Greater Manchester Police, while South Wales Police said 13 people were also held in Cardiff.

The protests marked the second consecutive weekend of arrests over alleged references to the proscribed organization. Its outlawing has meant support for the organization is deemed a criminal offense. Police arrested 29 people at a similar protest last weekend.

The demonstration was part of a coordinated campaign by the group Defend Our Juries, which held simultaneous actions in other UK cities including Manchester, Cardiff, and Derry.

 

Defend Our Juries said on X: “Over 300 police officers have been seen to carry away dozens of people from the foot of statues of Nelson Mandela and Gandhi for alleged ‘terrorism offences’. Those arrested are accused of holding signs in support of Palestine Action.”

Officers were seen cordoning off demonstrators, searching their bags, inspecting ID cards, and seizing signs. Some protesters lay atop one another as police moved in to confiscate their placards. The demonstrators’ signs reportedly included messages such as: “I oppose genocide. I support Palestine Action.” 

The protest comes days after the UK government’s controversial decision to ban Palestine Action under the Terrorism Act.

The move followed an incident in which activists allegedly broke into RAF Brize Norton and defaced two military aircraft with spray paint.

The ban was announced by Home Secretary Yvette Cooper in late June and formally approved by MPs last Wednesday.

The House of Lords backed the decision without a vote the following day. It marks the first time a direct action protest group has been proscribed under terrorism legislation in the UK, placing Palestine Action in the same legal category as Hamas, al-Qaeda, and Islamic State.

Under the new law, supporting or promoting the group now carries a prison sentence of up to 14 years.

Palestine Action is known for its campaigns targeting Israeli and Israeli-linked businesses in Britain, particularly defense firm Elbit Systems.




A protester is carried away after being arrested as people gather in support of the pro-Palestinian group "Palestine Action", in Parliament Square, London on July 12, 2025. (AFP)

Its protests have included blocking entrances, damaging property, and spraying buildings with red paint to symbolise blood.

Critics of the ban say the government is conflating protest with terrorism and suppressing legitimate dissent.

In a failed legal challenge to the proscription, a lawyer for Palestine Action argued the government’s move marked “the first time Britain had proscribed a group which undertook this type of direct action.”




Police officers carry a detained demonstrator, during a protest calling for the de-proscription of the Palestine Action group, in Manchester, Britain, on July 12, 2025. (REUTERS)

UN experts, human rights organisations, cultural figures, and hundreds of lawyers have also voiced alarm over the decision, warning it sets a dangerous precedent for criminalizing civil disobedience.

Saturday’s demonstration echoed scenes from the previous weekend, when 29 protesters, including 83-year-old former priest Rev Sue Parfitt, were arrested at a similar gathering in Parliament Square.

In Manchester, police also made arrests at a protest in support of Palestine Action, while peaceful demonstrations took place in Cardiff and Derry.

The controversy surrounding Palestine Action’s ban comes amid heightened tensions over the war in Gaza, where the International Court of Justice in The Hague is hearing a case brought by South Africa accusing Israel of committing genocide against Palestinians. Israel denies all allegations of wrongdoing.

( With Agencies )


US airlines cancel 1,200 flights Tuesday as shutdown continues

US airlines cancel 1,200 flights Tuesday as shutdown continues
Updated 19 sec ago
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US airlines cancel 1,200 flights Tuesday as shutdown continues

US airlines cancel 1,200 flights Tuesday as shutdown continues
  • After airlines canceled 2,400 flights and delayed 9,600 on Monday, airlines delayed just 1,700 on Tuesday, the best performance for the industry in recent days

WASHINGTON: Airlines canceled 1,200 flights on Tuesday as air traffic control staffing improved significantly ahead of an expected end to a record-setting government shutdown as soon as Wednesday.

After airlines canceled 2,400 flights and delayed 9,600 on Monday, airlines delayed just 1,700 on Tuesday, the best performance for the industry in recent days.

Last week, the Federal Aviation Administration instructed airlines to cut 4 percent of daily flights starting on Friday, November 7, at 40 major airports because of air traffic control staffing issues. Reductions in flights rose to 6 percent on Tuesday.

Flight reductions were set to hit 8 percent on Thursday and 10 percent on Friday, November 14. Airlines and the FAA are in discussions about when and how the cuts will be reduced and eventually eliminated as a record-setting 42-day government shutdown nears an end.

On Monday, President Donald Trump threatened to dock the pay of any controller who did not return to work and would welcome the resignations of workers who were not diligent in showing up for work.

Some airlines are holding off on cutting 8 percent of flights for Thursday. United Airlines said Tuesday it has cut about 5 percent of Thursday flights.

Several options are being discussed for how the FAA might end or shrink the flight cuts, sources told Reuters.

Air traffic control staffing shortages improved dramatically on Tuesday after more than two dozen issues on Monday. Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy said just four staffing issues were reported Tuesday, down from 81 Saturday.

Duffy said at a press conference at Chicago O’Hare that he will reduce flight cuts as safety allows.

“When that data changes, we’re going to start taking that down from 6 percent, maybe we’ll go to four, two, and get back to normal air travel,” Duffy said. “It depends on controllers coming back to work.”

On Monday night, the Senate voted to approve legislation to end the shutdown and fund the government through January 30. The House is set to take it up on Wednesday. Duffy said that if the House did not approve the bill that flight disruptions could skyrocket this weekend and some major airlines might not keep flying. “That’s how serious this is,” Duffy said.

Air traffic absences have led to tens of thousands of flight cancelations and delays since October 1 when the shutdown began. Over the weekend, 1.2 million passengers were delayed or had their flight cancelations due to air traffic controller absences.

The shutdown, the longest in US history, has forced 13,000 air traffic controllers and 50,000 Transportation Security Administration agents to work without pay.

The FAA is about 3,500 air traffic controllers short of targeted staffing levels. Many had been working mandatory overtime and six-day weeks even before the shutdown. 

 

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