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<a class="gmail-domain gmail-reader-domain" href="https://www.theguardian.com/world/2025/jul/12/arrests-for-second-week-running-at-london-event-that-references-palestine-action">theguardian.com</a>
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<h1 class="gmail-reader-title">More than 70 protesters across UK arrested for allegedly holding signs supporting Palestine Action</h1>
<div class="gmail-credits gmail-reader-credits">Sammy Gecsoyler</div>
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<div class="gmail-reader-estimated-time">July 12, 2025</div>
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<div class="gmail-moz-reader-content gmail-reader-show-element"><div id="gmail-readability-page-1" class="gmail-page"><div id="gmail-maincontent"><p>More
than 70 people have been arrested across the UK in several
demonstrations where references to Palestine Action were allegedly made,
a week after the group was banned as a terrorist organisation.</p><p>Protesters
gathered for the second week in a row in central London after police
reiterated that showing support for the group was a criminal offence,
resulting in the Metropolitan police making 42 arrests.</p><p>On
Saturday, shortly after 1pm, two small groups of protesters demonstrated
in Parliament Square, sitting at the steps of the statues of both
Mahatma Gandhi and Nelson Mandela. The action was organised by the
campaign group Defend Our Juries, which said more demonstrations were
due to take place elsewhere in London and in Manchester, Cardiff and
Derry.</p><p>Defend Our Juries said on X: \u201cOver 300 police officers have
been seen to carry away dozens of people from the foot of statues of
Nelson Mandela and Gandhi for alleged \u2018terrorism offences\u2019. Those
arrested are accused of holding signs in support of Palestine Action.\u201d</p><p>In
Manchester, 16 people holding signs referencing Palestine Action at the
foot of the Emmeline Pankhurst statue in St Peter\u2019s Square were
arrested.</p><p>A Greater Manchester police spokesperson said: \u201cAt
around 2.30pm this afternoon, we responded to a protest taking place in
St Peter\u2019s Square \u2013 16 people were arrested under the Terrorism Act
2000. The group peacefully dissipated at around 3.25pm.\u201d</p><p>In
Cardiff, 13 people who sat outside the BBC Cymru Wales headquarters
holding signs that appeared to express support for the group were
arrested.</p><p>A police spokesperson said: \u201cSouth Wales police supports
the right for people to make their voices heard through protest
providing it is done lawfully. We can confirm that 13 people were
arrested earlier today during a protest which took place in the vicinity
of Central Square, Cardiff.\u201d</p><p>\u201cThey were arrested on suspicion of committing offences under section 12 of the Terrorism Act 2000.\u201d</p><p>Defend
Our Juries said officers in Manchester pushed \u201cthrough crowds of
onlookers to arrest sign-holders, including three vicars and many
pensioners\u201d.</p><p>In London, Met officers formed a cordon around those
demonstrating, who wrote messages appearing to support Palestine Action
with black markers on pieces of cardboard, and silently held the signs
aloft.</p><p>Officers could be seen searching the bags of protesters and
taking their ID cards. Some demonstrators could be seen lying on top of
each other while police held their handmade signs.</p><p>The protesters were then led away from the statues by officers into waiting police vans parked around the square.</p><p>Yvette
Cooper, the home secretary, announced plans to ban Palestine Action
late last month, days after activists from the group allegedly broke
into RAF Brize Norton and defaced two military aircraft with spray
paint.</p><p>MPs voted in favour of proscribing the group on 2 July. The House of Lords backed the move without a vote the following day.</p><p>UN
experts, civil liberties groups, cultural figures and hundreds of
lawyers have condemned the ban as draconian and said it sets a dangerous
precedent by conflating protest with terrorism.</p><p>The ban means
Palestine Action has become the first direct action protest group to be
banned under the Terrorism Act, placing it in the same category as
Islamic State, al-Qaida and the far-right group National Action.</p></div></div></div>
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