
Every week now we see more evidence of harassment and criminalisation of protest, especially round the Palestine movement. A woman in Canterbury was threatened with arrest by armed police for waving a Palestine flag and having a placard condemning Israel’s genocide. Councillor Michael Lavalette in Preston has been called in for an interview under caution over a Facebook post about intifada. Dozens have been arrested for displaying placards or T-shirts in support of Palestine Action. Saturday’s national demonstration in London was greeted with dystopian signs telling us that ‘Threatening or abusive chants may lead to arrest’ and ‘It’s an offence to support a proscribed organisation’. Those on remand for spray painting planes at Brize Norton are told that their trials will not be until 2027 – a breach of their civil liberties and human rights.
The repression is rising. Even in November 2023, Suella Braverman, then Tory Home Secretary, was unable to ban our marches which she described as ‘hate marches’. Under a Labour government we are seeing increased powers granted to the police, the proscription of a non-violent direct action group as terrorist, and creeping restrictions on what we can say or do. The attempt is to demonise or criminalise support for Palestine and to widen the scope of illegality so that actions which should be regarded as perfectly normal parts of solidarity protests suddenly become illegal.
We should be clear why this is happening. Our government and its allies are losing the argument over Palestine, so they want to stop us making it. Opinion worldwide has firmly turned against the Israeli genocide in Gaza. In Britain all the attempts to ban, demonise, and attack the solidarity movement have failed to halt the growing number of demonstrations, BDS actions, meetings, bike rides, bake sales, boating regattas, and much more. Only this week, Edinburgh University students organised mass protests at their graduation ceremonies demanding disinvestment. An impressive 22 union general secretaries have signed a letter opposing the criminalisation of leaders of the movement who are facing trial.
The response of the British government to the appalling daily murders in Gaza, to the deliberate targeting of starving children and to war crimes carried out on a daily basis is to occasionally murmur in feeble embarrassment but carry on supplying the weapons, wining and dining the Israeli ambassador, carrying out surveillance flights from RAF Akrotiri and giving full endorsement to Netanyahu and Trump.
The Palestine movement has very deep roots in Britain and internationally, and it is this that the government and the Zionists want to change. We cannot allow the criminalisation of a movement. It will not of course stop with Palestine. Already supporters of non-violent direct action groups are in prison over environmental issues. But this will spread to trade unionists and other campaigns. People who want to protest over government cuts, against wars, for equality, will find themselves subject to draconian laws.
It is an illusion to think that we can campaign over specific issues without taking up the question of civil liberties and protest. We said this back in 2001 when we founded Stop the War Coalition: if they bring us imperialist wars they will bring us racism against those they attack and try to prevent us protesting. Tony Blair did not dare criminalise the Iraq movement, despite attempts to stop us marching to Hyde Park in 2003. But Keir Starmer has no such compunction. Therefore part of the Palestine movement – and the left more generally – has to be campaigning against bans and proscriptions, for the right to protest. This isn’t a diversion from the struggle for solidarity, but an integral part of it, and needs to be seen as such. We need to defend our civil liberties and the best way of doing that is to keep organising, keep building mass protests which involve ever wider numbers, and keep showing solidarity for Palestine.
Source: Counterfire