At least 365 arrests at Palestine Action ban protest
Published: 10 August 2025, 1:55:18
At least 365 people have been arrested at a demonstration in London in support of proscribed group Palestine Action, police say.
Scores of people simultaneously unveiled handwritten signs with the same message “I oppose genocide. I support Palestine Action” at the protest, organised by Defend Our Juries at Westminster’s Parliament Square.
The government proscribed the group in July under the Terrorism Act of 2000, making membership of or support for it a criminal offence, punishable by up to 14 years in prison.
With the protest still ongoing, the Metropolitan Police said anyone there who held a placard expressing support for the group “was either arrested or is in the process of being arrested”.
Footage from the square showed officers moving among the protesters, who were mainly seated on the ground, and speaking to them before leading them away.
On X, the Met Police said about 500 to 600 people were in Parliament Square when the protest began, but that “many were onlookers, media or people not holding placards in support of Palestine Action”.
It said by 18:00 BST it had arrested 365 people for supporting a proscribed organisation, and there were a further seven arrests for other offences including five for assaults on police officers, though none were seriously injured.
Protesters whose details could be confirmed during processing were bailed with conditions not to attend any further protest in support of Palestine Action.
People who refused to give their details or whose identities could not be verified were taken into custody.
Many of the protesters didn’t want to speak to media who came to cover the protest, but one – who didn’t give her name – told the BBC: “If they ban Palestine Action, what other group is next? Until we’re just no longer allowed to protest anything. That’s the opposite of democracy.”
Another, Claudia Penna-Rojas, 27, said: “I don’t think anyone wants to get arrested, but I’m more concerned with what is happening to people in Palestine right now, and I refuse to be a bystander.”
Jacob Ecclestone, 86, said: “I believe in freedom of speech. What this government is trying to do is deeply authoritarian. And it’s extremely dangerous.”

Most of the protesters who unveiled signs did so while sitting in Parliament Square next to the House of Commons
At 13:00, when Big Ben chimed, the hundreds of people sat on the square pulled out their placards, at which point the police started making multiple arrests at a time, working their way through the crowds.
Protesters patiently waited their turns. Some chose to walk out quietly. Those who refused to move, lying on the ground, were carried out by police to chants of “shame on you” directed at the officers.
The protest comes just days after the first three people to be charged with supporting the group in England and Wales were named.
Organisers Defend Our Juries claimed there were more than 1,000 “sign-holders” at the protest – and a large number had not been arrested.
Responding, the Met Police said: “That claim simply isn’t true.”
Defend our Juries said the turnout “shows how repulsed and ashamed people are about our government’s ongoing complicity in a livestreamed genocide”.
It added that “Palestine Action and people holding cardboard signs present no danger to the public at large”.

The signs had been prepared moments before they were simultaneously unveiled

Police approached protesters sitting on the ground and either led or carried them away
As well as the protest by Palestine Action, two marches have been organised by Palestine Coalition and pro-Israeli group Stop the Hate and will be held on consecutive days in central London.
The Metropolitan Police said it had drawn officers in from other forces to help form a “significant policing presence” in the capital as it faces a busy weekend.
Ahead of Saturday’s protest, more than 200 people had been arrested across the country for similar reasons since the ban was implemented by Home Secretary Yvette Cooper last month.
On Thursday two women and a man were also charged with showing support for a proscribed terror group. They are due to appear at Westminster Magistrates’ Court on 16 September, the Metropolitan Police said.
At the end of July, the High Court ruled that Palestine Action would be able to challenge its proscription.
Lawyers for the group’s co-founder Huda Ammori have argued that the ban breaches the right to free speech and has acted like a gag on legitimate protest. The government says the ban is justified because it narrowly targets a group that has been organising serious criminality.
MPs voted to proscribe the group after activists broke into RAF Brize Norton in June, spraying two Voyager aircraft with red paint and causing £7m worth of damage. Palestine Action took responsibility for the incident at the time.
A Home Office spokesperson said the decision to proscribe the group was based on “strong security advice” following “serious attacks the group had committed, involving violence, significant injuries and extensive criminal damage”.