All our readers feeds will have been full of outrage at the behaviour of the police on Saturday’s demonstration in solidarity with Palestine, the intimidation against supportive MPs and the charges that activists have since been subject to. John McDonnell MP has written here, Jeremy Cobyn here. All this underlines the points Roland Rance made in his article a few days ago, that this is a real threat to the overall right to protest.
Onwards together
This is the statement from Ben Jamal, Director of the Palestine Solidarity Campaign about his arrest and its intention
Yesterday I voluntarily attended an interview with the Metropolitan Police, to address allegations that I led, and incited others to join, a procession which forced its way through a Police line at the top of Whitehall, thereby breaching conditions imposed upon our protest.
Within 2 hours of the interview concluding, Police officers turned up at my front door to inform me that charges were being brought against me.
I am due in Court to face these charges on February 21st 2025, and will of course vigorously contest them.
What we saw on Saturday was a huge assault on the right to freedom of assembly and to protest. The anti-protest laws introduced under the last Conservative government are an affront to democracy and Saturday provided the clearest examples of the willingness of Keir Starmer’s Government to use them to suppress the Palestine solidarity movement, and the core freedoms of all of us.
The facts of what happened on Saturday are laid out clearly in the statement made by the Palestine Coalition, backed by the wide body of video evidence PSC has posted online.
It seems clear that the political intention was to create scenes of mass disorder which could be used to justify the Home Secretary intervening to ban all future marches. Despite this attempt, there were not scenes of mass disorder. This was due to the extraordinary and determined discipline of those who came to protest, even in the face of such provocation.
I thank everyone who attended and send solidarity to all those unjustly arrested, some of whom, including my comrade Chris Nineham of the Stop the War Coalition, are now also facing charges.
What the political establishment also seeks is to distract attention from their complicity in the genocide that they have green-lighted for the last 15 months. Those of us who have protested peacefully, in unprecedented numbers, against genocide and for a ceasefire, came on Saturday to mark that ceasefire and to share with the Palestinian people their feelings of relief that it has finally arrived, their trepidation regarding the likelihood of Israel renewing its brutal assault upon them, their grief for the family members slaughtered in the last 15 months, and their celebration, even as they return to their destroyed homes that, as they have done for generations, they have prevailed.
The state wishes to silence our movement. It will not succeed. We will not stop protesting and campaigning until every brick in the wall of apartheid that imprisons and oppresses the Palestinian people is torn down, until Palestinians in exile are free to return to their homes and on every inch of their historic homeland, from the river to the sea, are finally able to live in freedom with justice.
Onwards together.
Legal scholars call for inquiry into Met on Palestine demo arrests
In a letter to Home Secretary Yvette Cooper and the Mayor of London Sadiq Khan , the authors describe the policing of the demonstration as “a disproportionate, unwarranted and dangerous assault on the right to assembly and protest”and call on the government to intervene as the “drift of British law and policing poses a fundamental threat to the right to protest”.
Full text of the letter below:
Letter to the Home Secretary, Yvette Cooper MP
CC: Sadiq Khan, Mayor of London
CC: Richard Hermer, Attorney General
Defend the Right to Protest
The arrest of the Chief Steward, Chris Nineham, and various participants in the Palestine Solidarity Campaign (PSC) demonstration on the 18 January 2025 and the subsequent bringing of charges against Ben Jamal, the Director of the PSC, represent a disproportionate, unwarranted and dangerous assault on the right to assembly and protest in Britain.
This right has been held central to democratic life in Britain for centuries. Advancing the causes of the Chartists, trade unionists, the Suffragettes and many more. It is now formally protected via the Human Rights Act 1998 through Articles 10 and 11 of the European Convention on Human Rights. Taken together, these two articles have been interpreted by the European Court of Human Rights as conferring on individuals an extensive right to peaceful protest, which imposes stringent obligations, both negative and positive, on public bodies to respect and facilitate the right to protest.
Over the last few years, this right has been undermined by a raft of new enactments, and by a shift in policing tactics that emphasises controlling and limiting protest, rather than facilitating it, as required by both European and international legal standards. This assault on the right to protest has heightened in the last year, with anti-war and pro-Palestine protestors experiencing particularly acute attacks on their rights to peacefully protest Israel’s genocide in Gaza.
The conditions imposed by the Metropolitan Police on the PSC demonstration on 18 January 2025 were disproportionate and an abuse of police powers. Despite a demonstrable track record of overwhelmingly peaceful protests for over a year, the police prevented the demonstration to assemble near, or march towards, the BBC on Saturday without offering any compelling evidence. The police thus seemed to be motivated by political considerations that seek to limit the efficacy of the protesters and shield state institutions from criticism.
The subsequent arrest of the Chief Steward and others based on factual claims that available video evidence seems to clearly controvert, further reflects this abuse of police powers. It is a worrying escalation in the assault on the right to protest in general, and on anti-war and pro-Palestine protests in particular.
As lawyers and legal scholars, we echo the concerns of the Joint Committee on Human Rights, the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights and many others that the drift of British law and policing poses a fundamental threat to the right to protest. A threat that it behoves all of us concerned with human rights, equality and the rule of law to resist.
We believe the charges should be dropped against those arrested, or subsequently charged, in relation to alleged public order offences on 18 January 2025, and that an independent investigation should be conducted into the policing of this protest. More fundamentally, we call for a repeal of the raft of anti-protest laws passed in recent years, and a recalibration of the law in a way which genuinely protects the right to protest.
- Dr Paul O’Connell, Reader in Law, SOAS University of London
- Dr Nimer Sultany, Reader in Law, SOAS University of London
- Dr Daniella Lock, Lecturer in Law, King’s College London
- Dr Kanika Sharma, Senior Lecturer in Law, SOAS University of London
- Dr Gregory Davies, Lecturer in Law, University of Liverpool
- Dr Eva Nanopoulos, Reader in Law, Queen Mary, University of London
- Dr. Lena El-Malak, independent legal consultant
- Dr. Tanzil Chowdhury, Senior Lecturer in Law, Queen Mary, University of London
- Professor Neve Gordon, School of Law, Queen Mary University of London
- Dr. Nicola Perugini, Senior Lecturer in International Relations, University of Edinburgh
- Professor Jeff King, Professor of Law, UCL Laws
- Professor Marco Goldoni, Professor of Philosophy of Law, University of Glasgow
- Professor Laleh Khalili, University of Exeter
- Dr. Sarah Keenan, School of Law, Queen Mary University of London
- Professor Penny Green,School of Law, Queen Mary University of London
- Professor David Whyte School of Law, Queen Mary University of London
- Professor David Mead, School of Law, University of East Anglia
- Dr. Shahd Hammouri, Lecturer in International Law at the University of Kent Law School
- Dr Michelle Staggs Kelsall, Senior Lecturer in International Law, SOAS University of London
- Professor Kristian Lasslett, School of Applied Social and Policy Sciences, University of Ulster
- Dr Maria Tzanakopoulou, Birkbeck, School of Law
- Dr Sara Razai, British Institute of International and Comparative Law, London
- Dr Nicolette Busuttil, Lecturer in Law, SOAS University of London
- Dr Luigi Daniele, Senior Lecturer in IHL and ICL, Nottingham Law School, Nottingham Trent University
- Dr Andrew Pitt, Lecturer in Law, Queen Mary University of London
- Dr Zoe Adams, Affiliated Lecturer in Law, University of Cambridge
- Dr Rose Parfitt, Senior Lecturer, Kent Law School, University of Kent
- Dr Steven Cammiss, Birmingham Law School, University of Birmingham
- Dr Mazen Masri, Senior Lecturer in Law, City St George’s, University of London
- Professor Lynn Welchman, School of Law, SOAS University of London
- David Amos, Associate Professor in Law, City St George’s, University of London
- Paul McKeown, Barrister, Associate Professor of Law, City St George’s, University of London
- Professor Tawhida Ahmed, City St George’s, University of London
- Lord Hendy KC (Honorary Professor, Law Faculty, UCL)
- Professor Lutz Oette, School of Law, SOAS University of London
- Dr. Mayur Suresh, Reader, School of Law, SOAS, University of London
- Dr Angela Sherwood, Lecturer, School of Law, Queen Mary, University of London
- Dr Andrew Woodhouse, Lecturer, School of Law and Social Justice, University of Liverpool
- Dr Vidya Kumar, Senior Lecturer in Law, School of Law, SOAS, University of London, UK
- Dr Josh Bowsher, Assistant Professor in Sociology, University of Sussex
- Professor Violeta Moreno Lax, Professor of Law, Queen Mary University of London
- Michael Bartlet, Senior Lecturer, School of Law, SOAS University of London
- Michael Mansfield KC, President Haldane Society of Socialist Lawyers
Reposted from the Stop the War Coalition
Watch video from Chris Nineham who was violently arrested at the demo:
We will share news as we get it of actions to support all those we know have been charged –
there is a public meeting organised on 25th January:
1 February is the next day where another action is planned.