Over 890 arrested at London's Palestine Action rally, cops condemn abuse
On Saturday, the Met Police said it had deployed more than 2,500 officers to manage protests across the UK capital.
PTI
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Photo: PTI
London, 7 Sep
The Metropolitan Police on Sunday condemned the
“intolerable” abuse suffered by officers who were “kicked and spat on” as they
made over 890 arrests at a protest here against the banning of Palestine Action
as a terror group.
Hundreds gathered at Parliament Square over the course of
the weekend to oppose the group's proscription by the UK government, holding
placards such as “I oppose genocide, I support Palestine Action” in protest
over the Israel-Hamas conflict.
Police had, in August, arrested a large number of people
during a similar protest defying the ban on the same organisation.
A total of 857 individuals were arrested in Parliament
Square in London under the UK Terrorism Act 2000 over alleged offences, the Met
Police said. Other arrests were made for other offences, including on suspicion
of assaulting officers.
“In carrying out their duties, our officers have been
punched, kicked, spat on and had objects thrown at them by protesters,” said
Met Police Deputy Assistant Commissioner Claire Smart, who led the policing
operation.
“It is intolerable that those whose job it is to enforce the
law and keep people safe – in this case arresting individuals committing
offences under the Terrorism Act – should be subject to this level of abuse…
“The tactics deployed by supporters of Palestine Action in
their attempt to overwhelm the justice system, as well as the level of violence
seen in the crowd, required significant resources which took officers out of
neighbourhoods to the detriment of the Londoners who rely on them,” she said.
On Saturday, the Met Police said it had deployed more than
2,500 officers to manage protests across the UK capital. The majority of
protests, including the Palestine Coalition march attended by around 20,000 people,
passed with very few arrests.
However, the protest organised by the Defend Our Juries
organisation in support of the proscribed terrorist organisation Palestine
Action saw the most arrests.
“Throughout the demonstration, there was a coordinated effort
to prevent officers from carrying out their duties which escalated to violence
where officers were punched, kicked, spat on and had objects thrown at them,”
the Met Police said.
“More than 25 individuals have been arrested for assaults on
police officers and other public order offences. Attacks on officers will not
be tolerated and those responsible will be pursued to the full extent of the
law,” the Met Police added.
Former home secretary Yvette Cooper had banned Palestine
Action under the UK’s Terrorism Act in July, making membership of or support of
the group a criminal offence, punishable by up to 14 years in prison.
A spokesperson for Defend Our Juries claimed their rally had
been “the picture of peaceful protest” and that the Met Police's statement
about its officers being abused was an “astonishing claim.”
It has called on the new Home Secretary, Shabana Mahmood –
appointed in a reshuffle two days ago as Cooper moved to the Foreign Office, to
lift the ban.
Elsewhere in the UK, Police Scotland made two arrests at a
demonstration in Edinburgh, where dozens of people held signs showing support
for Palestine Action.
Earlier in August, the Metropolitan Police
arrested over 500 people during what was the UK’s largest protests in support
of Palestine Action.
While 522 of those arrested during the demonstration in
London were detained under the UK’s Terrorism Act for showing support for a
proscribed group, others were held for other offences, including assaulting
police officers.
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