Palestine Action Legal Challenge Against UK Proscription
- Palestine Action challenges its proposed proscription under the Terrorism Act 2000 in a High Court judicial review, seeking to block the ban's implementation with an injunction.
- Following the RAF Brize Norton protest on June 20, the UK government laid a draft order before Parliament to ban Palestine Action, MMC, and RIM, citing damage to military aircraft.
- The draft order criminalizes support for Palestine Action, equating it with ISIS and al-Qaeda, with penalties up to 14 years in prison.
- An urgent High Court hearing has taken place; the ban could take effect as soon as Saturday, risking criminal sanctions for thousands of supporters, Liberty warns.
- More broadly, Palestine Action becomes the first protest group to face proscription under UK anti-terror laws, risking a dangerous precedent that critics say blurs civil disobedience and terrorism.
38 Articles
38 Articles
UK pro-Palestine group granted urgent hearing to challenge terrorist proscription
The UK High Court on Monday granted Palestine Action an urgent hearing to challenge the Home Secretary’s decision to proscribe the group as a terrorist organization under Schedule 2 of the Terrorism Act 2000, alongside terror organizations such as ISIS and Al Qaeda. The urgent hearing will take place 10:30 a.m. Friday, July 4. The court will consider whether to allow the group to challenge the Home Secretary’s decision by way of judicial review.…
Roger Waters, Tilda Swinton, Steve Coogan Join Israel Committing ‘Genocide’ Smear Campaign, Demand UK Stop Arming IDF
Actors Tilda Swinton, Steve Coogan, Reggie Watts, and rocker Roger Waters and many more have signed onto a letter demanding that the British government reject a plan to officially label a home-grown Palestinian activist group as a terror outfit. The British government is debating whether to label the U.K.-based group Palestine Action as a terror outfit after the group has made it a policy to engage in violence, property destruction, and disrupti…
The British militant association Palestine Action announced on Monday that it would challenge its next ban and its addition to the list of "terrorist" organizations, which the government has indicated could take place this weekend.

Supreme Court allows US terrorism victims to sue Palestinian entities
The Supreme Court upheld a law allowing the families of victims of terrorism to sue Palestinian entities in U.S. courts, reviving decades-old lawsuits against the Palestine Liberation Organization and the Palestinian Authority.
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