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Hundreds sign legal experts’ open letter demanding no proscription of Palestine Action

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A Palestine Action protest in 2024.

Hundreds of people have signed an open letter written by legal experts – and anti-apartheid campaigner and former ANC MP Andrew Feinstein – to Starmerite Home Secretary Yvette Cooper and her boss Keir Starmer demanding the regime’s plan to ban, or ‘proscribe’, anti-genocide protest group Palestine Action as terrorists alongside the likes of ISIS and al-Qaeda to protect Israel’s interests.

In collusion with Israel lobby groups, Cooper announced that she would put a proscription plan before Parliament next week to push through the ban and the Establishment has reacted with horror to the scale of public opposition to the plan and support for the group, which carries out ‘direct action’ against organisations colluding or participating in Israel’s genocide in Gaza, which has murdered almost 400,000 Palestinian civilians in Gaza and is starving 1.8 million who still survive.

The letter reads:

Joint Letter Opposing Government Moves to Proscribe Palestine Action

Rt Hon Yvette Cooper MP

Home Secretary
2 Marsham Street
London
SW1P 4DF

cc
Sir Keir Starmer, Prime Minister
Rt Hon Shabana Mahmood, Secretary of State for Justice
Rt Hon Lord Hermer KC, Attorney General

22 June 2025

Dear Home Secretary,

We, as individuals or as organisations representing a broad spectrum of civil society and the legal community, are writing to you, in response to the threat of proscribing the grassroots solidarity and direct action group, Palestine Action. 

The United Kingdom has a long and proud history of direct action that opposes military intervention. From Greenham Common to the 2 million marching in London against the invasion of Iraq, British governments of different political persuasions have respected people’s right to peacefully protest. Indeed, as the leading case of R v Jones  https://publications.parliament.uk/pa/ld200506/ldjudgmt/jd060329/jones-1.htm makes clear : “The appellants acted as they did because they wished to impede, obstruct or disrupt the commission of that crime, or what they believed would be the commission of that crime, by Her Majesty’s Government or the Government of the United States against Iraq in the weeks and days before (as we now know) hostilities began.”

Any attempt to criminalise peaceful direct action including by mislabelling it as ‘terrorism” would raise grave concerns, some of which are listed below for your consideration:

  • It would be unwise to blur the very clear lines between peaceful protest and terrorism by using misleading rhetoric. This conflation can underplay the credible dangers of genuine terrorism, legitimise terrorism in the eyes of those members of the public who support this cause, and confer unjustified renown on groups that are unfairly proscribed.
  • In a series of acts contrary to international law, the UK govt appears to be using the RAF Brize Norton base to onward service RAF Akrotiri that in turn is used by our allies and the UK to facilitate what the ICJ has found to be a plausible genocide in Gaza. As a state party to the Genocide Convention, facilitating such a genocide would be a particularly egregious breach of international law, by the UK. The UK government, by simultaneously seeking to criminalise those peacefully protesting this genocide using proscription, is further doubling down on these acts, rather than remedying these errors of judgment, as it should.
  • Even if it were assessed by the Home Secretary that measures are needed to be taken to deal with this particular direct action group, a wide range of more proportionate, proven and effective remedies are available to her. 
  • Having to enforce and police the proscription of Palestine Action would create a disproportionate strain on police resources and an ensuing additional and unjustified burden on the justice system to enforce such a proscription. It would leave many ordinary members of the public vulnerable – for example, simply wearing a t-shirt saying “I support Palestine Action” would be seen as violating the proscription and action would need to be taken. 
  • There are many dangers to proscribing peaceful direct action groups, even if their objectives are those some of us may disagree with. Current and future governments may misuse this precedent to attack other interest groups in future, offering no avenues for peacefully venting dissent. Bottling public anger and frustration creates the breeding ground for violence by or against members of the public. 

It is our hope that the Home Secretary will recognise both the moral arguments and the strength of feeling in civil society in this matter and resile from this proscription

Sincerely,

Haldane Society of Socialist Lawyers
Michael Mansfield KC (Haldane President)
The Good Law Project
Andrew Feinstein
Lord John Hendy KC
Sir Geoffrey Bindman KC (Hon)
Liz Davies KC
Carolyn Jones, Institute of Employment Rights

Despite little publicity so far, hundreds have added their names to the letter and the number is climbing fast, a sign of the UK people’s horror at Starmer’s eager collaboration in Israel’s crimes against humanity.

Add your signature here if you support the letter’s demands.

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4 comments

  1. Knowing what a complete inability Starmer has to read the room, he may well plough on regardless and proscribe PA after not only Kneecap but also their mates Bob Vylan slagged off Israel at Glastonbury today to loud cheers!

    1. I don’t watch Glastonbury…any evidence of any blue, six-pointed star flags there, Tim?

  2. None whatsoever…And not a single headline about it – as yet

    They must be on double time and a day in lieu at the CAA..

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