Police
make more than 440 arrests at Palestine Action protest in London
Officers
arrest activists at silent vigil in support of banned organisation, as demos go
ahead despite PM’s pleas
Robyn
Vinter and Raphael Boyd
Sat 4 Oct
2025 19.23 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2025/oct/04/palestine-action-protest-police-arrests-london-demo
Police
have made more than 440 arrests in London at what organisers hoped would be the
biggest demonstration so far against a ban on the proscribed organisation
Palestine Action.
Officers
began arresting demonstrators at the silent vigil in support of the group,
which has been classed by the UK government as a terror organisation since July
this year.
The first
arrest took place shortly after 1pm as the seated protesters took out pens and
wrote signs showing support for Palestine Action.
Dozens of
police were lined up to begin arresting members of the group, who were sitting
silently on the pavement in the square.
Early
indications suggest the hundreds of protesters, with a mixture of ages and
different backgrounds including many retirees, may not be enough to break the
record for the number of arrests.
Two hours
into the protest, the organisers said they counted about 1,000 seated people
holding signs.
The
Metropolitan police said 442 people had been arrested during the protest.
The chair
of the Metropolitan Police Federation has claimed “enough is enough” as she
said officers policing protests in London were “emotionally and physically
exhausted”.
Paula
Dodds said: “Enough is enough. Our concentration should be on keeping people
safe at a time when the country is on heightened alert from a terrorist attack.
And instead officers are being drawn in to facilitate these relentless
protests.
“And we
are coming under attack for doing so. How can this be right?“
She
added: “There aren’t enough of us. Hard-working police officers are continually
having days off cancelled, working longer shifts and being moved from other
areas to facilitate these protests.
“We are
emotionally and physically exhausted. What are politicians and senior police
officers going to do about it?”
The
organisers, Defend Our Juries, previously said they expected the turnout to be
higher than previous protests, with more than 1,500 people planning to attend,
potentially beating an arrest record set at the 1961 anti-nuclear
demonstration, which was held at the same London location.
The
demonstration went ahead despite Keir Starmer calling on protesters to call it
off to “respect the grief of British Jews”, while Jewish figures called the
action “phenomenally tone deaf” after Thursday’s killing of two people in the
terror attack on a Manchester synagogue.
In
Manchester a demonstration by GM Friends of Palestine to mark the second
anniversary of the start of the conflict saw hundreds of people gather.
John
Nicholson, a campaigner for the group, said that increased tensions since the
fatal attack on a synagogue in the city had led to some choosing to stay at
home.
“The
genocide hasn’t stopped, so why should we?” he said. “If the bombings had
stopped for a week, if food and medicine had been allowed to go into Gaza for a
week, we may have taken a week off. But they haven’t, so we won’t.”
Nicholson
denied the claim that the march was a way of intimidating Manchester’s Jewish
population, saying that Jewish people regularly attend the weekly meetings, and
that the marches are meant to target policies and governments, not individuals.
“We are
not targeting any member of our community, least of all our Jewish community.
It is targeted at Trump, at Starmer and at Netanyahu, who are war criminals and
who must be held accountable,” he said.
The
demonstration ended outside the central library where it joined another group
of Palestine activists who were reading the names of all the people killed in
the past two years in Gaza. The reading, which was done in order of the ages of
the deceased from youngest to oldest, began at 7am and, by the time the march
reached it at about 1.45pm, still had not finished the names of toddlers.
In
London, one protester, Trudy Warner, a retired social worker from London, was
holding a sign reading “Police find your love, find your conscience.”
She said
she was focusing on the police because they were able to take action as
individual officers and not participate in the mass arrests.
“I would
love to think they could learn from us about the power of collective action and
walk away instead of doing this because it’s unconscionable. It’s actually
unconscionable.”
A
Buckinghamshire couple, Larry and Sue, were holding a sign in support of
“Plasticine Action”, a subtle difference in spelling that changes the meaning
entirely.
“About
eight policemen came and they read me my rights and said I was being arrested
under the Terrorism Act and they were about to take me away so I sat on the
floor. And when they were bending down to take me away one of them noticed that
it says something else and they had to let me go.”
During
the interview with the Guardian, a police officer approached them.
“Sir, can
I take your sign please?” the officer said, before realising it did not express
support for Palestine Action. “I’m dyslexic!” she added.
“I’m
totally fed up with what is happening in Gaza,” said Larry. “Everybody that is
not raising their voice to this is somehow slightly complicit in letting our
government support this.”
The
Metropolitan police also said officers arrested six people in connection with a
banner draped on Westminster Bridge in support of Palestine Action.
The force
said: “Officers were quickly on scene, the banner had been removed and the six
people involved have been arrested for supporting a proscribed organisation.”
Responding
to Keir Starmer’s suggestion that the action should not go ahead, Defend Our
Juries supporter Zoe Cohen, who was arrested at the August action and is
Jewish, said: “Those who have used the attack on the Jewish community in
Manchester to call for today’s vigil to be cancelled, are wrongly conflating
the actions of the Israeli state with all Jews. Jewish people around the world
are not responsible for Israel’s crimes and there are many Jewish people who do
not support the actions of the Israeli state. Cancelling today’s vigil would
have perpetuated this dangerous narrative which fuels antisemitism.”
She said
if there was a strain on policing resources on Saturday, the blame lay with the
government. If the protest had been cancelled, it would have been “letting
terror win”.
Cohen
added: “When I was brought up learning about the Holocaust and we said ‘never
again’, I learned that this means ‘never again’ for anyone.”

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