Britain’s ban on pro-Palestinian campaign group Palestine Action as a terrorist organization was ruled unlawful by London’s High Court on Friday, though the ban will temporarily remain in place, and the government said it would appeal against the decision.

Palestine Action was proscribed in July, having increasingly taken “direct action” against Israel-linked defense companies in Britain, often blocking entrances or spraying red paint.

Britain argued the group’s escalating actions amounted to terrorism, citing a 2024 raid on a factory of Israel’s largest defense firm, Elbit Systems, in which prosecutors said activists caused around 1 million pounds of damage and a police officer was hit with a sledgehammer.

Palestine Action was banned shortly after a June break-in at the Royal Air Force’s Brize Norton air base, in which activists damaged two planes, an action described by Prime Minister Keir Starmer as “disgraceful.”

Lawyers representing Huda Ammori, who co-founded Palestine Action in 2020, argued at a hearing last year that the move was an authoritarian restriction on the right to protest.

Judge Victoria Sharp said Palestine Action “promotes its political cause through criminality and the encouragement of criminality.”

A PALESTINIAN FLAG is attached to a traffic light as a rally takes place to challenge the UK government’s banning of Palestine Action under anti-terrorism laws, in Parliament Square, last month. Europe finds itself entangled with radical Islam, says the writer.
A PALESTINIAN FLAG is attached to a traffic light as a rally takes place to challenge the UK government’s banning of Palestine Action under anti-terrorism laws, in Parliament Square, last month. Europe finds itself entangled with radical Islam, says the writer. (credit: CARLOS JASSO/REUTERS)

UK court rules that government ban on Palestine Action unlawful

The High Court nonetheless ruled that the ban was a disproportionate interference with the right to freedom of expression. Yet, it was not lifted ahead of a further hearing to decide whether it should remain in place pending an appeal.

UK Interior Minister Shabana Mahmood said in a statement: “I intend to fight this judgment in the Court of Appeal.”

The ban put Palestine Action on a par with the Islamic State or al-Qaeda and made it a criminal offense to be a member, carrying a maximum 14-year prison sentence.

More than 2,000 people have since been arrested for holding signs in support of the group, though Friday’s ruling could lead to the dismissal of any criminal charges.

London’s Metropolitan Police said, following the judgment, that they would focus on gathering evidence where people expressed support for Palestine Action rather than making arrests.

Civil liberties groups, including Amnesty International, had called for the ban to be lifted, and Irish novelist Sally Rooney said it could even lead to her books being withdrawn from sale due to her open support for Palestine Action.

The British government argued that proscription only prevented support for Palestine Action and had not prevented people from protesting in favor of the Palestinian cause.

The High Court, however, said the ban could cause pro-Palestinian protesters to “exercise self-restraint in terms of what they say and what they do.”

The judgment was announced two weeks after six people charged over the 2024 raid on Elbit were all acquitted of aggravated burglary.

Prosecutors have said they will seek a retrial on those counts on which the jury could not reach a verdict, including the alleged assault on a police officer.