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Yvette Cooper should revoke the passport of a pro-Palestine Action activist, Labour’s former anti-extremism tsar has said.
59mOpinion
The Observer on MSNPalestine Action’s violent criminality is not lawful protest
Demonstrating is vital to free speech but this right does not extend to violence, intimidation and inflicting injuries ...
The Home Secretary wrote in The Observer that ‘lawful protest is a fundamental right but violent criminality is not’.
"No-one should allow desperate calls for peace in the Middle East to be derailed into a campaign to support one narrow group ...
British authorities plan to prosecute at least 60 people for supporting the recently banned group Palestine Action.
Britain’s human rights watchdog has warned against “heavy-handed policing” which it said risks a “chilling effect” on protest rights amid recent demonstrations about the war in Gaza.
For the working class, this crisis sharply poses the need for a struggle not only against the Palestine Action proscription, ...
Sir Keir Starmer is facing a furious backlash against the arrests and has been warned he is making a mistake of “poll tax ...
Defending the group's proscription under terror law, she said the organisation was "not a non-violent organisation".
Palestine Action’s co-founder Huda Ammori said: “Yvette Cooper and No 10’s claim that Palestine Action is a violent organisation is false and defamatory, and even disproven by the Government’s own ...
Yvette Cooper has defended the arrest of more than 500 people for holding signs supporting Palestine Action. The home secretary said protesters over the weekend may have been objecting to the group ...
Most of those detained were arrested for carrying signs supporting a pro-Palestinian group recently banned as a terrorist ...
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