The government wants to silence protest, but who can stand by during a genocide and do nothing?

OPINION – Right to Protest, Palestine


The Labour government has been making it increasingly difficult to organise the National Palestine marches, now they are using the draconian Public Order Act in an attempt to intimidate us. 

It’s a truism to say governments don’t like protest, and after 18 months of Palestine demonstrations ours is making its distaste for mass mobilisation abundantly clear. It’s using the Met police as its enforcer and the BBC as its propaganda tool.

Smearing protesters as anti-semitic hate marchers failed to have any impact on the size or frequency of the demonstrations, so the government has resorted to the using the Public Order Act against the march organisers and is placing ever more restrictive exclusion orders on the protests. 

Negotiations between organisers and the police have become increasingly arduous as time after time conditions are changed at late notice, restrictions are imposed for no justifiable reason other than to deter and confuse protesters and make organising more difficult. And now the police have charged and questioned under caution various members of the movement’s leadership, alongside some of its high profile supporters.

In this Orwellian world, 87 year-old Jewish Holocaust survivor, Stephen Kapos, was called in for questioning by the Met. Refusing to be cowed Kapos made clear that it is vital for us all to continue to protest for Palestine and speak out against our own government’s complicity in Israel’s genocide.

Khalid Abdalla, actor and activist, was also called in by the Met for questioning. In a statement made as he approached Charring Cross police station in central London he said he was both ‘incredibly sad’ but also ‘proud’ to attend his police interview. Sad because of what it says about the British state’s intension to subjugate the movement, proud to be on the right side of history. 

Alex Kenny, Chair of StW, Lindsey German, StW Convenor, Andrew Murray,  StW Deputy President and Sophie Bolt, General Secretary of CND, were all interviewed under caution this week. 

Chris Nineham (StW) and Ben Jamal, Director of PSC have been charged under the Public Order Act and are awaiting trial. 

The police hope that through a duel process of intimidating the movement’s leaders and imposing large restriction zones London marches will become confined to ever smaller areas and routes, especially on Saturdays, when it is becoming almost impossible to march through the centre of the city.

Heavily lobbied by Israeli zionists, including the Chief Rabbi, organisers have been told that protesters cannot march in the vicinity of a synagogue on Saturdays, regardless than there has been no reported incidents of intimidation at synagogues or indeed of Jewish people on the marches, and regardless that thousands of marchers themselves are Jewish. When the march organisers requested to also meet with Mark Rowley, the head of the Met Police, they were met with silence.

The police have even suggested we stop marching altogether, saying the marches have been going on too long. No acknowledgement that it’s the war on Gaza that has been going on for too long, or that it’s time for the genocide to stop.

Democratic governments are expected to facilitate demonstrations, whether they like it or not. Demonstrating is how our rights are won, and in this country we have a long and proud history of demonstrations. The right to protest is a fundamental part of living in a democracy. When opposition to government policy is significant, protest poses a challenge to the ruling elite, and the bigger the protest the bigger that challenge. 

The Palestine movement is not only massive, but it has shown it is here to stay. Marches on the scale we have seen sustained over the past 18 months are unique in modern British politics. They represent the abhorrence felt by the vast majority of British people to what is happening in Palestine and to our government’s complicity. 

The marches have had an incredible impact on public consciousness and show the depth of solidarity towards Palestine, they are watched around the world. Palestinians, and those from countries where protest is not tolerated, frequently express their gratitude for what we are doing on the streets of London. It is for these reasons they want to silence us.

In the face of ethnic cleansing in Palestine and the erosion of our rights at home, all those who are being hounded by the police expressed a renewed resolve to continue the fight. For who, in all conscience, can stand by and watch a genocide and do nothing? 

The next national demonstration is on 17 May, Nakba Day, Central London at 12 noon. The 12 April is a National Day of Demonstrations for Palestine, when towns and villages around the country will be protesting the genocide – get organising!

26 Mar 2025 by Terina Hine