The penalty for disagreeing with UK government policy on Palestine is 14 Years in prison
December 27, 2025
Middle East Monitor

Protesters called for “an end to the occupation and a halt to arms sales to Israel” during the national march organized in London by the Palestine Solidarity Campaign in London, United Kingdom on November 29, 2025. [Raşid Necati Aslım – Anadolu Agency
by Tony Greenstein
On 5 January I will go on trial at Kingston Crown Court charged with an offence under Section12 of the Terrorism Act 2000. The maximum penalty if found guilty is 14 years in gaol. There are others due to follow me.
You might be forgiven for thinking that my ‘offence’ was preparing a bomb intended for the Israeli Embassy. In fact, it was disagreeing with government policy and received opinion.
I was arrested on 20 December 2023 by Counter-Terrorism Police in a dawn raid under the Terrorism Act 2000. My ‘crime’ was posting a tweet, one month previously, saying that I supported the Palestinian resistance against the Israeli Defence Forces.
The anti-terrorism police are reminiscent of the Thought Police (Thinkpol) in George Orwell’s 1984, who spent their time hunting down “thought crime.” Britain’s equivalent of seized my electronic devices – computers, laptop, mobile phone etc. When I applied to the courts to recover these items, the police justified their retention by saying that they provided a ‘highly relevant insight’ into my mind.
The aim of Orwell’s Thought Police was to enforce mental conformity, ensuring citizens police their own minds. In his Expert Witness Statement in the Case for the Deproscription of Hamas, Jonathan Cook, a journalist who has worked on The Guardian, The Observer and The Times amongst other papers and a recipient of the Martha Gellhorn Special Prize for Journalism in 2011, wrote:
Over the past several months, I have been watching with growing professional alarm – and personal trepidation – what I can only describe as a campaign of political intimidation and persecution of a number of journalists in the UK. The journalists who have been targeted share one thing in common: they report and comment on Israel’s actions in Gaza from a critical perspective that judges those actions to be genocidal…
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(This) has been justified under an expansive interpretation of both Section 12 of the 2000 Terrorism Act and Sections 1 and 2 of the 2006 Terrorism Act. These laws tightly restrict commentary about Hamas and other Palestinian organisations the UK government has proscribed.
I now find myself in a situation where, for the first time in my 36-year professional career, I am no longer sure what by law I can write or say in my capacity as a journalist on an issue of major international importance.
The fact that Hamas was freely elected as the government of Gaza in 2006 is irrelevant. By opposing Israel militarily they have become ‘terrorists’.
I have been charged ‘inviting support for a proscribed organisation’. By posting a blog Full Support for the Gaza Ghetto Uprising I was inviting support for Hamas as an organisation.
I have posted many articles opposing the politics and practices of Hamas including an article condemning torture by Hamas and its attacks on NGOs in Gaza.
However I support resistance to the Israeli occupation, whoever is participating in it. The proscription of Hamas as a ‘terrorist’ organisation, when it has never operated outside Palestine, demonstrates that contrary to its official position, in practice the British government supports Israel’s unlawful occupation of the Palestinian Territories. The justification for the proscription is that.
Hamas has used indiscriminate rocket or mortar attacks, and raids against Israeli targets. During the May 2021 conflict, over 4,000 rockets were fired indiscriminately into Israel. Civilians, including 2 Israeli children, were killed as a result.
Presumably Israel using snipers to deliberately target children isn’t terrorism. Over 20,000 children have been killed by Israel since October 7 but what is that compared to two Israeli children? The racist hypocrisy of the British government is exposed for what it is.
Overseas doctors operating in Gaza during the genocide have all testified that Palestinian children are being targeted. Why? Because children are seen as the future of the Palestinian people.
At a conference of pre-military yeshivas on 7 March 2024, Rabbi Eliyahu Mali of the Bnei Moshe yeshiva in Jaffa explained that Palestinian children should be killed because they are the future generation of Palestinian fighters. Mali spoke about how in the case of Gaza, they shouldn’t leave “a soul” alive there.
Today’s terrorists are the children of the prior [military] operation that left them alive. The women are essentially the ones who are producing the terrorists,… It’s not only the 14 or 16-year-old boy, the 20 or 30-year-old man who takes up a weapon against you but also the future generation. There’s really no difference.
This is the same argument that Himmler made about exterminating Jewish children. At Posnan on 6 October 1943 he told SS Generals:
“For I did not consider myself justified in exterminating the men… and then allowing their children to grow up to wreak vengeance on our children and grandchildren.
In a poll conducted by Pennsylvania University 47% of respondents said that the Israeli army should kill all the inhabitants of any city they conquer. This rose to over 60 per cent when asked whether they believe there is a ‘current incarnation of Amalek’ – the tribe that god said the ancient Hebrews had to wipe out. This is what Starmer and our rulers believe constitutes the ‘right to self defence’.
In July 2024 the International Court of Justice ruled that Israel’s occupation of the Palestinian territories was unlawful. By saying that armed resistance to that occupation is ‘terrorist’ the British government is de facto supporting the occupation, despite claims to support a two state solution.
What Blair and Straw did with the passing in 2000 of the Terrorism Act was to make it a crime to support a national liberation or anti-colonial movement that is seeking to free itself from colonial domination or occupation, when the British government is friendly with the occupying power.
If the Terrorism Act had been in force during the era of Apartheid in South Africa then the ANC would have been classified as a ‘terrorist’ group.
When I gave my support to the 7 October attack I wasn’t giving my support to Hamas as an organisation, despite the attempts of the Crown to pretend that this is what it amounted to.
The example I gave to the Police was that of the Polish Home Army. In 1944 its officers told Jewish servicemen in Britain that when they went into battle then they would be shot in the back. Their slogan was that ‘Every Pole has two bullets—the first for a Jew and the second for a German’. The problems that Jewish servicemen faced in the Polish forces stationed in this country were debated in the Commons on 6 April 1944 in a debate initiated by Tom Driberg MP.
If I had been alive then I would not have supported the AK as an organisation but when they led the Warsaw Uprising in August 1944 I would have supported them against the Nazi occupiers.
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What is happening is a naked attempt to use the anti-terrorism laws in order to curtail free speech on Palestine. As John Dugard, an Emeritus Professor of Law at the Universities of Leiden and Witwatersrand and an ad-hoc Judge of the ICJ wrote:
Terrorism is an emotive word that has no place in the assessment of the conduct of either a government or a resistance movement. One man’s freedom fighter is another man’s terrorist. Few would today label members of the French resistance in World War II as “terrorist” and most would have no hesitation in describing the Nazi forces as “terrorist”.
One piece of legislation that has remained a dead letter is the International Criminal Court Act 2001, Section 52 of which renders assistance to the commission of genocide abroad an offence meriting a sentence of 30 years imprisonment. In allowing the supply of arms to Israel and providing military help via the overflight of RAF planes, this government is guilty of having actively supported genocide.
Fortunately though the permission of a member of the government, the Attorney General, is required in order that a prosecution can be initiated. Thus in order to bring a criminal prosecution against the government permission first has to be sought from that government!
Speaking of the corruption of the government’s law officers it was necessary in my case that the Attorney General approve my prosecution as being ‘in the public interest’. Because Richard Hermer is on record as saying that ‘I have dear family members currently serving in the IDF’ he chose to delegate the task to the Solicitor General, Sarah Sackman, who gave the go ahead.
And who is Sarah Sackman if not a dedicated Zionist, who was Vice-Chair of the Jewish Labour Movement from 2015 to 2024. The JLM waged the ‘anti-Semitism’ smear campaign against Jeremy Corbyn and the Labour Left. It is not surprising that on her promotion to Minister of State at the Ministry of Justice the JLM wrote ‘We’re so pleased for Sarah, our former vice chair, and know she’ll be fantastic in this new position.’ I imagine they are very pleased that one of her first tasks as Solicitor General was to approve the prosecution of a leading Jewish anti-Zionist. In the process she accused me of ‘anti-Semitism’ terming me ‘problematic’.
Since Sackman is supposed to act in a quasi-judicial role it beggars belief that she didn’t think there was a conflict of interest.
On 5th January I am calling for a protest demonstration outside Kingston Crown Court to demonstrate the strength of feeling at the deployment of the Terrorist Act against those who support the Palestinians.
The views expressed in this article belong to the author and do not necessarily reflect the editorial policy of Tne Middle East Monitor
Opinion
Is the UK imprisoning pro-Palestine activists on Israel's behalf?
As Western states arm Israel, they criminalise Palestine activists. Beauty Dhlamini explains the link between Israel’s prisoners and UK hunger strikers.
Beauty Dhlamini
23 December, 2025
Rabeea Eid
In the face of this repression, however, coverage in the mainstream media is still limited. This is representative of a wider failure to interrogate how governments and prison systems inflict terror, whilst conflating the identities and beliefs of minorities being illegally detaining, with terrorism.
To understand the stakes of Western media complicity is to therefore expose the reality these actionists are fighting to dismantle when they interfere with the infrastructures their governments build, sustain and fund to enact genocidal violence. For example, the UK government continues operations of Elbit Systems, Israel’s largest weapons manufacturer which provides its airforce with 85% of its combat drones, and its land forces with 80% of the weapons and equipment they use against Palestinians.
This is why all those detained for taking action against the complicity, are seen as prisoners of war proxy by solidarity movements around the world, they too are targets of Israel’s brutal apparatus. And this is made more apparent with the revelation by Declassified through a Freedom of Information (FOI) request to the Home Office, that government officials had a private meeting with Elbit Systems in December 2024.
Extending and exporting repression
Indeed, the persecution of activists in the West is merely an extension of the cruelty of the Israeli prison system, where over 10,000 Palestinian political prisoners (over 2,900 of them from Gaza), are still fighting for their freedom Palestinians.
Over 3,500 of these Palestinian prisoners are held under the Israeli system of 'administrative detention’ which allows them to imprison Palestinians for up to six months without charge or trial. Since 7 October, this system has only intensified, with scenes of systemic torture, starvation, lack of access to lawyers or family members, punitive strip searches and humiliation of detainees becoming the norm.
Detention orders are reified by an Israeli military court, and the six-month period of imprisonment can be renewed indefinitely, with none of the detainees or their legal teams having access to evidence detailing the reasons. Many have consequently been imprisoned for years without any due process.
Related
The same repressive playbook is being used globally, and an archipelago of political prisoners is being built by Israel with the facilitation of Western governments. In October 2025, 11 of 27 members of the Greek delegation participating in the Global Sumud Flotilla were captured and shortly after, announced their collective hunger strike to protest their illegal detention by Israeli authorities under anti-terrorist laws.
In Italy Palestinians, Anan Yaeesh, Mansour Doghmosh and Ali Irar continue to be held since March 2024, where they exist in the same judicial limbo as Palestinian administrative detainees. An Italian Court of Appeal refused the extradition bid by Israel for Yaeesh – who has been on hunger strike since October – because he faces the risk of torture in Israeli prison. This begs the question why the Italian judiciary system continues to detain him in “preventative custody“ for supporting the resistance of the illegal military occupation in Tulkarem, in the West Bank.
Similarly, a Palestinian who was granted asylum has been held in remand within a French prison for over a year and half after being detained under France’s anti-terrorism legislation at the Israeli government's request. Having already experienced administrative detentions prior to leaving Palestine in 2014, it seems Israel is determined to insure its punitive unjust judiciary process follows him wherever he goes.
Even in the US, Palestinian student Leqaa Kordia, who participated in the Columbia University protests whilst grieving the murder of hundreds of family members by the IOF, has been held in ICE immigration detention in Texas for nine months.
A global struggle
Meanwhile, in the UK the largest pro-Palestinian hunger strike remains steadfast. Of the 29 pro-Palestine activists (Filton 24 and Brize Norton 5) who are being held without trial in remand over their alleged involvement in actions against UK subsidiaries of Elbit Systems and the Royal Air Force (RAF) Brize Norton base, eight have been on hunger strike (some for up to 50 days). Whilst none have been charged with terrorism, the counter-terrorism laws that keep them in remand, and the forced retrospective association with the now proscribed group Palestine Action, exemplifies how Western governments punish those who carry out direct action in support of Palestine liberation.
The hunger strikers are demanding: an end to censorship as they await trial, immediate bail, immediate release, guarantee of safety as full citizens (especially those with a migrant status), the end of Israeli interference in their judiciary processes, and the end of the genocide in Gaza. These sit within the broader demands to de-proscription Palestine Action and exonerate the over 2,000 citizens arrested under the Terrorism Act for holding signs indicating support for the group.
Despite being geographically separated, the resolve of all of Israel’s global political prisoners is connected. For the actionists, activists and organisers alike who have been detained and imprisoned, parallels should constantly be drawn between their resistance and those of Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jails.
This is particularly important in the face of bigger Palestine solidarity platforms either being selective or largely ignoring the plight of the prisoners, especially the UK hunger strike currently taking place.
It is clear that growing crackdowns are linked to Western governments failing to quash the unshakeable international solidarity and resistance efforts over recent years. Whilst the growing number of Israel’s global political prisoners of war is supposed to instil fear in the rest of us, and to dissuade us from organising and protesting against Israel’s crimes, movements have only grown bigger and stronger.
Beauty Dhlamini is a Tribune columnist. She is a global health scholar with a focus on health inequalities and co-hosts the podcast Mind the Health Gap.
Follow her on Twitter: @BeautyDhlamini
Opinions expressed in this article remain those of the author and do not necessarily represent those of The New Arab, its editorial board or staff.
Is the UK imprisoning pro-Palestine activists on Israel's behalf?
As Western states arm Israel, they criminalise Palestine activists. Beauty Dhlamini explains the link between Israel’s prisoners and UK hunger strikers.
Beauty Dhlamini
23 December, 2025
THE NEW ARAB
Voices

Protestors block Whitehall outside Downing Street in support of the Palestine Action hunger strikers on December 11, 2025. [GETTY] in London, United Kingdom
Whilst Western governments continue to provide protection and support for Israel, including by supplying arms which the Israeli Offense Forces (IOF) use in the ongoing genocide in Gaza, a brutal persecution is being waged against those in support of Palestinian liberation.
The criminalisation of solidarity with Palestinian liberation, has come under sustained attack since 7 October 2023. A report by the International Federation for Human Rights (FIDH) revealed how the UK, the US, France and Germany, continue to misuse their immigration, counter-terrorism legislation as well as antisemitism hate crime laws to suppress support for Palestinian rights in Gaza and the occupied West Bank.
Despite the laws of all the mentioned countries differing, it is clear they represent a persistent trend of global repression.
Prisoners of war
As Western governments continue to pretend to call for an end to Israel’s punitive governance and policy of ethnic cleansing, and displacement, they have adopted the relentless legislative pursuit of those actively trying to prevent it. This is not new, and only proves what has been true since the 1917 Balfour Declaration: Israel exists as a proxy state for Western imperialism and settler-colonialism

Protestors block Whitehall outside Downing Street in support of the Palestine Action hunger strikers on December 11, 2025. [GETTY] in London, United Kingdom
Whilst Western governments continue to provide protection and support for Israel, including by supplying arms which the Israeli Offense Forces (IOF) use in the ongoing genocide in Gaza, a brutal persecution is being waged against those in support of Palestinian liberation.
The criminalisation of solidarity with Palestinian liberation, has come under sustained attack since 7 October 2023. A report by the International Federation for Human Rights (FIDH) revealed how the UK, the US, France and Germany, continue to misuse their immigration, counter-terrorism legislation as well as antisemitism hate crime laws to suppress support for Palestinian rights in Gaza and the occupied West Bank.
Despite the laws of all the mentioned countries differing, it is clear they represent a persistent trend of global repression.
Prisoners of war
As Western governments continue to pretend to call for an end to Israel’s punitive governance and policy of ethnic cleansing, and displacement, they have adopted the relentless legislative pursuit of those actively trying to prevent it. This is not new, and only proves what has been true since the 1917 Balfour Declaration: Israel exists as a proxy state for Western imperialism and settler-colonialism
Rabeea Eid
In the face of this repression, however, coverage in the mainstream media is still limited. This is representative of a wider failure to interrogate how governments and prison systems inflict terror, whilst conflating the identities and beliefs of minorities being illegally detaining, with terrorism.
To understand the stakes of Western media complicity is to therefore expose the reality these actionists are fighting to dismantle when they interfere with the infrastructures their governments build, sustain and fund to enact genocidal violence. For example, the UK government continues operations of Elbit Systems, Israel’s largest weapons manufacturer which provides its airforce with 85% of its combat drones, and its land forces with 80% of the weapons and equipment they use against Palestinians.
This is why all those detained for taking action against the complicity, are seen as prisoners of war proxy by solidarity movements around the world, they too are targets of Israel’s brutal apparatus. And this is made more apparent with the revelation by Declassified through a Freedom of Information (FOI) request to the Home Office, that government officials had a private meeting with Elbit Systems in December 2024.
Extending and exporting repression
Indeed, the persecution of activists in the West is merely an extension of the cruelty of the Israeli prison system, where over 10,000 Palestinian political prisoners (over 2,900 of them from Gaza), are still fighting for their freedom Palestinians.
Over 3,500 of these Palestinian prisoners are held under the Israeli system of 'administrative detention’ which allows them to imprison Palestinians for up to six months without charge or trial. Since 7 October, this system has only intensified, with scenes of systemic torture, starvation, lack of access to lawyers or family members, punitive strip searches and humiliation of detainees becoming the norm.
Detention orders are reified by an Israeli military court, and the six-month period of imprisonment can be renewed indefinitely, with none of the detainees or their legal teams having access to evidence detailing the reasons. Many have consequently been imprisoned for years without any due process.
Related
The same repressive playbook is being used globally, and an archipelago of political prisoners is being built by Israel with the facilitation of Western governments. In October 2025, 11 of 27 members of the Greek delegation participating in the Global Sumud Flotilla were captured and shortly after, announced their collective hunger strike to protest their illegal detention by Israeli authorities under anti-terrorist laws.
In Italy Palestinians, Anan Yaeesh, Mansour Doghmosh and Ali Irar continue to be held since March 2024, where they exist in the same judicial limbo as Palestinian administrative detainees. An Italian Court of Appeal refused the extradition bid by Israel for Yaeesh – who has been on hunger strike since October – because he faces the risk of torture in Israeli prison. This begs the question why the Italian judiciary system continues to detain him in “preventative custody“ for supporting the resistance of the illegal military occupation in Tulkarem, in the West Bank.
Similarly, a Palestinian who was granted asylum has been held in remand within a French prison for over a year and half after being detained under France’s anti-terrorism legislation at the Israeli government's request. Having already experienced administrative detentions prior to leaving Palestine in 2014, it seems Israel is determined to insure its punitive unjust judiciary process follows him wherever he goes.
Even in the US, Palestinian student Leqaa Kordia, who participated in the Columbia University protests whilst grieving the murder of hundreds of family members by the IOF, has been held in ICE immigration detention in Texas for nine months.
A global struggle
Meanwhile, in the UK the largest pro-Palestinian hunger strike remains steadfast. Of the 29 pro-Palestine activists (Filton 24 and Brize Norton 5) who are being held without trial in remand over their alleged involvement in actions against UK subsidiaries of Elbit Systems and the Royal Air Force (RAF) Brize Norton base, eight have been on hunger strike (some for up to 50 days). Whilst none have been charged with terrorism, the counter-terrorism laws that keep them in remand, and the forced retrospective association with the now proscribed group Palestine Action, exemplifies how Western governments punish those who carry out direct action in support of Palestine liberation.
The hunger strikers are demanding: an end to censorship as they await trial, immediate bail, immediate release, guarantee of safety as full citizens (especially those with a migrant status), the end of Israeli interference in their judiciary processes, and the end of the genocide in Gaza. These sit within the broader demands to de-proscription Palestine Action and exonerate the over 2,000 citizens arrested under the Terrorism Act for holding signs indicating support for the group.
Despite being geographically separated, the resolve of all of Israel’s global political prisoners is connected. For the actionists, activists and organisers alike who have been detained and imprisoned, parallels should constantly be drawn between their resistance and those of Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jails.
This is particularly important in the face of bigger Palestine solidarity platforms either being selective or largely ignoring the plight of the prisoners, especially the UK hunger strike currently taking place.
It is clear that growing crackdowns are linked to Western governments failing to quash the unshakeable international solidarity and resistance efforts over recent years. Whilst the growing number of Israel’s global political prisoners of war is supposed to instil fear in the rest of us, and to dissuade us from organising and protesting against Israel’s crimes, movements have only grown bigger and stronger.
Beauty Dhlamini is a Tribune columnist. She is a global health scholar with a focus on health inequalities and co-hosts the podcast Mind the Health Gap.
Follow her on Twitter: @BeautyDhlamini
Opinions expressed in this article remain those of the author and do not necessarily represent those of The New Arab, its editorial board or staff.















