Mass arrests at Gaza protests across UK supporting proscribed ‘terrorist' group
In the capital, the Metropolitan Police said 55 people had been arrested in Parliament Square for displaying placards in support of Palestine Action, London's The Telegraph reported. The force said they were arrested under Section 13 of the Terrorism Act 2000.
It later added that by 4pm, a further 10 people had been arrested within the main Palestine Coalition march, bringing the total to 65 in London.
The Telegraph reported that pro-Israel counter-protesters chanted 'there is no genocide' at thousands of pro-Palestinian demonstrators, with one activist shouting: 'You use genocide as an excuse for your hatred for the Jewish state.'
They held signs that read 'There is no genocide – but there are 50 hostages still captive', and were met with shouts of 'fascist' and 'f--- your Jewish state' by some pro-Palestinian protesters.
The Telegraph also reported that eight people were arrested on the steps of Truro Cathedral in Cornwall. Defend Our Juries said one of those arrested was Deborah Hinton, an 81-year-old former magistrate. Video posted online showed police carrying an elderly man away from the Truro demonstration as he shouted, 'I oppose genocide.'
Critics of the protests described them as antisemitic.
'These chants just show how thin the veneer is and why they fixate on Israel. The fact is that they hate the idea of a Jewish state existing because they cannot stand the idea of Jews having self-determination,' a spokesman for the Campaign Against Anti-Semitism told the Telegraph.
'Palestine Action has always been an extreme and hateful organisation and, rather than arresting and releasing their supporters, they must now face the full force of the law.'
Meanwhile, a cast member unfolded a Palestinian flag on stage during a Royal Opera House production on Saturday night, London time, the Telegraph reported.
The incident took place during the encore of a performance of Il Trovatore at the London venue and attempts were made to remove the flag, which was resisted.
A member of the audience told the Telegraph: 'At the Royal Opera House, one of the cast unfurled a Palestinian flag at the encore.
'Someone ... came on stage from the wings to try to remove the flag from the cast member who wrestled it back and refused to give it up.' The Telegraph approached the Royal Opera House for comment.
In Gaza, at least 36 people were killed by Israeli fire while they were on their way to an aid distribution site at dawn on Saturday, according to the Gaza Health Ministry and Nasser Hospital in Khan Younis.
The Israeli military said it had fired warning shots at suspects who approached its troops after they did not heed calls to stop, about a kilometre away from an aid distribution site that was not active at the time.
Gaza resident Mohammed al-Khalidi said he was in the group approaching the site and heard no warnings before the firing began.
'We thought they came out to organise us so we can get aid, suddenly (I) saw the jeeps coming from one side, and the tanks from the other and started shooting at us,' he said.
The Gaza Humanitarian Foundation, a US-backed group which runs the aid site, said there were no incidents or fatalities there on Saturday and that it had repeatedly warned people not to travel to its distribution points in the dark.
'The reported IDF (Israel Defence Forces) activity resulting in fatalities occurred hours before our sites opened and our understanding is most of the casualties occurred several kilometres away from the nearest GHF site,' it said.
The Israeli military said it was reviewing the incident.
The war began when Hamas-led militants stormed into Israel on October 2023, killing 1200 people, mostly civilians and taking 251 hostages back to Gaza.
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The Israeli military campaign against Hamas in Gaza has since killed around 58,000 Palestinians, most of them civilians according to health officials, displaced almost the entire population and plunged the enclave into a humanitarian crisis, leaving much of the territory in ruins.
Israel and Hamas are engaged in indirect talks in Doha aimed at reaching a US-proposed 60-day ceasefire and a hostage deal mediated by Egypt and Qatar, though there has been no sign of any imminent breakthrough. At least 20 of the remaining 50 hostages in Gaza are believed to still be alive.
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The Advertiser
an hour ago
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Protests take over from pageantry as parliament returns
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During Governor-General Sam Mostyn's speech laying out the priorities for the three years ahead, more than a dozen pro-Palestinian demonstrators were detained after protesting inside the foyer of parliament, before being removed from the building. Hundreds of protesters called for sanctions on Israel on the lawns of parliament, with one woman arrested, federal police say. Traffic around Parliament House was also disrupted by the protests. As the governor-general read her speech, Greens senator Mehreen Faruqi held a silent protest by holding a sign that read: "Gaza is starving. Words won't feed them. Sanction Israel". Ms Mostyn said cost-of-living relief would be high on the agenda for the next term. "(Voters) re-elected a government that will continue building on the foundation of its first term, upholding the values of fairness, aspiration and opportunity," the governor-general told the upper house. "The government will work to repay the trust Australians have placed in it." The day began with an ecumenical service at a Wesley Uniting Church, with the prime minister promising to get down to business quickly. "Every day is an opportunity to deliver for Australians and this week we will have legislation to do that," he told reporters outside the church. "We'll continue to work hard each and every day in the interest of Australians." Mr Albanese will command a large majority in his second term as leader, with Labor holding 94 of the 150 seats in the House of Representatives. The size of the majority was on display on the floor of parliament for the first time since the election, with Labor MPs sitting on both sides of the aisle in the lower house. Across the chamber, Opposition Leader Sussan Ley presides over just 43 lower-house MPs after an election wipeout for the coalition. "We got smashed at the last election and the number of seats that we now hold is a demonstration that we are at a low point," Ms Ley said. "But we're here to work hard, we're here to put the interests of the Australian people that we come here to represent front and centre. "And we know that aspiration connects every single thread of Australian society." After a ceremonial welcome to country and smoking ceremony on the forecourt of Parliament House, MPs and senators were sworn in one-by-one at their respective chambers. Business soon turned to the election of a speaker for the House of Representatives. Labor MP Milton Dick was re-elected to the role with bipartisan support before being ceremonially dragged to the speaker's chair by MPs. The prime minister said Mr Dick would continue to conduct the role with "fairness, with humour and with intellect". The returning speaker said it was a "profound honour" to carry on in the position. "My view is the role of speaker is not one of partisanship, but of stewardship, and it's my solemn responsibility to ensure that democracy is not only practised here, but it's strengthened here," Mr Dick said. In the Senate, Sue Lines was re-elected as president of the chamber, but not before One Nation leader Pauline Hanson's surprise nomination of political rival David Pocock for the position. The independent ACT senator declined the nomination. After Tuesday's ceremonial opening, formal business begins on Wednesday with legislation including for a 20 per cent reduction in HECS debt for students. Pomp and ceremony were on full display as MPs gathered in Canberra for the opening of federal parliament. But as formal traditions dating back hundreds of years played out at Parliament House, protests called for action on conflict in the Middle East. During Governor-General Sam Mostyn's speech laying out the priorities for the three years ahead, more than a dozen pro-Palestinian demonstrators were detained after protesting inside the foyer of parliament, before being removed from the building. Hundreds of protesters called for sanctions on Israel on the lawns of parliament, with one woman arrested, federal police say. Traffic around Parliament House was also disrupted by the protests. As the governor-general read her speech, Greens senator Mehreen Faruqi held a silent protest by holding a sign that read: "Gaza is starving. Words won't feed them. Sanction Israel". Ms Mostyn said cost-of-living relief would be high on the agenda for the next term. "(Voters) re-elected a government that will continue building on the foundation of its first term, upholding the values of fairness, aspiration and opportunity," the governor-general told the upper house. "The government will work to repay the trust Australians have placed in it." 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"But we're here to work hard, we're here to put the interests of the Australian people that we come here to represent front and centre. "And we know that aspiration connects every single thread of Australian society." After a ceremonial welcome to country and smoking ceremony on the forecourt of Parliament House, MPs and senators were sworn in one-by-one at their respective chambers. Business soon turned to the election of a speaker for the House of Representatives. Labor MP Milton Dick was re-elected to the role with bipartisan support before being ceremonially dragged to the speaker's chair by MPs. The prime minister said Mr Dick would continue to conduct the role with "fairness, with humour and with intellect". The returning speaker said it was a "profound honour" to carry on in the position. 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The day began with an ecumenical service at a Wesley Uniting Church, with the prime minister promising to get down to business quickly. "Every day is an opportunity to deliver for Australians and this week we will have legislation to do that," he told reporters outside the church. "We'll continue to work hard each and every day in the interest of Australians." Mr Albanese will command a large majority in his second term as leader, with Labor holding 94 of the 150 seats in the House of Representatives. The size of the majority was on display on the floor of parliament for the first time since the election, with Labor MPs sitting on both sides of the aisle in the lower house. Across the chamber, Opposition Leader Sussan Ley presides over just 43 lower-house MPs after an election wipeout for the coalition. "We got smashed at the last election and the number of seats that we now hold is a demonstration that we are at a low point," Ms Ley said. "But we're here to work hard, we're here to put the interests of the Australian people that we come here to represent front and centre. "And we know that aspiration connects every single thread of Australian society." After a ceremonial welcome to country and smoking ceremony on the forecourt of Parliament House, MPs and senators were sworn in one-by-one at their respective chambers. Business soon turned to the election of a speaker for the House of Representatives. Labor MP Milton Dick was re-elected to the role with bipartisan support before being ceremonially dragged to the speaker's chair by MPs. The prime minister said Mr Dick would continue to conduct the role with "fairness, with humour and with intellect". The returning speaker said it was a "profound honour" to carry on in the position. "My view is the role of speaker is not one of partisanship, but of stewardship, and it's my solemn responsibility to ensure that democracy is not only practised here, but it's strengthened here," Mr Dick said. In the Senate, Sue Lines was re-elected as president of the chamber, but not before One Nation leader Pauline Hanson's surprise nomination of political rival David Pocock for the position. The independent ACT senator declined the nomination. After Tuesday's ceremonial opening, formal business begins on Wednesday with legislation including for a 20 per cent reduction in HECS debt for students.


West Australian
2 hours ago
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