UK Appeals Ban on Palestine Action Ruling

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  • April 28, 2026 at 1:48 PM ET
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Key Takeaways

The UK government is appealing a High Court ruling that deemed the ban on pro-Palestinian group Palestine Action unlawful. Over 2,700 arrests have been made for showing support of the group since its proscription last year under terrorism laws.

  • The appeal hearing began Tuesday at London's Court of Appeal with five judges instead of the usual three.
  • Government lawyers argue High Court overstated impact on freedom of expression; activists damaged military planes in June 2025.
  • Ban equates Palestine Action to groups like Islamic State, making membership punishable by up to 14 years in prison.
  • Co-founder Huda Ammori says ban creates 'profound chilling effect' and climate of fear among Palestinian rights campaigners.
  • Metropolitan Police resumed arrests earlier this month after pausing them post-High Court ruling.

The UK government is appealing a High Court ruling that deemed the ban on pro-Palestinian group Palestine Action unlawful. The ban, imposed last year under terrorism laws, has led to over 2,700 arrests for showing support of the group.

The appeal hearing began Tuesday at London's Court of Appeal with a rare five-judge panel instead of the usual three. Lawyers representing Interior Minister Shabana Mahmood argued that the High Court's finding on freedom of expression was 'overstated and wrong.' The group was proscribed after activists damaged two military planes at RAF Brize Norton air base in June 2025.

The ban places Palestine Action on par with groups like Islamic State or al Qaeda, making membership a criminal offense punishable by up to 14 years in prison. Co-founder Huda Ammori stated that the ban had created a 'profound chilling effect' and fostered a climate of fear among those campaigning for Palestinian rights.

The Metropolitan Police initially paused arrests following the High Court ruling but resumed enforcement earlier this month, arresting over 500 people. The fate of those arrested remains uncertain as the appeal process continues. Celebrities and scholars, including novelist Sally Rooney and climate activist Greta Thunberg, have signed a letter in support of Palestine Action.

Opening arguments for the government's defense highlighted that overturning the ban would limit ministers' counter-terrorism powers. Sir James Eadie KC argued before the Court of Appeal that Parliament had given ministers discretion over such decisions once there was an expert finding that an organization was 'concerned in terrorism.' He asserted Palestine Action met this statutory definition, citing escalating seriousness in their activities.

In February 2025, three High Court judges found that while Palestine Action promotes its political cause through criminality and encouragement of criminality, these facts did not justify the ban under terrorism legislation. They ruled it breached the home secretary's own policy limiting use of this exceptional power—though the group remains banned pending appeal.

Written submissions to the Court detailed 158 'direct action events' by Palestine Action members between August 2024 and June 2025, targeting 48 business premises. On 28 occasions, protesters caused more than £50,000 of damage with 158 arrests made during this period.

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