#palaction

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2026-02-07

“[UK] Met[ropolitan] police refuse to say if it shared classified documents with Israel lobby groups”

by HG in The Canary

@thecanaryuk
@thecanary
@uk_politics

“The Met Police is refusing to admit the existence of a classified document, which pro-Israel groups used to lobby the government over the proscription of Palestine Action”

thecanary.co/uk/2026/02/06/%e2

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2026-02-06

“The jury were right to acquit the Palestine Action defendants. Here's why”

by Jonathan Cook on Substack

@uk_politics
@palestine@fedibird.com
@Palestine@masto.ai
@palestine@lemmy.ml

“Jurors bravely set aside social conditioning, the natural instinct we all share to defer to authority, and expectations fomented by establishment media. Instead they considered the actual evidence”

open.substack.com/pub/jonathan

Victory for Palestine Action as “Filton 6” Acquitted

Six Palestine Action activists who broke into an Israeli arms factory in the UK have been acquitted or not convicted of all charges against them.

Campaigners told The Electronic Intifada on Wednesday that the result was a “monumental” and “total” victory.

After eight days of deliberation in January and February, the jury either acquitted or refused to convict Charlotte Head, Samuel Corner, Leona Kamio, Fatema Zainab Rajwani, Zoe Rogers and Jordan Devlin of all charges.

Five out of the six were released on bail Wednesday evening.

All six were found not guilty of aggravated burglary, the most serious charge which could have led to life sentences.

The six activists were arrested on site in August 2024 and held on remand for 17 months.

They were the first of a total of 24 defendants to face trials relating to the invasion and smashing of a factory in Filton, near Bristol in the west of England, owned by a subsidiary of Elbit Systems, Israel’s largest weapons manufacturer.

The group of 24 includes some of the prisoners who recently went on a hunger strike.

Once inside, the group destroyed Israeli quadcopter drones, which have been used frequently to massacre Palestinians in Gaza.

During the trial, acquitted defendant Fatema Zainab Rajwani (a third-year film student at the time of the action) was open that, “I damaged drones which is what I went in to do.” She commented on video footage shown to the court, saying, “That is me dismantling a quadcopter drone with a crowbar,” and explaining that the group wanted to “document the presence of quadcopters and [Elbit’s] crimes.”

Fourteen other defendants were rounded up by Britain’s feared Counter Terrorism Police, in a series of violent pre-dawn raids in November 2024 and July last year.

A Palestine Action source told The Electronic Intifada on Wednesday that the remaining Filton 24 prisoners will now appeal to be released on bail.

Such prisoners can usually be held on remand before trial for up to six months. But the politicization and fallacious government “terrorism” campaign against the group – in connivance with Israel – meant that the campaigners have been held on remand for as long as 17 months.

Not guilty

In addition to beating the most serious charge, the jury acquitted Fatema Zainab Rajwani, Zoe Rogers and Jordan Devlin of violent disorder. It refused to convict Charlotte Head, Samuel Corner and Leona Kamio of the same charge.

Samuel Corner was also not convicted of “grievous bodily harm with intent” for allegedly striking a police officer.

Crucially, the jury refused to convict any of the defendants of criminal damage.

Yet five of the group had admitted in court to destroying Israeli weapons and equipment belonging to Elbit at the factory.

That the jury could not reach a majority verdict on some of the lesser charges means in theory that there could be retrails in some cases – though that is not expected to have a realistic chance of success.

That is why the sixth defendant, Samuel Corner, was not immediately released on bailed on Wednesday. Government prosecutors asked the court for more time to decide if they wanted to pursue a retrial in relation to the grievous bodily harm charge.

The Palestine Action source also said that certain issues relating to matters under reporting restrictions imposed by the judge in this trial meant that the verdict was the best possible outcome for the group.

The source said that the verdict represented a “total victory” for the six Palestine Action campaigners.

Most of the remaining “Filton 24” group have been held on draconian remand for months – for more than a year in some cases.

But one, Sean Middlebrough, escaped during a short-term release in November last year. In an exclusive statement, he told The Electronic Intifada that he was not on the run, and was instead “refusing to be held as a prisoner of war of Israel in a British prison.”

Government ministers such as former Home Secretary Yvette Cooper attempted to portray the Filton activists as violent criminals who assaulted a police officer. The British press for the most part obediently parroted such claims and insinuations.

But during this “Filton 6” trial, body-cam footage released to the jury – some of which can be viewed in the video above – showed the exact opposite: Elbit security guards apparently assaulting the activists with sledgehammers.

In a statement released on Wednesday the Filton 24 Defence Committee said the result was a “monumental victory.”

The committee detailed how the trial unfolded.

According to the committee, the verdicts demonstrated that “the jury did not accept the prosecution case that the defendants entered the Elbit weapons factory with the intention of using the items they carried as weapons.”

They said that instead the “jury agreed with the defense argument, that the defendants’ sole intention was to use the items, including sledgehammers, as tools to disarm Israeli weapons … The jury understood that it is not those who destroy Israeli weapons which are guilty, rather the guilty party is the one that deploys such weapons to commit genocide in Gaza.”

The trial also revealed that footage went missing from a number of Elbit’s internal CCTV cameras covering key angles, the committee said. The security guards’ body-worn videos had also been repeatedly turned off and on, as well as edited by Elbit.

Twenty-first century suffragettes

Defense lawyer Rajiv Menon compared the six to the suffragettes – women who demanded the right to vote. In the early 20th century, the suffragettes were routinely denounced as “terrorists and extremists,” although “the reality of course is very different,” Menon said.

The lawyer also said that Judge Jeremy Johnson tried to exclude evidence on Elbit Systems, and interrupted when counsel for the defense asked questions about the Israeli weapons manufacturer.

Menon said that the judge “has restricted what the defendants have been allowed to tell you … what they knew about Elbit’s role in the Israeli attack on Gaza. The consequence of that is that you do not know everything that the defendants knew about Elbit before” they took action against the factory.

The lawyer told the jury that Elbit is a “massive weapons company that has played a critical role in the killing of tens of thousands of Palestinians.”

At the end of the evidence, the judge told the jury that the “situation in the Middle East” and Elbit’s operations are “not relevant” to the case and directed the jury to “follow the legal directions I’ve given you and not anything else.”

The judge also issued a series of reporting restrictions on the case. As a result, I am still prevented from reporting certain details here.

Nonetheless, because the case was heard in open court, I am able to report the following.

During the trial, a juror asked whether they were allowed to acquit because the defendants genuinely believed that they were destroying weapons to prevent their use in genocide.

The judge’s response was “no.”

Trials of the remaining Filton 24 prisoners are still due to happen at some point in the future.

Blow to UK and Israel

Clare Rogers, the mother of defendant Zoe Rogers and a relentless campaigner in her own right said in the committee’s statement that “these are six young people of conscience … They had tried everything else – marches, petitions, writing to MPs, encampments … They felt they had no option but to take action themselves, to try to save as many lives as they could.”

The verdicts are a severe blow to the UK government’s attempt to smear Palestine campaigners as violent criminals and “terrorists.”

In a controversial move last July the home secretary banned Palestine Action as a “terrorist” group, marking the first time ever a non-violent protest group had been outlawed under Britain’s draconian Terrorism Act of 2000.

Activist lisa minerva luxx, from the Filton 24 Defence Committee, criticized the government for prejudicing the trial: “This was a trial by media. Yvette Cooper and [Prime Minister] Keir Starmer took evidence in this case out of context and broadcast it on televisions and tabloids across the country in order to justify proscribing Palestine Action as a terrorist organisation.”

 

With the result of a legal challenge to that ban expected any week now, the verdict also represents a serious blow to the credibility of that proscription.

This is despite the government – and even the legal system – going to the greatest lengths to try and stitch up this case.

There are also serious implications for the continuing right to trial by jury in the UK.

The fact that a jury of their peers acquitted or refused to convict the first six of the Filton 24 shows the importance and the democratic potential of jury trials.

It is exactly for those reasons that the UK government is seeking to abolish, or seriously erode, the right to trial by jury in the UK. In large part, these so-called “reforms” seem to be targeted precisely at supporting Israel and preventing juries from acquitting according to their conscience.

source: Electronic Intifada

abolitionmedia.noblogs.org/?p= #palAction #palestine #repression #Solidarity #uk
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2026-01-30

“Palestine Action Judicial Review”

by Craig Murray in Craig’s Substack on Substack

@uk_politics

“I attach the full text of Lord Young’s decision granting the Scottish judicial review of the proscription of Palestine Action. [..] we have a realistic chance of success on our three grounds - failure to consult, disproportionate limitation of freedom of assembly, disproportionate limitation of freedom of speech”

open.substack.com/pub/craigmur

Pal Action Prisoner Umer Khalid Refuses Water in Escalating Hunger Strike

Umer Khalid, a Palestine Action activist on hunger strike plans to start refusing fluids as well as food, tstating that he hopes his “drastic action” pressures the government into engaging with his protest demands.

Khalid stopped eating 13 days ago. He is currently receiving fluids with electrolytes, sugars and salts but said he will stop drinking altogether from Saturday.

While the body can survive for weeks without food, dehydration is certain to have fatal consequences in a far shorter time.

The escalation comes days after three other hunger-striking remand prisoners affiliated with Palestine Action ended their protests, claiming victory.

“The only thing that seems to have any impact, whether that is positive or negative, is drastic action,” Khalid, 22, told bourgeios media from prison via an intermediary. “The strike reflects the severity of this imprisonment. Being in this prison is not living life. Our lives have been paused. The world spins, and we sit in a concrete room. This strike reflects the severity of my demands.”

Khalid is calling for immediate bail; an end to alleged censorship in prison – authorities have been accused of withholding mail, calls and books and denying visitation rights; an inquiry into British involvement in Zionist military operations in Gaza; and the release of surveillance footage from Royal Air Force (RAF) spy flights that flew over Gaza on April 1, 2024, when British aid workers were killed in a Zionist fascist attack.

Khalid is among five activists accused of breaking into the United Kingdom’s largest airbase, RAF Brize Norton, in Oxfordshire in June and spray-painting two Voyager refuelling and transport planes. The incident, which was claimed by Palestine Action, caused millions of pounds worth of damage, according to the British government, which later absurdly proscribed the protest group as a “terrorist” organisation.

Critics have condemned the ban as illiberal overreach, given that Palestine Action’s stated objective is to use nonviolent means to counter the Zionist genocidal war against Palestinians and what it says is British complicity in it.

Khalid denies the charges against him of conspiracy to commit criminal damage and conspiracy to enter a prohibited place for purposes prejudicial to the safety or interests of the UK.

He is part of a collective of eight remand prisoners linked to Palestine Action that began a rolling hunger strike in November. Last week, three of them – two of whom were on the brink of death – ended their protests. Khalid is the only one still refusing food.

Eight remand prisoners accused of incidents claimed by Palestine Action have joined the rolling hunger strike since November. Top row from left: Amu Gib, Heba Muraisi, Jon Cink and Kamran Ahmed. Bottom row from left: Qesser Zuhrah, Lewie Chiaramello, Teuta Hoxha and Umer Khalid [Courtesy of Prisoners for Palestine]

Those now refeeding said improved prison rights signalled a concession. The UK’s reported denial of a defence contract to Elbit, Israel’s largest weapons manufacturer, is also being interpreted by them as a win.

Throughout the hunger strike, the British government said it has no power over the issue of bail because it is a matter for the judiciary to decide. The government also insisted that prison welfare procedures are being followed.

As for Khalid’s other demands, last year, the opposition Labour Party blocked a bill tabled by the left-wing lawmaker Jeremy Corbyn backing an official inquiry into Britain’s involvement in the war on Gaza.

And in April, the Ministry of Defence told The Times newspaper that it had video footage from an RAF surveillance plane that had flown over Gaza on the day of the Zionist strike that killed the aid workers but could not disclose any further details, citing national security.

Britain has said it flew spy planes over Gaza during the occupation’s onslaught to locate missing captives, but critics have raised questions about possible intelligence sharing with the Zionist entity.

Asim Qureshi, research director at the campaign group Cage, told Al Jazeera that the government’s refusal to meet with Khalid to negotiate on his demands “indicates their lack of concern for the life of this man, who is acting based on his principles within the context of a genocide”.

abolitionmedia.noblogs.org/?p= #hungerStrike #palAction #palestine #resistance #uk #umerKhalid

Three Hunger Strikers End Their Strike After Elbit Denied British Contract; Umer Khalid Continues Strike for 6th Day

On 14 January 2026, three of the Prisoners for Palestine — Heba Muraisi, Kamran Ahmad and Lewie C. — announced that they were ending their hunger strike (as they approached imminent death), following the announcement by the British government that Elbit Systems had been denied a £2 billion army training contract with the Ministry of Defence, after widespread reporting that Elbit would receive the contract. Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network salutes the Prisoners for Palestine and all of the hunger strikers on this important achievement and upon their sacrifice in the struggle for Palestinian liberation.

At the same time, Umer Khalid, another Prisoner for Palestine and one of the Brize Norton 5, has resumed his hunger strike. He has been repeatedly held in solitary confinement and denied his religious rights, while being held on remand for a trial that is not scheduled until January 2027. Umer says, “We must now continue to crush the protective skull of Zionism, which is the UK’s political and military support, under the weight of our collective mobilisation and action. Are you on the outside afraid of consequences when this life is so short? So let them keep us here as long as they want, because you can’t imprison resistance and you can’t kill a revolution. Liberation is a promise and victory is coming insha’Allah.” Umer previously conducted a hunger strike from 4-16 December 2025. It is urgent that we continue to support Umer Khalid and all of the prisoners for Palestine in British and other imperialist jails, imprisoned as part and parcel of imperialist complicity with Zionist genocide in Palestine.

STATEMENT – PRISONERS 4 PALESTINE – 14 JANUARY 2026

After 73 days of hunger strikes which began on Balfour Day, 2 November 2025, as some prisoners are facing imminent death, Heba Muraisi, Kamran Ahmed, and Lewie have ended their hunger strikes.

The decision to end their hunger strikes came as it was revealed that Elbit Systems UK was denied a vital £2 billion army training contract with the Ministry of Defence, a key demand of the hunger strikers.

The contract, which would have seen Elbit Systems provide training to the British Army over ten years, was lost despite the best efforts of officials in both the Ministry of Defence and the British Army, who it was revealed had been colluding with both Elbit Systems UK and its parent company Elbit Systems in backroom meetings and ‘tours’ to the capital of Palestine, Jerusalem, in a desperate attempt to further entrench their genocidal alliance and help them win the contract.

The abrupt cancellation of this deal is a resounding victory for the hunger strikers, who resisted with their incarcerated bodies in order to shed light on the role of Elbit Systems, Israel’s largest weapons manufacturer, in the colonization and occupation of Palestine. Since 2012, Elbit has won 25 public contracts in the UK totaling more than £333 million; the loss of this £2 billion contract marks a significant shift in this sordid “strategic alliance.” With this victory, it has never been clearer that Elbit’s days in Britain are numbered.

In addition to this key demand being met, we want to take this opportunity to celebrate the various victories achieved throughout the duration of the hunger strike:

In the past few weeks alone, hundreds of people have signed up to take action against the genocidal military-industrial complex, more than the number of people who took action with Palestine Action over its five-year campaign. During that five-year campaign, Israeli weapons factories were shut down. Elbit Systems is living on stolen time—we will see it shut down for good, not because of the government, but because of the people.

Heba Muraisi’s transfer to HMP Bronzefield has been accepted by HMP New Hall, where she is currently being held in intentional isolation from her family and friends.

T. Hoxha has been offered a meeting with the head of JEXU (Joint Extremism Unit) at her prison, the very same organization that orchestrates the prisoners’ treatment as ‘terrorists’.

Despite the cruel and constant medical neglect of the hunger strikers, including not logging food refusals, refusal of ambulances in life-threatening emergencies, and degrading treatment in hospitals, the national heads of prison healthcare have met with us at the behest of the Ministry of Justice.

During the hunger strike, some of the prisoners started receiving bulk packages of withelped mail, and in one case received an apology from prison staff for a letter that was delayed by six months. Books on topics of Gaza and feminism have also been given after months of waiting.

In pursuit of a fair trial, the hunger strikers demanded disclosure of export licenses for the last 5 years from Elbit Systems. After repeated requests, this information was disclosed to an independent researcher by the Department of Trade during the hunger strike.

The continued printing of the blood will remain on the stain on Britain’s facade of being a “democratic” country, with no sliver of law and order.

This pathetic and cowardly British government cannot resist authoritarianism; it uses fear to deter rightful protest and dissent, echoing the use of administrative detention against the Palestinian people.

The hunger strike has cemented this fact to the country, and across the world: Britain has political prisoners in service of a foreign genocidal regime. In a time of worsening political repression and widespread propaganda about a non-existent ‘ceasefire’ in Gaza, the hunger strike stands as a testament to continued defiance.

The hunger strikers have allowed those of us who were fearful of state repression to be brave—to go out once again onto the streets and fight for justice. The government should know they cannot ban a concept. Cowardly banning one group cannot stop a belief, a movement, a people. This is only the start of our collective fight to free us all, and the road to freedom runs through Palestine.

At the end of his hunger strike, on Elbit losing the £2 billion contract, Lewie said:

It is definitely a time for celebration. A time to rejoice and to embrace our joy as revolution and as liberation… We do this because of Palestine, because we’ve been inspired, because we’ve been tempted to take action and to try to realize our dreams for a free Palestine, for an emancipated world.

As these victories are declared, we turn our efforts and attention to Umer Khalid, the last remaining hunger striker, who continues to use his body as a weapon against the state in pursuit of justice.

source: Samidoun

abolitionmedia.noblogs.org/?p= #DirectAction #hungerStrike #palAction #palestine #repression #samidoun #uk

Irreversible Damage: Palestine Action Hunger Strike Nears 70 Days

Twelve days into the new year, two of the imprisoned members of Palestine Action, Heba Muraisi and Kamran Ahmed, have entered what doctors describe as the most dangerous and medically irreversible phase of the hunger strike. Their protest has become a matter of survival, placing unprecedented pressure on the British prison system, now facing one of its most serious political hunger strikes in decades.

Medical professionals, including Dr. James Smith, warn that after two months without sustenance, the human body begins cannibalizing itself to sustain basic organ function. Fat reserves are exhausted, muscle tissue is broken down, and the risk of organ failure escalates rapidly. According to doctors who have either examined the prisoners or reviewed their conditions, the hunger strikers’ bodies are now “breaking down”, with some experiencing severe neurological impairment.

Several activists have already been forced to suspend or end their strikes in recent weeks after reaching the brink of death. Teuta Hoxha was among those who halted her protest following acute medical deterioration.

Reports from inside the prison system and from visiting physicians describe conditions that are increasingly dire. Activists have suffered partial loss of vision and hearing, tremors, and loss of motor control. Heba Muraisi, the longest fasting member of the group, is reportedly struggling to breathe. This suggests that the muscles responsible for respiration are beginning to fail. Last week, Kamran Ahmed was transferred to hospital after his condition became life-threatening.

Observers have increasingly drawn parallels between the current hunger strike and the 1981 Irish Republican hunger strike, the largest and most politically charged prison protest in modern British history. That strike, which led to the deaths of ten prisoners, including Bobby Sands, reshaped British and Irish politics and forced international attention onto the conditions inside UK-controlled prisons.

The current strike is now widely regarded as the most prominent in UK prisons since 1981, both in terms of duration and the scale of political implications it carries. As in 1981, prisoners have turned to their own bodies as a final means of protest after legal and institutional avenues failed to produce relief.

On New Year’s Eve, Belfast saw hundreds of Irish people gathering in solidarity with the starving activists whose struggle serves as a reminder of what happened 44 years ago. Standing beneath a mural of Bobby Sands, Pat Sheehan, a survivor of the 1981 Irish Republican hunger strike, warned in comments to Al Jazeera that history is once again approaching a deadly threshold. Sheehan, who spent 55 days on hunger strike before it was called off, said he was “in theory… the next person to die” when the protest ended. By that point, he recalled, his liver was failing, his eyesight had deteriorated, and he was vomiting bile. “Once you pass 40 days, you’re entering the danger zone,” he said, adding that those currently fasting for more than 50 days “must be very weak now.” Yet Sheehan noted that hunger strikes often harden resolve as they continue, explaining that if participants are psychologically prepared, “their psychological strength will increase the longer the hunger strike goes on.”

Appeals from lawyers, doctors, and MPs to British ministers to intervene have been met with outright refusal. Government officials argue that engaging with the hunger strikers would “create perverse incentives that would encourage more people to put themselves at risk through hunger strikes.” The government has attempted to normalize the situation by suggesting that hunger strikes are routine within the prison system. According to The Guardian, officials have claimed that “over the last five years we have averaged over 200 hunger strike incidents every year,” implying that no extraordinary response is warranted. However, the figures cited refer primarily to short-term food refusals by individual prisoners, a fundamentally different phenomenon from a prolonged, collective hunger strike that now presents an imminent risk of death by starvation.

Frome police raids of pro-Palestine marches, to the alienation of activists and the cowardly official response, a non-surprising pattern takes shape as the United Kingdom continues to uphold a legacy of imperialism and genocide affiliation. Yet the hunger strikers remain intent on carrying on until their demands are met.

source: Al Akhbar

abolitionmedia.noblogs.org/?p= #europe #palAction #palestine #Solidarity #uk #westAsia
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2026-01-03

“36 Minute Trial And No Jury - Starmer’s Fascist Mass Court”

by Craig Murray in Craig’s Substack on Substack

@uk_politics
@UKLabour

“Those charged with terrorism for supporting will have no jury in trials limited to 36 minutes each, with prison sentences up to six months. These are the plans for Starmer Courts for mass trials of anti-Genocide protestors”

open.substack.com/pub/craigmur

Mansoor Adayfi entame une grève de la faim en soutien aux #HungerStrikers Écrivain, artiste, activiste et ew-prisonnier de Guantánamo 《 Dans le mauvais traitement des détenus de #PalAction, je vois ma propre histoire. Je vois des preuves évidentes que Guantánamo n'a pas pris fin; il s'est propagé.》

RE: https://bsky.app/profile/did:plc:7jvfg42rufbunraty5o73pw2/post/3mbgx56kw522t

PFLP Expresses its Full Solidarity With the Heroes of “Palestine Action” on Hunger Strike, Holds the British Regime Responsible for Their Lives

The Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine expresses its complete and unlimited solidarity with the heroes of the “Palestine Action” movement who are on hunger strike in British prisons, and whose health condition has entered the stage of extreme danger. As a result of their insistence on confronting the colonial system of oppression with empty hearts, in defense of Palestinian rights and in rejection of the British government’s complicity in the war of extermination.

The Front holds the British Labor Party government fully responsible for the lives of the strikers, considering that the policy of deliberate medical negligence practiced by the British authorities against these activists, leaving them to face slow death, is a carbon copy of what the criminal Zionist occupation practices against our heroic prisoners, which reaffirms that the killer and the colonizer are one, and the repressive policy towards supporters of freedom is indivisible.

The arbitrary arrest without trial that the “Palestine Action” activists are subjected to, and the classification of their movement as a “terrorist” organization, is a moral and legal decline that reflects the Starmer government’s complete dependence on the dictates of the influential Zionist lobby.

The Front denounces the blatant contradiction of the British government; While it feigns calls to stop the war, it is actually complicit in the annihilation of Gaza and obstructing the international prosecution of the war criminal Netanyahu by the International Criminal Court, and at the same time it is waging a repressive campaign against its honorable citizens who are rising up to close the Elbit Systems factories that are killing our children.

The struggle of the peoples to stop this attack against freedom activists is one struggle, whether in London, New York, Berlin or Gaza, and we call on the living and free forces in Britain and the world to escalate popular and trade union pressure to save the lives of the strikers, and to stand in the face of these repressive measures that have crossed all the red lines and international laws that Britain praises.

Time is running out, and the lives of the activists are in danger. We demand their immediate release, and the repeal of the unjust decisions banning their peaceful activity against genocide.

Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine
Central Information Department
December 21, 2025

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2025-12-23

“Video: Police ‘strangle’ doctor unconscious as she tries to help hunger striker”

by Skwawkbox with The Canary

@thecanaryuk
@uk_politics
@palestine@fedibird.com
@Palestine@masto.ai
@palestine@lemmy.ml

“NHS medic, Olivia Brandon, has accused of strangling her until she lost consciousness. This incident occurred during a protest to secure help for a dying anti-genocide hunger strikers”

thecanary.co/skwawkbox/2025/12

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2025-12-23

“BREAKING: hunger strikers launch legal action against Lammy”

by Skwawkbox with The Canary

@thecanaryuk
@uk_politics
@palestine@fedibird.com
@Palestine@masto.ai
@palestine@lemmy.ml

“The six [#Filton24] hunger strikers [..] have launched legal action against ‘justice’ secretary David , with a ‘letter before action’ (LBA) for a of [their] treatment [by the UK govt]”

thecanary.co/skwawkbox/2025/12

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2025-12-17

“Councillor goes on hunger strike over Filton 24 political prisoners”

by Skwawkbox with The Canary

@thecanaryuk
@palestine@fedibird.com
@Palestine@masto.ai
@palestine@lemmy.ml
@UKLabour

“Islington councillor Ilkay Cinko-Oner is holding an individual vigil and 24-hour fast [..] outside her MP’s office in solidarity with hunger-striking anti-genocide activists held as political prisoners without trial by the Starmer government”

thecanary.co/skwawkbox/2025/12

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2025-12-15

“How a Palestine Action hunger striker was left on her cell floor”

by Katherine Hearst in Middle East Eye

@palestine@fedibird.com
@Palestine@masto.ai
@palestine@lemmy.ml
@BBC5Live
@BBCRadio4
@BBCNews
@AlJazeera

“The friends of a -affiliated prisoner currently on hunger strike say she [Qesser Zuhrah] was left to lie on her cell floor with worsening chest pains while the prison refused repeated requests to call an ambulance”

middleeasteye.net/news/can-you

Eight Prisoners for Palestine in Critical Phase of Hunger Strike, UK Government Accused of Lying

Eight prisoners alleged to have taken part in actions in support of Palestine are now in a critical phase of their hunger strike in British prisons, with some entering their 38th day without food. Medical professionals have warned that the activists face life-threatening health complications, yet the UK government has been accused of deliberately ignoring their plight.

Critical health deterioration

The hunger strikers, held across multiple facilities including HMP Bronzefield, HMP Pentonville, HMP New Hall, HMP Peterborough, HMP Bristol, and HMP Wormwood Scrubs, are experiencing severe health decline:

Qesser Zuhrah (HMP Bronzefield) – On her 38th day of hunger strike, Zuhrah has lost significant weight and is “unable to sleep,” according to friends. Despite her deteriorating condition, she remains committed to the strike.

Amu Gib (HMP Bronzefield) – Also 38 days into the strike, Gib has lost over 10 kilograms and is suffering from deep exhaustion. Green Party deputy leader Mothin Ali, who visited Gib on December 3, described them as being on their “last legs.”

Kamran Ahmed (HMP Pentonville) – Has been hospitalised twice, most recently on December 9, for the second time. Ahmed collapsed with dangerously low blood sugar levels, indicating hypoglycaemia, and has reported progressive dizziness, chest tightness, and an inability to stand steady. According to Prisoners for Palestine, his ketone levels reached dangerous heights before his second hospitalisation. Ahmed has lost substantial weight and continues his hunger strike despite medical intervention.

Jon Cink (HMP Bronzefield) – Has lost 12 kilograms since beginning his strike on November 6, now weighing just 47 kilograms. Doctors have expressed serious concern about his kidney function and strain. Close friend Joseph Knight reported that medical checks have been “inconsistent” and alleged that on one occasion the medical team failed to test Cink’s ketone levels because they lacked the necessary equipment, and a nurse “didn’t take his temperature because she didn’t feel like it.”

Teuta Hoxha (HMP Peterborough) – Was hospitalised on November 27 after 20 days on hunger strike. She is experiencing dangerously low blood pressure and breathlessness, and supporters fear she will require immediate re-hospitalisation. According to Prisoners for Palestine, the prison refused her multiple requests for masks and winter clothing, resulting in her developing a cold.

Heba Muraisi (HMP New Hall) – Joined the strike on November 5 and fears “hospitalisation is imminent.” She has lost over 10 kilograms and is experiencing severe deterioration.

Lewie Chiaramello (HMP Bristol) – The eighth and newest hunger striker, Chiaramello has been without food for 15 days. Due to his diabetes, his blood sugar levels are fluctuating dangerously between very high and very low. Prison doctors have expressed concerns about long-term implications for his health.

Muhammad Umer Khalid (HMP Wormwood Scrubs) – The 22-year-old joined the open-ended hunger strike on December 4. Despite being just five days into his strike, Prisoners for Palestine reports he is “struggling to sit up,” experiencing “a lot of pain,” and “deteriorating much faster than expected.” He has not yet received his medical checks.

Dr. James Smith, an NHS emergency doctor who has been in regular contact with the prisoners’ families, issued a stark warning: “For someone who was previously well, with no other underlying medical issues, [at] around six to eight weeks [on hunger strike], there’s a very, very high risk of death.”

Alleged medical neglect and inhumane treatment

The prisoners and their supporters have documented what they describe as systematic medical neglect and inhumane treatment:

– Medical teams were initially slow to respond when the strike began, refusing requests for electrolytes and medical attention for nine days, despite Ministry of Justice guidelines requiring “full initial medical assessment” for prisoners refusing food.

– When Ahmed was first hospitalised in late November, paramedics initially refused to take him from the prison, stating “there was nothing they could do if he wouldn’t eat.”

– During his hospitalisation, Ahmed was refused all communication with family and solicitors. When he requested to contact his next of kin before accepting treatment, an officer told him: “You either get treated or go back to prison, you can’t make a phone call.”

– Ahmed reported being forced to walk through gravel in his socks while handcuffed to an officer, after his shoes were taken away, leaving him to use shared hospital bathrooms barefoot.

– The entire hospital ward was locked down due to Ahmed’s presence, and doctors were allegedly “directed not to give any updates about anyone on the ward at all.”

– Both Zuhrah and Cink had their next of kin contacts changed to HMP Bronzefield when transferred to hospital on December 3, preventing their families from being notified of their whereabouts.

– Supporters report that medical checks have been “inconsistent and change day by day,” with some checks simply not being performed.

Lammy confrontation and accusations of lying

On December 9, Justice Secretary David Lammy was confronted by protesters and family members of the hunger strikers outside his constituency office. In video footage that has circulated widely, Lammy claimed he “didn’t know anything” about the prisoners’ cases.

Shahmina Alam, sister of hunger striker Kamran Ahmed, told Lammy directly: “We’ve been waiting for you to respond and the Ministry of Justice to respond.”

When presented with the letter that had been sent to him at the beginning of November, alerting him to the planned strike and outlining the participants’ demands, Lammy replied: “I didn’t know anything about this.”

MP Zarah Sultana, who visited Qesser Zuhrah at HMP Bronzefield on December 9, was unequivocal in her response: “I’ve written to David Lammy, so the fact he’s saying he doesn’t know about this is a lie.”

The Ministry of Justice later responded to the controversy, stating: “The reporting is wrong. The letter in question was delegated to an appropriate minister as is usual with departmental correspondence.” However, this response has done little to quell concerns that the government is deliberately avoiding engagement with the crisis.

In the video, as Lammy attempted to leave, protesters shouted after him: “There’s been four weeks of hunger strikes, why have you said nothing?”

Extended pre-trial detention and terror legislation

All eight prisoners are being held on remand without trial, with many facing nearly two years in detention before their cases are heard. Most are part of the “Filton 24” case, accused of involvement in an August 2024 action against an Elbit Systems factory in Filton, Bristol, where over £1 million in damage was allegedly caused. Three others face charges related to a June 2025 protest at RAF Brize Norton, where military supply planes were allegedly daubed with red paint.

Kamran Ahmed’s case exemplifies the judicial irregularities the prisoners face. Arrested on November 19, 2024, he has now been held for nearly 13 months. Judge Bobbie Cheema-Grubb ordered him to be bailed in February 2025 at Crown Court, but government prosecutors immediately appealed, and Ahmed was not released. Not only was his bail overturned at the High Court, but according to his sister, Judge Cheema-Grubb was immediately removed from judging similar cases.

Political visits and growing support

The hunger strike has drawn political attention, with Sultana becoming the second politician to visit the strikers, following Green Party Deputy Leader Mothin Ali’s visit on December 3. Jeremy Corbyn is scheduled to visit the prison on December 10.

Ali described the conditions as “inhumane” and “an affront to human decency,” telling Middle East Eye that both Gib and Cink were on their “last legs.” He emphasised that the activists are “only holding on because of their youth.”

MPs Jeremy Corbyn, Zarah Sultana, and John McDonnell met with families and friends of the hunger strikers on December 4, with supporters warning that “time is running out.”

Democratic Socialists of Your Party (DSYP) issued a solidarity statement on December 9, expressing “love, admiration and solidarity for the hunger strikers” and calling the action “the biggest collective hunger strike in the prisons of the British state since the Irish Republican hunger strike of 1981.”

Media blackout concerns

Supporters have raised concerns about what they describe as a deliberate UK media blackout on the hunger strike. Francesca Nadin, spokesperson for Prisoners for Palestine, told The Electronic Intifada that there has been “almost a complete blackout in the mainstream media about this story,” despite its historical significance.

Sultana echoed these concerns, stating: “I think there are editors who refuse to cover this, and they’ll use all sorts of reasons as to why, just because they don’t want to profile the hunger strike because of it being about genocide.”

The lack of coverage stands in stark contrast to the scale of the crisis and its historical significance as the largest hunger strike in Britain since 1981.

Historical significance and stakes

The Prisoners for Palestine hunger strike represents the most significant collective hunger strike in British prisons since 1981, when 10 Irish Republican prisoners died after refusing food in the H-Blocks of the Maze Prison in the north of Ireland.

Teuta Hoxha wrote in a statement: “Our demands are simple, and I want it stated for the record that our collective strike should only be interpreted as a will to live, using nothing but our hunger to resist the imperial war machine. We are prepared to push to the very end for these rights. Any harm we sustain lies at the door of the government.”

As the hunger strike enters its most dangerous phase, with prisoners reaching the point where medical experts warn of imminent risk of death, the British government faces mounting pressure to engage with the prisoners’ demands. The accusations of deliberate ignorance and the documented medical neglect have intensified calls for immediate action.

Prisoners for Palestine emphasises: “Our prisoners are reaching a critical point.”

The coming days will prove crucial as the health of all eight hunger strikers continues to deteriorate. Without government intervention, Britain may face its first hunger strike deaths since the 1981 tragedy that left ten Irish Republicans dead and scarred the nation’s conscience for decades.

Sul Nowroz
Source: Al Mayadeen

abolitionmedia.noblogs.org/?p=

#europe #hungerStrike #palAction #palestine #repression #resistance #Solidarity #uk

Obscure_Rebel has moved!Obscure_Rebel
2025-12-11

“8 Palestine Action Prisoners Are On Hunger Strike Demanding Unconditional Bail and an End to Being Treated as Terrorists”

via Tony Greenstein

@palestine@fedibird.com
@Palestine@masto.ai
@palestine@lemmy.ml
@UKLabour

“Today we will be holding a webinar including speakers from the Filton 24 and Prisoners for Palestine”

Please Register for the Webinar on 11 December @ 6 pm

tinyurl.com/2s3py925

Alarming Situation for Pal Action Political Prisoners on Hunger Strike: UK

The situation of prisoners engaged in a collective hunger strike has become extremely worrying. Amu Gib and Qesser Zuhrah are now 37 days without food. Amu Gib’s condition is deteriorating so quickly that she no longer has the strength to make statements, while Qesser Zuhrah had to be rushed to hospital due to dangerously low vital signs.

The prison also banned him from any contact with the outside world. 31 days into the strike, Jon Cink was also hospitalized due to critical blood sugar and ketone levels. Kamran Ahmed, on day 29, was admitted to the hospital for the second time, suffering from chest pain and dizziness. The situation of Teuta Hoxha, on the 30th day, is just as alarming: the conditions of her hospital treatment were so deplorable that she left the establishment on her own in order to finally be able to contact her lawyer, a right that was denied to her.

Heba Muraisi, on day 36, was hospitalized several times. Despite a request for a mask made more than a week ago, it was ignored, which now raises fears of COVID infection. Furthermore, Muhammed Umer Khalid, on the 7th day, warned that the strike could lead to him having to use a wheelchair, and Lewie Chiaramello, despite his diabetes, began a regular fast as a sign of solidarity.

Despite everything, their determination remains intact to demand that the United Kingdom sever its ties with Elbit Systems, end the ban on Palestine Action, guarantee the immediate release on bail of the 33 British prisoners for their pro-Palestinian commitment and an end to censorship in detention.

Amu Gib and Jon Cink are due to appear at the Old Bailey this Friday for their bail application hearing.

abolitionmedia.noblogs.org/?p=

#hungerStrike #palAction #palestine #solidarity #uk

Obscure_Rebel has moved!Obscure_Rebel
2025-12-10

“Renowned Irish republicans back Palestine Action hunger strikers”

by Robert Freeman in The Canary

@thecanaryuk
@palestine@fedibird.com
@Palestine@masto.ai
@palestine@lemmy.ml
@BBC5Live
@BBCRadio4
@BBCNews
@AlJazeera

It was significant that Tommy McKearney, a participant in the 1981[hunger strike by republican prisoners in Northern Ireland] was present at a London meeting on Friday, 5 December, to show solidarity with the anti-genocide campaigners”

thecanary.co/uk/analysis/2025/

Obscure_Rebel has moved!Obscure_Rebel
2025-12-09

“That is how state power works. The govt wants to prime the public for a guilty verdict, whatever the actual evidence shows. If the jury rejects the charges, despite these evidential manipulations, the government and media narrative will be that the jury failed in its duty to deliver justice”

- extract from “Has the British public been tricked about what the Filton trial videos really show?” by Jonathan Cook on Substack

open.substack.com/pub/jonathan

##ShowTrial

Obscure_Rebel has moved!Obscure_Rebel
2025-12-09

“You don’t need to support Palestine Action, or even the Palestinian people’s right to be protected from slaughter, to realise how important it is that the government not get away with its criminality – lawbreaking that will harm us all”

- extract from “Has the British public been tricked about what the Filton trial videos really show?” by Jonathan Cook on Substack

open.substack.com/pub/jonathan

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