UK pro-Palestine groups vow to continue protests amid new curbs on right to demonstrate

Pro-Palestine organizations in the UK have condemned British government plans to give police greater powers over repeated demonstrations, calling it a “draconian assault” on the right to protest, and have vowed to continue mobilizing despite the measures. (X/@LindseyAGerman)
Pro-Palestine organizations in the UK have condemned British government plans to give police greater powers over repeated demonstrations, calling it a “draconian assault” on the right to protest, and have vowed to continue mobilizing despite the measures. (X/@LindseyAGerman)
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UK pro-Palestine groups vow to continue protests amid new curbs on right to demonstrate

UK pro-Palestine groups vow to continue protests amid new curbs on right to demonstrate
  • UK Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood announced earlier this month that police will be granted new powers to impose tougher conditions on demonstrations

LONDON: Pro-Palestine organizations in the UK have condemned British government plans to give police greater powers over repeated demonstrations, calling it a “draconian assault” on the right to protest, and have vowed to continue mobilizing despite the measures.

UK Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood announced earlier this month that police will be granted new powers to impose tougher conditions on demonstrations by taking into account the “cumulative impact” of previous similar events.

Ben Jamal, director of the Palestine Solidarity Campaign, or PSC, that the move represented “a further draconian assault on the fundamental right to protest.”

He continued: “This potentially has enormous implications. It could mean, for example, ‘you have already protested once, you can’t protest again.’”

Jamal said that police had previously invoked “cumulative impact” to block protest routes near synagogues, and that the Palestine Coalition, a network of six groups behind recent pro-Palestine marches, was prepared to challenge the new rules in court.

“The implications are really broad but they are specifically aimed at targeting our movement,” he said.

“We also know what’s happened in the past two years is extraordinary, there has not been a body of consistent protests like this in the numbers that we’ve been able to galvanize since the suffragette movement. It’s been responding to a fairly unique circumstance, which is a livestreamed genocide, and a continuing complicity by our government in that,” he said.

Israel has denied accusations of genocide in Gaza.

Tens of thousands of demonstrators marched through central London on Saturday, a day after a ceasefire between Israel and Hamas came into effect.

The PSC has announced further actions, including a mass student walkout on Thursday and a boycott of Barclays bank on Saturday.

Mahmood said that the proposed changes to the Public Order Act would not amount to a blanket ban on protests but were “about restrictions and conditions,” insisting that repeated large-scale demonstrations had caused “considerable fear” within the Jewish community.

No timeline has been set for when the new rules might take effect, though Mahmood said the ongoing review of protest legislation included consideration of powers to ban demonstrations outright.

Lindsey German, national convener of the Stop the War Coalition, argued that the reasoning behind the measures “did not make sense.”

She said: “The whole question of cumulative impact, if you think about a demonstration, they are meant to have an impact, they are meant to be effective, they are meant to keep highlighting the issue that hasn’t been resolved.”

German added: “We are assuming that we will continue demonstrating over the next few months, we are very concerned about the rules to restrict the law further … we fear it’s going to be increasingly difficult to protest in London. This is, either way, a denial of our right to protest.”

The Home Office has been approached for comment by The Independent.


Trump says he will meet Putin again after “productive” talks

Updated 3 sec ago

Trump says he will meet Putin again after “productive” talks

Trump says he will meet Putin again after “productive” talks
Trump said he believed “great progress was made with today’s telephone conversation”

WASHINGTON: US President Donald Trump said he would meet with Russian President Vladimir Putin in Budapest, Hungary, to discuss ending the war in Ukraine after a productive conversation on Thursday.
No date for the meeting was provided, but Trump said in a social media post he believed “great progress was made with today’s telephone conversation.”
Trump was due to meet Ukrainian leader Volodymyr Zelensky on Friday at the White House.

Russian strikes force nationwide Ukraine power cuts

Russian strikes force nationwide Ukraine power cuts
Updated 23 min 45 sec ago

Russian strikes force nationwide Ukraine power cuts

Russian strikes force nationwide Ukraine power cuts
  • “Due to the challenging situation in the energy system, emergency power outages have been implemented in all regions of Ukraine,” Ukrenergo said
  • The rolling power cuts are designed to ration electricity across the country

KYIV: Ukraine imposed nationwide rolling power cuts for the second day running on Thursday, the state grid operator said, as Russia intensifies its attacks on the country’s energy network and temperatures drop.
Russian forces struck gas facilities in eastern Ukraine early Thursday, sparking major disruption to the network in Moscow’s latest large-scale bombardment.
The Russian army has attacked Ukrainian power infrastructure each winter since invading in 2022, forcing Kyiv to impose emergency power cuts and import energy from abroad.
AFP reporters in the northeastern Kharkiv region were in a shop that had been plunged into darkness, as a cashier took payments and operated the till by generator power.
“Due to the challenging situation in the energy system, emergency power outages have been implemented in all regions of Ukraine,” national electricity operator Ukrenergo said in a statement.
The rolling power cuts are designed to ration electricity across the country, with officials urging the population to limit consumption.
Russia’s army said Thursday it had launched a “massive” strike using ballistic missiles and drones against Ukrainian gas sites.
The CEO of Ukrainian gas company Naftogaz, Sergii Koretskyi, said there had been “hits and destruction in several regions at once. The operation of a number of critically important facilities has been halted.”
Ukraine’s air force said Russia launched 320 drones and 37 missiles, adding that 283 drones and five missiles were downed.
“This autumn, the Russians use every single day to strike at our energy infrastructure,” Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said.
Media reports earlier suggested that recent Russian strikes had halted around 60 percent of Ukrainian gas production, and attacks on power stations had cut electricity for hundreds of thousands of people.
Kyiv has increasingly responded to Moscow’s aerial attacks with strikes on Russian logistics and refineries.
Ukrainian strikes on the Russian-occupied part of the Kherson region left almost 100,000 people without power, Moscow-backed authorities said.
The International Criminal Court last year issued arrest warrants for two top Russian army officials over the attacks on Ukraine’s energy facilities, saying they constituted a “war crime” and had inflicted “excessive” harm to civilians.
Kyiv has been appealing to its allies for more air defense systems to protect critical infrastructure.


UK ends Gaza surveillance flights after 2-year mission to locate hostages held by Hamas

UK ends Gaza surveillance flights after 2-year mission to locate hostages held by Hamas
Updated 49 min 39 sec ago

UK ends Gaza surveillance flights after 2-year mission to locate hostages held by Hamas

UK ends Gaza surveillance flights after 2-year mission to locate hostages held by Hamas
  • ‘Professionalism’ of British personnel praised 

LONDON: The UK has ended its surveillance flights over Gaza after nearly two years, following the release of hostages held by Hamas as part of the recent ceasefire deal, Defense Secretary John Healey had confirmed.

Healey praised the “professionalism” of British personnel who had conducted the unarmed missions, which began in December 2023 with the stated goal of helping locate hostages taken during the Oct. 7 attacks of that year.

The final flight took place last week, shortly before the ceasefire came into effect, .

“This ceasefire is a moment of profound relief, for the civilian population of Gaza, and for the Israeli hostages and their families, who have all endured unimaginable suffering,” Healey said.

“I am proud of the UK’s efforts to support the safe return of the hostages, and the professionalism of our service personnel involved.”

The UK’s Ministry of Defense said the aircraft were “always unarmed, did not have a combat role, and were tasked solely to locate hostages.”

Intelligence passed to Israel, officials said, was strictly limited to hostage rescue operations.

However, the program proved controversial throughout its duration.

The UK government confirmed earlier this year that operations were carried out either by the Royal Air Force or by US contractors it hired, a revelation that raised concerns within the MoD itself.

A technical error last July exposed one such US aircraft, registered in Nevada, flying above Khan Younis.

The program drew criticism from rights groups and opposition politicians, who questioned whether intelligence gathered by the UK could have been used by Israel in its military operations in Gaza.

among legal experts and analysts that Britain had “no operational control” over how information passed to Israel might be used once shared.

Helen Maguire, the Liberal Democrats’ defense spokesperson, said at the time that while she supported efforts to find hostages, “the government must outline what steps it has taken to ensure Israel can’t use UK-sourced intelligence for its military operations in Gaza.”

Labour backbencher Kim Johnson also voiced alarm, saying it was “deeply concerning that surveillance flights over Gaza continue relentlessly, even as serious questions remain about their purpose and oversight.”

Former Foreign Secretary David Lammy also told reporters at the time: “It would be quite wrong for the British government to assist in the prosecution of this war in Gaza. We are not doing that, (we) would never do that.”

The MoD repeatedly insisted that strict controls governed the intelligence-sharing process and that no information of “military utility” was passed to Israeli authorities.


Crude drone attack hits Mexican govt office in Tijuana

Crude drone attack hits Mexican govt office in Tijuana
Updated 16 October 2025

Crude drone attack hits Mexican govt office in Tijuana

Crude drone attack hits Mexican govt office in Tijuana
  • No deaths or injuries were reported by the authorities
  • Drone struck outside the office of the attorney general’s anti-kidnapping unit

MEXICO CITY: A Mexican crime group launched a makeshift drone attack on the state attorney general’s offices in the northern border city of Tijuana, just across from California, on Wednesday, according to Mexican authorities.
The crude improvised explosive device, which contained nails and pieces of metal, struck outside the office of the attorney general’s anti-kidnapping unit, damaging some cars but causing no deaths or injuries, the Baja California state Attorney General Maria Elena Andrade told reporters on Wednesday.
Andrade said that a large organized crime group was behind the attack, but declined to name it.
On Wednesday, the US Consulate in Tijuana issued a security alert over the attack.


Russian street musician is jailed for 13 days after she played banned song

Russian street musician is jailed for 13 days after she played banned song
Updated 16 October 2025

Russian street musician is jailed for 13 days after she played banned song

Russian street musician is jailed for 13 days after she played banned song
  • Diana Loginova was arrested on Wednesday after her performance of the popular song “Swan Lake Cooperative”
  • A video showed a crowd of youngsters singing along with Loginova in a rare show of public defiance of the authorities

ST PETERSBURG: A teenage Russian street musician was jailed for 13 days on Thursday after she played a banned anti-Kremlin song on St. Petersburg’s central avenue.
Diana Loginova, an 18-year-old music student who performs under the name Naoko with her band Stoptime, was arrested on Wednesday after her performance of the popular song “Swan Lake Cooperative” by exiled Russian rapper Noize MC went viral on Russian social media.
A video showed a crowd of youngsters singing along with Loginova in a rare show of public defiance of the authorities, given the risk of arrest.
A St. Petersburg court found her guilty on Thursday of organizing an unplanned gathering that blocked public access to the metro — an administrative, as opposed to criminal, offense.
City police said after serving the 13 days, Loginova would be charged with an additional administrative offense of “discrediting” the Russian military.
If convicted, she could face a fine. Any subsequent re-offense could lead to criminal charges and a long prison term.
Noize MC, the musician who wrote “Swan Lake Cooperative” and whose real name is Ivan Alexeyev, is openly critical of the Kremlin and left Russia for Lithuania after the start of the war in Ukraine.
Moscow has added him to its list of “foreign agents,” which comprises hundreds of individuals and entities accused of conducting subversive activity with support from abroad.
Video posted online shows Loginova performing the song on St. Petersburg’s Nevsky Prospekt earlier this week as onlookers chant the lyrics: “I want to watch the ballet, let the swans dance. Let the old man shake in fear for his lake.”
The song does not name President Vladimir Putin or mention the Ukraine war. The ballet reference is to Tchaikovsky’s Swan Lake, which was played on television after the deaths of Soviet leaders and during a 1991 coup attempt against President Mikhail Gorbachev, to the point where it came to symbolize the end of a leader’s rule.
The lyrics also refer to Ozero (Russian for “lake“), a dacha cooperative north of St. Petersburg that is associated with Putin’s inner circle.
In May, a St. Petersburg court banned the song on the grounds it “may contain signs of justification and excuse for hostile, hateful attitudes toward people, as well as statements promoting violent changes to the foundations of the constitutional order.”
While links to “Swan Lake Cooperative” on YouTube and Noize MC’s website are blocked inside Russia, many young people use virtual private networks (VPNs) to circumvent such bans.
Loginova, who studies at a music college in St. Petersburg, has won multiple student music prizes in Russia and abroad.