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The UK Court of Appeal will decide if the government was correct to label Palestine Action as a 'terrorist' organization. This follows a High Court ruling that deemed the proscription unlawful.
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The United Kingdom’s Court of Appeal is expected to rule on Monday whether the British government was right to proscribe the Palestine Action activist group as a “terrorist” organisation.
Palestine Action was formally proscribed by the UK last July. A court in London ruled earlier this month that four activists convicted of criminal damage at a British facility owned by an Israeli weapons group would be sentenced on the basis that their actions had a “terrorist connection”.
The proscription of Palestine Action as a “terrorist” organisation has been challenged in the High Court, which ruled in February that the ban was unlawful. The government then appealed that decision.
Palestine Action is a British protest group which was founded six years ago and describes itself as a movement “committed to ending global participation in Israel’s genocidal and apartheid regime”.
It says it uses “disruptive tactics” to target “corporate enablers” and companies involved in the manufacture of weapons for Israel, such as Israeli group Elbit Systems, Italian aerospace company Leonardo, French multinational Thales and Teledyne from the United States. The group has targeted British facilities linked to those companies.
In all, British police have said action by the group has resulted in millions of pounds of criminal damage.
Palestine Action’s protests include:
Days after the Brize Norton attack, members of parliament voted in favour of proscribing the group. That classified Palestine Action as a “terrorist” organisation, bringing it into the same category as armed groups such as al-Qaeda and ISIL (ISIS).
The ruling will determine whether the UK government's classification of Palestine Action as a 'terrorist' organization is legally justified.
Palestine Action was proscribed due to its actions, which the government claims have a 'terrorist connection', particularly following criminal damage incidents linked to Israeli weapons facilities.
The High Court ruled in February that the proscription of Palestine Action as a terrorist organization was unlawful.
Activists were convicted for damaging a facility owned by an Israeli weapons group, which the court connected to their classification as terrorists.

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Critics decried the vote, arguing that while members of the group have caused damage to property, they have not committed violent acts that amount to terrorism.
More than 130 high-profile public figures have spoken out against the proscription.
At least 1,600 arrests linked to support for Palestine Action were made in the three months following the ban.
Last August, Palestine Action’s co-founder, Huda Ammori, challenged the government’s proscription in the High Court. In November, the High Court heard a three‑day judicial review.
In February, the High Court ruled that the government’s “terror group” ban was unlawful and disproportionate.
The government immediately said it would appeal. “I am disappointed by the court’s decision and disagree with the notion that banning this terrorist organisation is disproportionate,” Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood said.
“I intend to fight this judgment in the Court of Appeal.”
Although the High Court found the ban unlawful, the proscription remains in force, pending the outcome of the government’s appeal at the Court of Appeal on Monday.

Palestine Action protesters at the Royal Court of Justice in London, April 28, 2026 [Kin Cheung/AP]
Four activists from the Palestine Action group were sentenced as “terrorists” on Friday, despite most of them only being convicted of criminal damage by a jury in May.
Dozens of protesters were arrested outside Woolwich Crown Court in London ahead of the sentencing of the four members of the group – Charlotte Head, 30, Samuel Corner, 23, Leona Kamio, 30, and Fatema Zainab Rajwani, 21 – for causing criminal damage at the Elbit Systems facility in Filton, near Bristol in west England.
Corner was also found guilty of striking a police officer with a sledgehammer and convicted of inflicting grievous bodily harm.
While the convictions are for criminal damage, the court had leeway to decide whether their actions were related to “terrorism”, which carries heavier penalties.
Judge Jeremy Johnson handed down sentences of about five to eight years to the four defendants after branding their August 2024 raid on the Elbit Systems site in Bristol a “terrorist act”.
Having their convictions linked to “terrorism” means the activists will have to serve their entire sentences in prison, unless they have already completed at least two‑thirds of their sentences and a parole board decides they can be released.
Samuel was jailed for seven years and eight months, Charlotte was sentenced to five years, along with Leona, while Fatema was ordered to serve four years and eight months in prison.
They will be recorded as “terrorists” for the rest of their lives, will be required to register new mobile devices, email addresses and bank accounts with the police for their lifetime, and face being returned to prison if they breach their licence conditions or reoffend.
Amnesty International said the sentencing was “completely disproportionate”.
The organisation’s UK chief executive, Kerry Moscogiuri, said: “Today’s sentencing hearing risks marking a new low in the ongoing crackdown against protest across the UK. Criminal damage has never been treated as terrorism within the UK justice system before, and it is completely disproportionate to do so because the offence occurred at a protest.”
“The use of terrorism laws to suppress direct action protesters sets a dangerous precedent for our fundamental rights in this country and must come to an end.”
On Wednesday, ahead of the sentencing, a group of more than 50 lawyers and law professors published an open letter denouncing potential plans to sentence the four Palestine Action members as terrorists.
The letter highlights that damage to property has been a recurring feature of protest campaigns from the Suffragettes who fought for women to have the right to vote a century ago, to the modern environmental protest group Extinction Rebellion.
“It has never previously even been suggested that those taking such action should be treated as terrorists. Blurring the distinction between principled direct action and terrorism is the hallmark of authoritarian regimes,” the open letter stated.
The letter has been signed by law professors from universities in the UK, the Netherlands, Norway and Canada as well as by dozens of practising barristers and solicitors.