Palestine Action

Palestine Action
Formation30 July 2020 (2020-07-30)
Founders
TypeDirect action movement
PurposeOpposition to British arms exports to Israel
Region
United Kingdom
Websitepalestineaction.org
Designated as a terrorist group byUnited Kingdom

Palestine Action is a British pro-Palestinian direct action network. Founded in 2020 with the stated goal of ending global participation in Israel's "genocidal and apartheid regime", the organisation also became active in the Gaza war protests in the United Kingdom, in the wake of the ongoing Gaza genocide. It is currently proscribed as a terrorist group under the Terrorism Act 2000, making membership or support for it a criminal offence.

The group uses direct action to disrupt the UK arms industry, which it accuses of being complicit with Israel in conducting a genocide. Palestine Action have mounted 45 documented direct actions in the United Kingdom. Key targets have been British factories of Israeli weapons manufacturer Elbit Systems and RAF Brize Norton base. In their campaigns, Palestine Action have used protest, occupation of premises, destruction of property, and vandalism, which sometimes resulted in its members being arrested. A break-in on 6 August 2024 resulted in a charge of grievous bodily harm, and multiple charges of aggravated burglary, criminal damage and violent disorder. The accused were found not guilty of aggravated burglary. A protest on 16 March 2025 resulted in three activists being charged with one count each of assault by beating.

The British Government proscribed Palestine Action as a terrorist group on 5 July 2025 under the UK's Terrorism Act 2000 after members of the network vandalised Royal Air Force aircraft at Brize Norton. Between then and the end of November 2025, British police had arrested at least 2,545 individuals for showing support to Palestine Action, many of these resulting from sit-ins in Parliament Square on 9 August 2025 and 6 September 2025, and in Trafalgar Square on 4 October 2025. Further silent vigils were held in November 2025, and during the wave of silent action over 600 more arrests were made.

Civil liberties groups criticised the ban as conflating protest with terrorism. Lawyers for Palestine Action have said the group can be compared to the suffragettes. Huda Ammori, co-founder of Palestine Action, said the "votes-for-women movement" would have faced the same ban, if today's terrorism laws had been in place more than 100 years ago.

On 13 February 2026, the High Court of Justice ruled that the proscription was unlawful but would temporarily remain in place to allow the government to appeal.