A former British intelligence counter-terrorism chief has questioned the continued arrests of Palestine Action activists, after more than 50 people were detained on Thursday while protesting for the group.
Richard Barrett has condemned the UK government's designation of Palestine Action as a terror group and the amount of police time and resources being used to arrest people holding signs. βI oppose genocide, I support Palestine Action,β he said.
βWith all the arrests that the police made β¦ were they a sensible use of police time?β Mr Barrett asked. More than 1,600 people, most of them elderly, have been detained since July.
Former MI6 counter-terrorism chief Richard Barrett. Photo: British Institute of International and Comparative Law
Under the UKβs terrorism laws, police made arrests on Thursday of people quietly sitting and holding placards outside the Ministry of Justice in central London.
The protest is part of a wave of actions in 20 towns and cities across the UK opposing the ban before a judicial review next week of the government's proscription of Palestine Action under the Terrorism Act 2000.
The group was proscribed after two activists broke into RAF Brize Norton in Oxfordshire, southern England, in June, and spray-painted transport aircraft, causing Β£7 million's worth of damage.
βThat's an action you might consider to be terrorist but the impetus behind their support is not necessarily terrorist. They're not a small malignant cell looking to harm the government,β said the former intelligence officer, who is now involved in countering violent extremism.
Designating them terrorists was, as many among the British public believe, βgoing too farβ, he said. He added that βan awful lot of people feel quite strongly about Gaza and that doesn't make them terroristsβ.
Mr Barrett, who served as MI6βs director of global counter-terrorism operations both before and after 9/11, also argued that Britainβs Terrorism Act 2000, which was mainly designed to tackle terrorism in Northern Ireland, should be βupdated continually to maintain the trust and confidence of the publicβ.
While people wanted protection from terrorism βthey're certainly not going to get it from a law which is outdated and no longer relevant to the circumstances,β he added.
Gaza war impact
Mr Barrett, who also worked for MI5 and the Foreign Office, commented on the Gaza conflict, saying that with βtens of thousands of Palestinian families suffering the death of a mother or a child or uncle or auntβ, it was βhard to imagine seeing people not being radicalisedβ.
βThat's not going to stop them wanting to hit back,β said the former intelligence officer, who led on the UNβs radicalisation issues and on terrori
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