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UK government sent police details to Israeli Embassy amid Gaza protest probe

UK government sent police details to Israeli Embassy amid Gaza protest probe
Campaigners calling for an end to the war in Gaza hold their daily demonstration in the town centre of Keighley, northwest England, on June 14, 2024. (AFP)
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Updated 29 April 2025

UK government sent police details to Israeli Embassy amid Gaza protest probe

UK government sent police details to Israeli Embassy amid Gaza protest probe
  • Redacted emails show communication between Attorney General’s Office, deputy ambassador
  • Solicitor: This ‘clearly raises questions and needs further investigation’

LONDON: The UK government sent the contact details of counterterrorism officials to the Israeli Embassy amid an investigation into a pro-Palestine demonstration, The Guardian reported on Tuesday.

This has raised concerns about foreign interference in the UK’s justice system, with legal experts questioning the involvement of Israeli officials in a British legal matter.

On Sept. 9 last year, an email was sent by the Attorney General’s Office to Israeli Deputy Ambassador to the UK Daniela Grudsky Ekstein.

The email carried the subject line “CPS/SO15 (Crown Prosecution Service/counterterrorism police) contact details.”

It followed the arrest, under the UK’s Terrorism Act, of 10 Palestine Action demonstrators a month earlier.

The demonstrators were arrested after protesting at an Israeli weapons factory based in the UK, with a further eight being arrested in November in relation to the same incident.

The email was sent by Nicola Smith, the AGO’s head of international law. It was obtained through a Freedom of Information request by The Guardian and came 11 days after Smith had met Grudsky Ekstein on Aug. 28.

Aside from the subject line, the content of the email was redacted. Minutes of the meeting between the two officials are available but heavily redacted.

Past disclosures of requests by the Israeli Embassy to the AGO show repeated attempts to intervene in individual British legal cases. The AGO has rejected intervention attempts by the embassy in the past.

In 2023, Douglas Wilson, AGO director general, said in a response to a redacted request from the embassy: “As we noted … the Crown Prosecution Service makes its prosecution decisions and manages its casework independently.

“The law officers are unable to intervene on an individual case or comment on issues related to active proceedings.”

Lydia​ Dagostino from Kellys Solicitors, which is representing several Palestine Action activists, said: “The information disclosed in response to a FoI request clearly raises questions and needs further investigation.

“Why, for example, did the Attorney General’s Office provide the contact details for the Crown Prosecution Service, an independent body, to the Israelis?​

“What further exchanges followed and was there discussions about ongoing criminal prosecutions?​”

International lawyer and academic Dr. Shahd Hammouri​ raised concerns about the evidence obtained by The Guardian “which indicates foreign influence.”

The use of anti-terror legislation by the UK government against the protesters has also caused alarm.

In November, four UN special rapporteurs wrote to the government and expressed concern over the “apparently unjustified use” of terrorism laws against the demonstrators.

The UK’s Terrorism Act 2000 allows people arrested under the act to be detained for up to 14 days without charge.

Those arrested in August were initially held for 36 hours without access to legal representation, the four experts warned. The protesters were then detained for a further seven days.

“Counterterrorism legislation, including the Terrorism Act 2000 and the Terrorism Act 2006, appears to have been increasingly used in the context of domestic support for Palestinian self-determination and political activism against the UK’s foreign policy on the conflict in the occupied Palestinian territory of Gaza,” the letter by the four human rights experts said.

“In particular, members of Palestine Action — a grassroots movement that organizes direct actions against Israeli weapons factories in the United Kingdom — have reportedly been arrested under counterterrorism legislation for conduct that appears to be in the nature of ordinary criminal offenses and does not appear to be genuinely ‘terrorist’ according to international standards.”

The 10 protesters arrested in August have had limited legal support, family visits, healthcare and religious rights while awaiting trial in prison, the letter added.

In response to the communication between the AGO and Israeli Embassy, Huda Ammori, co-founder of Palestine Action, said: “The timing of this correspondence coincides with the ongoing investigation into Palestine Action activists accused of dismantling the … site of Israel’s biggest arms producer.

“It seems apparent that the Attorney General’s Office has facilitated foreign interference in this case and potentially other ongoing criminal cases.”

A government source told The Guardian: “It has been routine under successive governments for AGO to help embassies get in contact with the relevant authorities purely for purposes of sharing information that could be relevant to a case.

“Decisions to prosecute, convict and sentence are, rightly, made independently of government by the Crown Prosecution Service, juries and judges respectively.”


WHO says 42 dead in latest Ebola outbreak in DR Congo

WHO says 42 dead in latest Ebola outbreak in DR Congo
Updated 57 min 10 sec ago

WHO says 42 dead in latest Ebola outbreak in DR Congo

WHO says 42 dead in latest Ebola outbreak in DR Congo
  • Ghebreyesus posted on X that “at this time, 64 people have had Ebola in the DRC, of which 42 have died“
  • The UN health agency and its partners are supporting the government-led response

KINSHASA: An Ebola outbreak declared in the DR Congo in early September has caused 42 deaths out of 64 confirmed cases but the risk of it spreading in the region is moderate, the WHO said Wednesday.
Health authorities in the Democratic Republic of Congo two weeks ago began rolling out a vaccine program against the often fatal virus.
The highly contagious haemorrhagic fever has killed some 15,000 people in Africa over the past 50 years.
The deadliest Ebola outbreak in the DRC, between 2018 and 2020, killed nearly 2,300 people.


Last month’s vaccination campaign followed the announcement of a resurgence of the disease in the central province of Kasai.
World Health Organization chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus posted on X that “at this time, 64 people have had Ebola in the DRC, of which 42 have died.”
The UN health agency and its partners are supporting the government-led response, he added.
The WHO estimates a risk of further spread as high on a national level but moderate in the wider region.
The WHO says the outbreak is fueled by insufficient protective equipment, as well as incomplete contact tracing, late detection and unsafe burial practices.
It added that high population mobility in a country of more than 100 million, plus a reliance on traditional healers, increased the risk of spread.
First identified in 1976 and thought to have crossed over from bats, Ebola is a deadly viral disease spread through direct contact with bodily fluids, causing severe bleeding and organ failure.
The WHO estimated the mortality rate for the latest outbreak at 45.7 percent compared with between 25 and 90 for previous outbreaks.
The Zaire strain of the virus, for which there is a vaccine, is behind the new outbreak.
The International Coordination Group on Vaccine Supply (IGC), which manages the global stockpile of vaccines against a number of viruses including Ebola, has approved shipment of some 45,000 additional doses to the DRC, the WHO says.


Austria sentences woman for Daesh membership after repatriation from Syria

Austria sentences woman for Daesh membership after repatriation from Syria
Updated 01 October 2025

Austria sentences woman for Daesh membership after repatriation from Syria

Austria sentences woman for Daesh membership after repatriation from Syria
  • Maria G., now 28, was brought back from Syria with her two sons in March and has remained free since her return
  • The court ruled that she will have to continue undergoing psychological counselling and a de-radicalization program

VIENNA: An Austrian court on Wednesday convicted a woman who was repatriated from a Syrian detention camp for having been part of the Daesh group, handing her a two-year suspended jail sentence.
Since Daesh was ousted from its self-declared “caliphate” in 2019, the repatriation of family members of fighters who were either captured or killed has been a thorny issue for European countries.
Maria G., now 28, was brought back from Syria with her two sons in March and has remained free since her return, but was facing charges of being part of a terrorist group and a criminal organization.
At her trial on Wednesday in a court in the city of Salzburg, Maria G. pleaded guilty to both charges and “fully confessed,” court spokeswoman Christina Bayrhammer told AFP.
Prosecutors said they found no evidence of other crimes committed by Maria G. beyond her joining Daesh.
The court handed her a “suspended jail sentence of 24 months,” which she accepted, describing it as “another chance in life,” Bayrhammer said.
The court ruled that she will have to continue undergoing psychological counselling and a de-radicalization program.
The verdict is final, as both the prosecution and the defense waived their right to appeal.
Maria G. had left Austria as a teenager in 2014 to join Daesh in Syria, where she married a now-deceased Daesh fighter and gave birth to two children.
From 2020, she and her sons had been held in the Kurdish-run Roj detention camp for suspected militants.
They were brought back to Austria in March alongside another woman, Evelyn T., who was given a two-year suspended jail sentence in April.
In 2024, a Vienna court had ordered that Maria G. and her sons be repatriated, stressing that it was “in the children’s greater interest.”
Austria’s foreign ministry had previously rejected her request to be repatriated.
The EU member previously repatriated several children.
Belgium, France, Germany and the Netherlands are among other countries that have repatriated relatives of militant fighters.
Many of the women returned have been charged with terrorism crimes and imprisoned.


Australian government concerned over citizens’ safety aboard Gaza flotilla

Australian government concerned over citizens’ safety aboard Gaza flotilla
Updated 01 October 2025

Australian government concerned over citizens’ safety aboard Gaza flotilla

Australian government concerned over citizens’ safety aboard Gaza flotilla
  • The Australian government has been in contact with 6 of its citizens on the Gaza flotilla and expressed concerns to Israel about the risk of their detention or arrest by the Israeli navy
  • More than 500 volunteers, including doctors, lawyers, politicians and activists, are aboard 50 civilian boats heading to the Palestinian coastal territory of Gaza

LONDON: The Australian government has expressed “deep concern” for the safety of its citizens aboard a global flotilla heading to the Gaza Strip, anticipating that Israeli forces may intercept the vessels on Wednesday.

It has been in contact with six Australians on the Gaza flotilla, expressing concerns to Israel about the risk of their detention or arrest by the Israeli navy.

“Australia calls on all parties to respect international law and international humanitarian law, and to refrain from any unlawful or violent act against the flotilla,” said Matt Thistlethwaite, the assistant minister for foreign affairs.

More than 500 volunteers, including doctors, lawyers, politicians and activists, are aboard 50 civilian boats heading to the Palestinian coastal territory of Gaza. Swedish climate campaigner Greta Thunberg is among the volunteers.

The Global Sumud Flotilla is attempting to break the Israeli naval blockade and deliver essential medical supplies and food. Palestinians have been experiencing widespread hunger due to ongoing Israeli attacks that began in late 2023 in Gaza and resulted in the killing of more than 65,000 people.

The Australian government is also concerned about recent drone attacks on the flotilla and the safety of Australians and other passengers onboard, according to Thistlethwaite.

The flotilla has reported several drone attacks since departing from Spain on Sept. 1. This prompted Spain and Italy to dispatch military ships for assistance and possible rescue operations.

On Tuesday, Italy stopped tracking the flotilla with a military vessel. It urged the activists to accept a compromise to drop aid in a Cyprus port to avoid confrontation with Israeli forces.

The Israeli Foreign Ministry has also proposed that flotilla activists unload their aid at Ashkelon port for transport into Gaza, saying they will “not allow a breach of a lawful naval blockade.”

Flotilla members rejected these offers and said that their risks “pale” in comparison to the suffering of Palestinians during two years of war. They also said that their decision to launch the flotilla was due to the “inaction” by their governments to stop the ongoing Israeli attacks.

The Australian government has advised its citizens wishing to provide aid to do so through official channels.

“We understand people are distressed and want to respond to the humanitarian catastrophe in Gaza; we also want to see critical aid being delivered,” said Thistlethwaite.

“We have been clear that Israel must comply with the binding orders of the International Court of Justice, including to ensure the unhindered provision of basic services and humanitarian assistance at scale.”


UK to review how courts interpret migrants’ rights: Starmer

UK to review how courts interpret migrants’ rights: Starmer
Updated 01 October 2025

UK to review how courts interpret migrants’ rights: Starmer

UK to review how courts interpret migrants’ rights: Starmer
  • Starmer is battling to stem the irregular arrival of migrants in small boats across the Channel
  • “We need to look again at the interpretation of some of these provisions, and we’ve already begun to do that work in some of our domestic legislation,” he told BBC Radio

LONDON: Prime Minister Keir Starmer vowed in an interview aired Wednesday to review how UK courts interpret international human rights laws as he bids to curb immigration levels and deport more migrants.
Starmer is battling to stem the irregular arrival of migrants in small boats across the Channel as well as the number of people coming through other regular legal channels.
Both have reached record levels in recent years, helping spur anti-immigrant sentiment and the rise of Brexit champion Nigel Farage’s hard-right Reform UK party.
Shortly after warning his center-left Labour party’s annual conference Tuesday that Britain faces a “battle for the soul of the country,” Starmer told broadcasters his government will reassess various rights protections for migrants.
“We need to look again at the interpretation of some of these provisions, and we’ve already begun to do that work in some of our domestic legislation,” he told BBC Radio.
“It’s the refugee conventions, it’s the torture conventions, it’s the convention on the rights of children.
“I’m not going to tear all that down. I believe in those instruments... but all international instruments, and this is long-established, have to be applied in the circumstances as they are now.”
The UK leader said those “genuinely fleeing persecution should be afforded asylum” but the country was “seeing mass migration in a way that we haven’t seen in previous years.”
Reform has vowed to scrap the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR), while Starmer, a former human rights lawyer, favors reforming its application in Britain.
He told the BBC that Articles 3 of the ECHR — prohibiting torture, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment, and used by asylum seekers to stay in the UK or fight deportation — was an example.
“I do think we should look at that again,” the UK leader said.
“I think there’s a difference between someone being deported to summary execution and someone who is simply going somewhere where they don’t have the same level of health care, or... prison conditions.”
Starmer also noted that Article 8, stating “everyone has the right to respect for his private and family life,” would also be reexamined.
UK courts have interpreted it in some “exceptional circumstances” as providing the right to remain in Britain with relatives.
In a May policy paper, the government pledged new laws would “clarify” how to interpret it.
The interior ministry said in September that new legislation will reform “family immigration” rules so they are based on actions of “parliament, rather than ad hoc court decisions.”
In response to Starmer’s comments, Akiko Hart, director of rights organization Liberty, warned the approach risked “setting us on a path to undermining the rights of every person in Britain.”


Nigeria boat accident kills 26

Nigeria boat accident kills 26
Updated 01 October 2025

Nigeria boat accident kills 26

Nigeria boat accident kills 26
  • The boat was taking traders to a market in Illushi in Edo State on the other side of the river bank
  • Accidents are common on Nigeria’s busy rivers, often caused by overloaded boats, poor maintenance or failure to comply with safety regulations

LAGOS: A boat accident on the Niger River in southern Nigeria has killed at least 26 people, authorities in Kogi State said on Wednesday.
The boat was taking traders to a market in Illushi in Edo State on the other side of the river bank, Kingsley Femi Fanwo, Kogi State commissioner for information, said in a statement on X.
“Reports indicate that the unfortunate incident has allegedly claimed the lives of not less than 26 passengers,” he said.
The national rescue agency, NEMA, told AFP that it had sent teams to the scene.


Accidents are common on Nigeria’s busy rivers, often caused by overloaded boats, poor maintenance or failure to comply with safety regulations.
Last month, a crowded ferry boat capsized in Niger State after reportedly hitting a tree stump, drowning at least 32 people.
In late August, a boat carrying around 50 people overturned in the northwestern state of Sokoto, killing three and leaving 25 others missing.
“We call on our people, especially riverine communities, to always prioritize safety by avoiding overloading and by using life jackets and other precautionary measures whenever they travel by water,” Fanwo added.
Kogi State is particularly vulnerable to flooding during the rainy season, which generally lasts from March to November in the region.
A few hundred kilometers (miles) upstream from the site of the accident, in Lokoja, the Niger River — the third longest in Africa — is joined by its main tributary Benue River.
Several riverside communities were hit by flooding in September.
They included the Ibaji area, where the traders had departed from in the latest boat accident, and which is the region’s rice producing hub.
Heavy rainfall causes the river to flood, making navigation particularly dangerous.
According to local authorities, flooding forced 76,000 people from their homes last year.
Poor infrastructure and inadequate drainage often worsens the impact of floods triggered by heavy rains across Africa’s most populous country.
Scientists have warned that climate change is fueling more extreme weather patterns.