Illustration: Guardian Design/Getty View image in fullscreen Illustration: Guardian Design/Getty Opinion Palestine Action The Belfast riots, Palestine Action protests. What is terrorism now – and why the hypocrisy? George Monbiot The right is obsessed with ‘two-tier policing’. This is indeed a two-tier government – but the real victims are progressives
“I f you are targeting people on the basis of the colour of their skin,” the Northern Ireland secretary, Hilary Benn, asked last week , “how else can you describe them? That is racist thuggery.” It is. But there is another way of describing the actions of the rioters burning people out of their homes in Belfast, though ministers somehow cannot bring themselves to say it. Terrorism.
The violence there clearly meets the government’s definition : “the use or threat” of actions designed to “intimidate the public” for the purpose of “advancing a political, religious, racial or ideological cause”. Among these actions are “serious violence against a person” and “serious damage to property”. I happen to believe that the property clause blurs the issue . But either way, in what possible world do the Belfast attacks not fit the definition?
Instead, the term is largely reserved by ministers for those who challenge Israel’s actions in Gaza. Matching the official definition to the Palestine Action protests is a far tougher call than matching it to the Belfast riots. But while more than 3,000 people have now been arrested for holding up signs in support of the banned group, and many face terrorism charges, no one in Belfast or Southampton has been charged with terrorist offences. Nor have those who whipped up the riots online. In fact, the latter group hasn’t yet been charged with anything. If you say “I support Palestine Action”, they might put you in jail. If you incite a racist riot, they put you on TV.
On Monday, the court of appeal upheld the government’s ban on Palestine Action, in a ruling that seems to me to highlight both the dangerous breadth of the government’s definition and the inequality of its application. As the human rights group Liberty points out , the judgment fails to clarify which direct action targeting property would not be terrorism. The former home secretary, Yvette Cooper, decided to ban the group after some of its members spray-painted two warplanes. Damaging military equipment in the hope of preventing its deployment, especially in illegal wars, has long been treated as an act of civil disobedience motivated by conscience, and some juries have acquitted on this basis .
Read more The court of appeal judgment managed to cast protest as terrorism and terrorism as protest. Palestine Action “is not, as it claims, a direct action civil disobedience protest group like the suffragettes operating transparently in the open”. What??? Did the suffragettes plan their bombings, arson and assassination attempts – far more extreme than anything Palestine Action has contemplated – in open meetings in Parliament Square? The entire judgment seems to me to be based on fairytales: about democracy and how it evolves, the benign nature of the state, the efficacy of polite, invisible protest, and the untroubled course of English history.
The judges stated that banning Palestine Action “will not prevent any or all demonstrations targeted at Elbit”, an arms manufacturer supplying the Israel Defense Forces, whose factories in Britain have been a primary focus for the group. Well, two days earli…
