Dwelling Secretary Shabana Mahmood has prohibited the annual Al Quds march in London after approving a Metropolitan Police request. Officers decided the occasion’s scale, mixed with a number of counter-protests amid the continuing US-Israeli battle with Iran, poses an unacceptable threat of great public dysfunction.
Causes for the Ban
Metropolitan Police Commissioner Sir Mark Rowley evaluated that the demonstration exceeds the edge for permitting it to proceed. The distinctive complexity of the present context and elevated dangers make normal circumstances inadequate to forestall accidents to the general public, protesters, officers, or property harm.
Mahmood acknowledged: “I’ve authorized the Metropolitan Police’s request to ban the Al Quds march. I’m glad doing so is critical to forestall critical public dysfunction, because of the scale of the protest and a number of counter-protests, within the context of the continuing battle within the Center East.”
She emphasised that any stationary demonstrations would face strict police enforcement. “I anticipate to see the total power of the legislation utilized to anybody spreading hatred and division as a substitute of exercising their proper to peaceable protest,” Mahmood added.
Authorities Stance
Justice Minister Sarah Sackman, MP for Finchley and Golders Inexperienced, publicly urged motion in opposition to the march. “I am clear that hate marches just like the Al Quds march don’t have any place in British society. And the authorities and police ought to take the enforcement motion wanted in opposition to these marches,” she stated.
Sackman continued: “I’m very clear that that type of behaviour is just not respectable and we needs to be doing the whole lot we will to quash that type of hatred on the streets of this nation.”
Occasion Background
The Islamic Human Rights Fee organizes the Al Quds march, describing it as a peaceable gathering in help of Palestinians. Labour MPs and friends have labeled it a “hate march,” citing alleged ties to Iran and extremism.
This protest originates from a world collection launched in 1979 by Iran’s first supreme chief, Ruhollah Khomeini, to oppose Israel and present solidarity with Palestinians. Previous occasions have concerned arrests, clashes with police, Israeli flag burnings, and—previous to Hezbollah’s 2019 proscription—shows of the group’s flag.
Organizers anticipated a bigger crowd this 12 months following latest US-Israeli strikes on Iran. This marks the primary ban on the march since 2012, when authorities halted English Defence League protests over related public dysfunction issues.

