The Electronic Intifada 15 September 2022
Now, however, the group faces its biggest and gravest legal challenge yet – and without the National Security Bill having even entered into law. Eight activists, including Palestine Action co-founders Huda Ammori and Richard Barnard, face trial on 10 October for a variety of alleged offenses, and face many years in prison individually and collectively as a result.
Unprecedented charges
A copy of their indictment has been seen by The Electronic Intifada. The charges leveled include conspiracy to commit burglary, and intent to destroy or damage property. The eight activists are said to have “conspired together and with others unknown to enter as a trespasser” into Elbit’s London headquarters “with intent to do unlawful damage to the said building or anything therein.”
That location also saw the group’s very first action, when activists stormed the office, trashed facilities, and spray painted a number of phrases on the interior walls, including “we will be back.”
Two years of sustained campaigning later, Elbit vacated the site this June.
Alerting target sites and Elbit’s supporting companies of future actions is a calling card of Palestine Action. It is this trademark that accounts for the most serious charge leveled against Ammori, Barnard and their comrade Emily Arnott: conspiracy to blackmail. Between August 2020 and February the next year, the trio are said to have:
“Conspired together and with persons unknown to make unwarranted demands by sending letters and emails to Lasalle Ltd, requiring them to sever ties with Elbit Ltd and to evict Elbit Ltd from their premises, with menaces.”
This refers to Palestine Action activists writing to Jones Lang LaSalle Inc, encouraging the company to turf Elbit out of the premises, and promising to expand their campaign if their requests weren’t met.
Numerous protest groups have historically and in the present day advertised that their actions will continue until or unless their demands are met, including the environmental movement Extinction Rebellion.
The boycott, divestment, and sanctions (BDS) movement has also routinely used the prospect of boycotts and other punitive financial measures to compel companies to divest from Elbit, including HSBC.
Interpretation of blackmail in England and Wales can be broad and applicable to an individual seeking any form of “gain” – which is distinct from profit – from another individual or commercial entity, and can include a target’s loss of property. Sentencing guidelines are similarly non-specific, granting courts the power to hand down a variety of severe penalties for blackmail if defendants are found guilty.
The maximum penalty for blackmail under English and Welsh law is 14 years in prison.
Enemies in high places
The use of blackmail charges represents an unprecedented escalation by British authorities. Palestine Action activists believe this campaign is politically motivated, could well be inspired and sustained by ongoing, direct lobbying from the Zionist state, and is ultimately concerned with terminating the group’s activities.
In August 2020, then-Israeli Minister of Strategic Affairs Orit Farkash-Hacohen and Defense Minister Benny Gantz traveled to London to meet with then-British Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab.
Farkash-Hacohen specifically referred to Palestine Action’s incipient protests against Elbit, branding their activities part of “the delegitimization campaign against Israel [that] has become widespread throughout Europe and the world.”
“Only last weekend, the offices of an Israeli security company were vandalized, for the fourth time in the last month. We want Israeli companies to continue doing business in London. It’s good for both countries,” she added.
It was not long after this intervention that Ammori and Barnard spotted a covert surveillance camera installed on a public school facing their home. A phone call to the school confirmed it was placed by police.
Nevertheless, their campaigning continued, and on 21 November the offices of Jones Lang LaSalle in London’s Finsbury Park were defaced with red paint, representing the blood of Palestinians.
Palestine Action believes its physical targeting of Elbit assets has also drawn visceral attention to the fact that London’s complicity in Israeli apartheid is far from casual or limited to diplomatic support and public defenses of the Zionist state’s murderous policies in parliament and the media.
Elbit produces its infamous Hermes 450/900 drones on British soil, which comprise 85 percent of Israel’s unmanned airborne fleet and are routinely used to devastating effect in the occupied territories.
It may be precisely because of this blood-soaked reality that Elbit has hitherto been reluctant to press serious charges against Palestine Action protesters. After all, doing so would raise the prospect of damning testimony about the use of its products in serious human rights abuses against Palestinian civilians being revealed in open court, negative publicity the company could do without.
It’s for this reason that, while to a degree mortified to be standing trial on blackmail charges, and potentially facing a lengthy prison sentence as a result, Ammori remains defiant.
“Whilst we may be the ones facing a politically charged prosecution, it’s Elbit Systems with the extensive rap sheet of crimes against the Palestinian people, and humanity as a whole. It should be Elbit who are afraid of the dock, not us,” she said.
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