Politics
Apr 30, 2026
UK Terrorism Laws Risk Overreach, Watchdog Warns
The UK's 'terrorism' laws risk being stretched beyond their original purpose, potentially targeting…
The Lead
The British government risks stretching “counterterrorism” laws beyond their original purpose by using such powers against activist groups, a United Kingdom “terrorism” watchdog has said.
Watchdog's Concerns on Terrorism Laws
In his annual report examining the use of Britain’s “terrorism” legislation during 2024, independent reviewer Jonathan Hall said the subsequent banning of pro-Palestine group Palestine Action had exposed “real uncertainty” over whether serious damage to property alone should qualify as “terrorism”.
The Data Analysis
About 3,000 arrests have been made since the ban on Palestine Action was introduced, mostly for displaying placards in support of the group.
Hundreds of people now face charges.
The Impact Analysis
The law’s broad wording could, without clearer limits, risk pulling protest activity into “terrorism” policing, even where there is no intent to harm people, Hall said.
“There is no legal authority on what ‘serious damage to property’ means,” Hall wrote, saying the definition could extend beyond violent attacks to acts such as criminal damage, depending on how courts interpret the threshold.
The Prediction
While he said it was unthinkable to remove property damage entirely from the legal definition of “terrorism”, he suggested lawmakers could narrow the test, for example, by requiring a risk to life, a national security dimension or exclusion for non-violent protest.
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