(function(i,m,p,a,c,t){c.ire_o=p;c[p]=c[p]||function(){(c[p].a=c[p].a||[]).push(arguments)};t=a.createElement(m);var z=a.getElementsByTagName(m)[0];t.async=1;t.src=i;z.parentNode.insertBefore(t,z)})('https://utt.impactcdn.com/P-A5214873-739b-4b62-90d0-e91a409ef89a1.js','script','impactStat',document,window);impactStat('transformLinks');impactStat('trackImpression'); Following a pro-Palestinian demonstration, Britain charges two women with "terrorism". - Voiceofthe.street24

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Following a pro-Palestinian demonstration, Britain charges two women with "terrorism".



 British police said on Friday that two women are facing charges of committing terrorism-related crimes after participating in a march in support of the Palestinians and rejecting the Israeli aggression on Gaza.

According to sources, the two women allegedly put stickers on their clothes with pictures of paratroopers during a protest in London on October 14. They have been charged under the Terrorism Act, and are scheduled to appear before Westminster Magistrates Court in London on November 10.

Some fighters from the Izz al-Din al-Qassam Brigades - the military arm of the Islamic Resistance Movement (Hamas) - used parachutes during Operation Al-Aqsa Flood on October 7, and Tel Aviv says that the attack led to the death of about 1,500 Israelis, including more than 330 soldiers. Along with the families of more than 230 others.

The British Crown Prosecution Service said that the photos “raised reasonable doubts that the two women are supporters of a banned organization, specifically Hamas,” as Britain classifies Hamas as a terrorist organization.

Tensions have worsened in Britain and other countries since Operation Al-Aqsa Flood, which was initiated by the Palestinian resistance in Gaza last October, and the subsequent violent bombing and massacres carried out by Israel against the residents of the Gaza Strip, which claimed the lives of about 10,000 people, most of whom were women and children.

Tens of thousands of protesters participated in pro-Palestinian marches, demanding that the British government call for a ceasefire. They also accused it of complicity with Israel’s crimes in Gaza.

The so-called "Campaign to Combat Anti-Semitism" said on Friday that the London police did not implement current laws or did not enforce them "sufficiently strictly."

In turn, the police said they would adopt a proactive approach and would use more precise interventions to make arrests in crowds, including analyzing social media and using retrospective facial recognition technology.



Source: Agencies

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