Palestine Action activists jailed over factory raid

5 hours ago 3

46 minutes ago

Chloe Harcombe,West of Englandand

Dominic Casciani,Home and Legal Correspondent

Palestine Action A person wearing a red jumpsuit and black cap, using a sledgehammer to damage equipment inside the factory.Palestine Action

Four people were convicted for the violent clash which fractured a police officer's spine and caused £1.2m worth of damage

Four Palestine Action activists have been jailed after causing £1.2m of damage at a UK site of an Israel-based defence firm.

Charlotte Head, 30, Samuel Corner, 23, Leona Kamio, 30, and Fatema Rajwani, 21, were convicted of criminal damage in a retrial after they broke into the Elbit Systems factory near Bristol in August 2024.

Mr Justice Johnson said their actions had aimed to influence the government and the group was sentenced on the basis the raid had a "terrorist connection".

Corner was jailed for seven years and eight months for criminal damage and inflicting grievous bodily harm on a police sergeant. The judge said he had no justification for the "extreme and gratuitous force" used.

Head, who drove the prison van into the compound, was sentenced to five years in prison, Kamio was also handed a five-year jail term, and Rajwani received a prison sentence of four years and eight months.

The case is believed to be the first time that convictions for criminal damage have been classified as connected to terrorism.

Due to the terrorist ruling, the offenders will not qualify for early release from prison provisions and the Parole Board will assess their risk to the public when it determines when they can be set free.

Johnson said two of the activists had livestreamed the raid and posted the footage to social media, as part of an effort to "glorify criminality and vigilantism".

He added that they had been "reckless" about who would be injured and had been heavily involved in organising the raid with the right of veto over each part of the plan.

Sgt Evans held back tears as she read an impact statement to the court which revealed she was still receiving medical treatment and had been forced to give up her rank after struggling in the aftermath of the attack.

"The emotional impact of this incident has been profound and ongoing.

"I experience disturbed sleep, often waking in a panicked state or after distressing dreams," she said.

She also told the court that Corner showed "no sign of shock or regret" after he hit her and that he only attempted to "justify his actions with baseless and offensive claims that [she] was complicit in genocide".

In a statement released after sentencing, Avon and Somerset Police's Chief Constable Sarah Crew said: "What happened that night changed the life of one of our officers. For Sgt Evans, this has been deeply personal, painful and lasting.

"It is important everyone realises that behind every uniform is an ordinary person.

"Someone with a family, with responsibilities, and a life beyond the job."

Palestine Action A white van with yellow and orange hi-vis decals at night. There is a lot of smoke in the air and on the right there is a figure wearing all black and a white hard hat.Palestine Action

The raid was livestreamed and posted online

Rajiv Menon KC, defending barrister for Head and leading for all the defendants, previously told the court the prosecution's application for the case to have a terrorist connection "undermines the integrity of the criminal justice system and amounts to chilling and creeping authoritarianism".

"It would be wholly wrong and unfair for this court to reach any conclusions as to the reasons or underlying motivations of the defendants in doing what they did given the prosecution applied for that evidence to be excluded," he said.

Menon pointed out that Head had been cleared of aggravated burglary during a first trial of the case, while prosecutors then dropped a charge of violent disorder before a second trial went ahead only on the criminal damage charge.

The barrister said it would be unprecedented for a defendant to be sentenced on the basis of a terrorist connection when found guilty of a non-violent offence.

Menon added that it would be "laughable" if any Palestine Action activist actually believed direct action would achieve the group's stated aim to "shut Elbit down".

He said activists in the raid on the Elbit Systems factory wanted to destroy equipment they believed would be sent to Israel and then used against Palestinians.

PA Media A large group of protesters outside Woolwich Crown Court. Many of them are holding flags and banners in support of Palestine Action.PA Media

A large demonstration is being held outside the court ahead of the activists' sentencing

Deanna Heer KC, for the Crown Prosecution Service, said that the criminal damage at the Elbit factory had a "terrorism connection".

Under the law, anyone guilty of a standard offence can receive a longer sentence if a court rules that the manner in which the crime was committed could be said to meet the definition of terrorism.

The UK's definition of terrorism encompasses both acts of serious violence or serious damage to property which a court is sure were carried out to influence a government or a section of the public to advance a particular ideological cause.

Outside the court earlier, about 500 protesters gathered in a demonstration to support Palestine Action.

The Metropolitan Police said 107 people were arrested and taken to custody.

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