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Yvette Cooper has defended the arrest of more than 500 people for holding signs supporting Palestine Action.

The home secretary said protesters over the weekend may have been objecting to Palestine Action being proscribed as a terror group because they “don’t know the full nature of this organisation”.

Ms Cooper said that could be due to reporting restrictions on court hearings “while serious prosecutions are underway”.

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A total of 532 people were arrested on suspicion of supporting a proscribed organisation contrary to Section 13 of the Terrorism Act 2000.

Around half of them (259) were aged 60 and above – including almost 100 people who were in their 70s.

The Met Police said it was the largest number of arrests it had made related to a single operation in at least the past decade.

A woman is dragged away by police officers after attending the Palestine Action protest in Parliament Square. Pic: PA
Image:
A woman is dragged away by police officers after attending the Palestine Action protest in Parliament Square. Pic: PA

Ms Cooper added: “Proscription is not about protest around Palestine or Gaza, where we had tens of thousands of people protesting lawfully just this weekend about some of the horrendous events that we’ve seen in the Middle East.”

She said members of Palestine Action have carried out violent attacks, causing injuries and involving weapons and smoke bombs, “causing panic among innocent people” and major criminal damage against national security infrastructure.

The home secretary added there had been “clear security assessments and advice” before Palestine Action was proscribed as a terror organisation in July.

Palestine Action co-founder Huda Ammori said: “Yvette Cooper and No 10’s claim that Palestine Action is a violent organisation is false and defamatory.

“Spraying red paint on war planes is not terrorism. Disrupting Israel’s largest weapons manufacturer Elbit Systems by trespassing on their sites in Britain is not terrorism.”

Former government lawyer Tim Crosland, now spokesman for Defend Our Juries, which organised the weekend’s protest, told Sky News: “Yvette Cooper is so politically invested she’s going to continue to defend the arrests of people simply protesting.

“There will be more people at the next action, the police will be so aggrieved that they’re having to arrest people holding placards protesting against the atrocities in Gaza while they’re having budget cuts.”

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Will volume of arrests at protests overwhelm police?

Sir Keir Starmer’s spokesman said Palestine Action was proscribed based on “strong security advice” following assessments from a “wide range” of experts across government, the police and security services.

“Those assessments were very clear, this is not a non-violent organisation,” he said.

He added Palestine Action had committed “three separate acts of terrorism” but could not go into more detail as further evidence had been provided in a closed court setting due to “ongoing national security reasons”.

The view above Parliament Square. Pic: PA
Image:
The view above Parliament Square. Pic: PA

Human rights group Amnesty International said it was “deeply concerned” about the arrests this weekend.

Its UK chief executive, Sacha Deshmukh, said: “The protesters in Parliament Square were not inciting violence and it is entirely disproportionate to the point of absurdity to be treating them as terrorists.

“Instead of criminalising peaceful demonstrators, the government should be focusing on taking immediate and unequivocal action to put a stop to Israel’s genocide and ending any risk of UK complicity in it.”

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MoD urged to reveal details of nuclear incident at Faslane

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MoD urged to reveal details of nuclear incident at Faslane

The Ministry of Defence is being urged to reveal details of a nuclear incident that took place at Faslane naval base earlier this year.

Figures show that a Category A event occurred at HMNB Clyde between 1 January and 22 April.

The Ministry of Defence (MoD) defines Category A as the most serious – however, it has claimed the incident was categorised as of “low safety significance” and did not pose a risk to the public or result in any radiological impact to the environment.

HMNB Clyde is based on the banks of Gare Loch at Faslane in Argyll and Bute.

It is the Royal Navy’s headquarters in Scotland and is home to Britain’s nuclear submarines, which includes the Vanguard vessels armed with Trident missiles.

A Vanguard nuclear submarine at HM Naval Base Clyde. Pic: PA
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A Vanguard nuclear submarine at HM Naval Base Clyde. Pic: PA

Nuclear Site Event Reports (NSERs) detail incidents at nuclear facilities and are classified based on their safety significance and impact.

Responding to a written question earlier this year by SNP MP Dave Doogan, Maria Eagle, minister for defence procurement and industry, confirmed dozens of incidents at Faslane and nearby RNAD Coulport – the storage and loading facility for the Trident programme.

More on Ministry Of Defence

Nuclear site events (22 April 2024 to 22 April 2025):

Coulport: 13 Category C and 34 Category D
Faslane: 1 Category A, 5 Category B, 29 Category C, and 71 Category D

Ms Eagle said she could not provide specific details of the Category A or B incidents “as disclosure would, or would be likely to, prejudice the capability, effectiveness or security of any relevant forces”.

She assured Mr Doogan that “none of the events caused harm to the health of any member of staff or to any member of the public and none have resulted in any radiological impact to the environment”.

In a letter to Mr Doogan, UK Defence Secretary John Healey said: “I can confirm that all reported events were categorised as of low safety significance.

“In accordance with the International Nuclear and Radiological Event Scale (lNES) significant safety incidents are categorised at the lowest level – level one of seven.

“Incidents that might fall into this category include equipment failures, human error, procedural failings or near misses where no harm [was] caused to the health of any member of naval base staff, any member of the public, or any resultant radiological impact to the environment.”

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In the past week, concerns have been reignited over the environmental and public health impact of the UK’s nuclear weapons programme.

It comes following an investigation by The Guardian and The Ferret, which uncovered radioactive water from RNAD Coulport had leaked into Loch Long due to faulty old pipes back in 2019.

The secrecy battle went on for six years.

The Scottish Environment Protection Agency (SEPA) reported the discharges were “of no regulatory concern”, while the MoD said there had been “no unsafe releases of radioactive material” into the environment.

In response to the “catalogue of failures”, the SNP’s deputy leader is calling for an “urgent explanation” from the UK government as to what actually happened at Faslane.

MSP Keith Brown said: “Nuclear weapons are an ever-present danger and this new information is deeply worrying.

“With repeated reports of serious incidents at Faslane and now confirmed radioactive contamination in Loch Long, it’s clear these weapons are not only poorly maintained but are a direct threat to our environment, our communities, and our safety.

“Worse still, the Labour government is refusing to provide any details about the Category A incident.”

The MoD said it was unable to disclose the details of the incidents reported for “national security reasons”, but stressed all were categorised as of “low safety significance”.

A spokesperson for the MoD said: “We place the upmost importance on handling radioactive substances safely and securely.

“Nuclear Site Event Reports demonstrate our robust safety culture and commitment to learn from experience.

“The incidents posed no risk to the public and did not result in any radiological impact to the environment. It is factually incorrect to suggest otherwise.

“Our government backs our nuclear deterrent as the ultimate guarantor of our national security.”

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Vietnam state-run Military Bank partners with Dunamu to launch crypto exchange

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Vietnam state-run Military Bank partners with Dunamu to launch crypto exchange

Vietnam state-run Military Bank partners with Dunamu to launch crypto exchange

Military Bank, a Vietnamese state-controlled lender, has partnered with the parent company of South Korea’s Upbit exchange, Dunamu, to develop a cryptocurrency exchange.

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Spar rolls out nationwide stablecoin and crypto payments in Switzerland

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Spar rolls out nationwide stablecoin and crypto payments in Switzerland

Spar rolls out nationwide stablecoin and crypto payments in Switzerland

Spar will launch crypto and stablecoin payments across 300 Swiss supermarkets via Binance Pay and DFX.swiss, marking a retail first for the country.

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