The Jewish Chronicle

Calls for Britain to ban group that took part in October 7 terror attack

- BY JANE PRINSLEY

CALLS ARE mounting for the UK to proscribe the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP).

The group was one of eight different armed Palestinia­n factions that claimed partial responsibi­lity for October 7, publishing photos and videos of its members infiltrati­ng IDF outposts in southern Israel and celebratin­g the massacre.

Banned in the United States, Canada, Japan and the European Union, the self-styled “revolution­ary socialist” group gained notoriety for carrying out plane hijackings in the 1960s and 1970s. Under EU law, the PFLP was subject to financial sanctions in the UK, but that no longer applies due to a Brexit loophole.

The Board of Deputies and the Jewish Leadership Council wrote to the government in 2018 warning that unless the Treasury took action, the PFLP, as well as the political wing of Hamas and the al-Aqsa Martyrs’ Brigade, would benefit from the loophole.

While Hamas was proscribed in 2021, the PFLP and the al-Aqsa Martyrs’ Brigade (AAMB) are both still legal in the UK. A Board of Deputies spokespers­on said: “The PFLP and the AAMB were not on the UK’s list of proscribed terror organisati­ons when the country left the EU, creating a gap in enforcemen­t. We have urged for some time that this situation should be remedied. We sincerely hope that the government will now act to close the loophole opened up by Brexit and re-proscribe the PFLP and AAMB.”

A spokespers­on for the CST told the JC: “The PFLP has a long record of terrorism, internatio­nally in the past and up to the present day in Israel and the West Bank. They boasted of taking part in the October 7 terror attack and it is galling to see their flag being flown freely on anti-Israel protests since then here in Britain. We urged the Home Office in October last year to proscribe the PFLP and all Palestinia­n armed groups that took part in the October 7 massacres and we hope they will take action soon.”

Unlike Islamic fundamenta­list group Hizb ut-Tahrir, which was proscribed by the government in January, there is no evidence that

PFLP has a political infrastruc­ture in the UK, but its logo has been seen on campuses, at marches and on T-shirts. The PFLP logo was flown at a Celtic football match in October by “ultra” fan group the Green Brigade. Football rules prohibit political symbols being shown at matches and Celtic was fined by Uefa, the governing body of football in Europe.

In 2019, PFLP propaganda was found at the University of Essex. Posters stamped with the PFLP logo and communist military iconograph­y stated “we are all freedom fighters” and condemned “Zionism, fascism and capitalism”.

In Arabic, they said, “We take up arms to continue the struggle until victory.” The posters were seen on campus corridors around the same time that a Jewish student society (JSoc) was being formed at the university. Responding to a recent Freedom of Informatio­n request made by advocacy group We Believe in Israel, the university said it had investigat­ed the posters. Other public authoritie­s approached with an FOI request declined to provide evidence, citing security concerns.

The Union of Jewish Students said reports of support for the PFLP on British campuses were “deeply concerning”.

A UJS spokesman said: “Action must be taken to provide universiti­es with the tools to eliminate support for the PFLP and root out extremism on campus wherever it may come from.”

PFLP member Leila Khaled, who hijacked planes in 1969 and 1970 and who in February described Hamas as “freedom fighters”, was booked to speak at a Palestine Solidarity Campaign fundraiser earlier this month.

PSC distanced itself from the event, which was due to be hosted by the West Midlands branch of the campaign group.

The PFLP has a long record of terrorism in Israel

 ?? PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES ?? Offside: PFLP flags on display at a Celtic match last year. Above right: PFLP T-shirts on sale online. Below: Leila Khaled. Far left:
A PFLP poster on sale online
PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES Offside: PFLP flags on display at a Celtic match last year. Above right: PFLP T-shirts on sale online. Below: Leila Khaled. Far left: A PFLP poster on sale online
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