Pro-Palestine activists in Britain have bank account closed amid crackdown fears

Demonstrators protest in solidarity with Palestinians, amid the ongoing conflict between Israel and the Palestinian Islamist group Hamas, in London. (Reuters)
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Updated 15 October 2025
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Pro-Palestine activists in Britain have bank account closed amid crackdown fears

  • John Nicholson, 70, and Norma Turner, 86, are treasurer and chair of Greater Manchester Friends of Palestine
  • ‘This kind of behaviour has just never happened in our lifetime of activism before, and is suddenly happening to activists and to organisations and to people’

LONDON: A retired British couple who took part in local pro-Palestine activist have had their joint bank account closed without explanation, The Guardian reported.

John Nicholson, 70, and Norma Turner, 86, are treasurer and chair, respectively, of Greater Manchester Friends of Palestine, which also had its bank account with Virgin Money frozen.

The couple said that their personal account with Yorkshire Building Society was used as a nest egg.

They received the full balance of the account via check after being informed of its closure.

Nicholson, a retired immigration barrister, and Turner, a former nurse, received a letter on Sept. 27 in which they were told that their account, which was opened about five years ago, would close on Sept. 30. 

“Neither of us​ have never been in financial difficulties, never been in debt​, (other than) mortgages, but paid those off. Never had any criminal ​record, fraud or anything​ of that sort of whatsoever,” Nicholson said.

“This is just inexplicable and, obviously, it’s not inexplicable because it’s to do with Palestine. It’s as simple as that but it’s inexplicable in that this was an amount of money we’ve got from retirement, put into a savings account, rolled it forward in a fixed-term bond, when that finished, rolled it forward in another one.

Yorkshire Building Society had, one month ago, “accepted quite happily” for the couple to roll forward the fix-term bond again, Nicholson said, adding that the account had no transactions.

He added: “This kind of behaviour has just never happened in our lifetime of activism before, and is suddenly happening to activists and to organisations and to people. If it isn’t Palestine, then why doesn’t YBS say what reason it is?”

The bank account of GMFP was frozen without explanation on July 10, five days after the banning of Palestine Action.

The Manchester organization had no connection with the proscribed group, sparking fears of a broader coordinated crackdown on pro-Palestinian activism in Britain.

The publicly listed activities of GMFP include letter-writing, individual consumer boycotting, leafleting, social media output, widespread protests and direct action.

A separate member of GMFP, also a signatory to the organization’s bank account, had their personal account frozen, too, but wished to remain anonymous.

Nicholson said: “We’ve absolutely no other idea of why anything could have happened to us other than (our pro-Palestinian activism) because that is pretty much the only thing that we’re doing in our lives at the moment.

“And then the ban came in on Palestine Action and we know that other people are having their bank accounts frozen,” he added, referring to the Scottish Palestine Solidarity Campaign.

The SPSC had its account with Unity Trust bank frozen in June, apparently due to its website featuring a button to donate to Palestine Action before the group’s banning.

However, despite the button being removed after proscription, the account remains frozen.

YBS, Virgin Money and Unity Trust bank all declined to comment on individual cases when approached by The Guardian.

A spokesperson for the former said: “We never close savings accounts based on different opinions or beliefs. Accounts are closed only in very rare circumstances, with decisions made on the basis of the specific facts of the case.”


Protests across globe mark one week of Iran war

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Protests across globe mark one week of Iran war

  • In Washington DC, demonstrators gathered at the National Mall carrying US, Israeli and Iranian flags, with some protesters painting the colors of the Iranian flags on their cheeks
  • Several counter-protesters carried signs denouncing Israel and in support of the Palestinians

PARIS, France: Lion-emblazoned flags of pre-revolution Iran fluttered in cities across the world on Saturday as demonstrators took to the streets a week after the start of the war in the Middle East.
Europe, Africa and the Americas saw demonstrations, with some protesting against Iran’s Islamic regime, others railing against the war, and some in support of Iran’s late supreme leader Ali Khamenei, who was killed in the first US-Israeli strikes of the conflict.
Paris saw two demonstrations: one supporting the US-based Reza Pahlavi, the son of the late shah, to head up a transition, and another denouncing that scenario.
“I support Pahlavi who is calling for a revolution,” Masoud Ghanaatian, 35, a student, told AFP at a protest in southern Paris, where participants carried photos of the late shah’s son and waved US, Israeli and pre-revolution Iran flags.
“He’s a democrat. He can oversee a transition and promises to organize elections.”
Hundreds of pro-Pahlavi demonstrations also gathered in Stockholm, holding up pictures of him and his late father.
But farther north, protesters wearing yellow vests reading “Free Iran” showed off stickers on their hands that read “No Shah, no Mullah.”
In Amsterdam protesters snaked along one of the city’s canals, holding up Israeli, American and pre-revolution Iran flags, as they called on the government to invite Pahlavi to the country and to close the Iranian embassy.
In Israel, anti-war activists and police scuffled during a protest against eh war in HaBima Square in Tel Aviv.
Shortly after dawn in Britain, anti-war protesters gathered at the entrance of an air force base in Fairford, southwest of England, holding signs reading “Hands off Iran,” “Peace” and “Yanks go home.”

- ‘Assassins’ -

A demonstrations against the war also took place in Cyprus.
Outside the US consulate in Mexico City, protesters carried a placard with pictures of US President Donald Trump and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu with blood-soaked palms over the word “Assassins” and kicked pinatas with images of the two leaders.
In the United States, protesters carried Iranian, Lebanese and Palestinian flags and signs “Iran is not our enemy” and “No war on Iran” in downtown Detroit, Michigan.
In Washington DC, demonstrators gathered at the National Mall carrying US, Israeli and Iranian flags, with some protesters painting the colors of the Iranian flags on their cheeks.
In Boston, Iranian Americans gathered at Copley Square to call for the fall of the Islamic republic.
In South Africa — which has dragged Israel to International Court of Justice, accusing it of genocide during the Gaza war, a charge Israel denies — dozens gathered in front of the US consulate in Johannesburg, holding up photos of Khamenei, the Islamic republic’s flag and signs bashing Israel.
Protesters carried pictures of Khamenei and denounced the war in central Tunis in Tunisia.
In Cape Town, Iranian pro-democracy activists and supporters of Israel waved Israeli flags and chanted slogans in the Albert Waterfront shopping mall.
Several counter-protesters carried signs denouncing Israel and in support of the Palestinians.