Showing posts with label Filton 4. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Filton 4. Show all posts

Saturday, 13 June 2026

“How the Filton 4 Were Sentenced as Terrorists for a Political Protest in the UK”

 




Britain’s most significant protest‑related sentencing in decades

On Friday 12 June 2026, Britain crossed a line.

Four young activists — none charged with terrorism, none convicted of violence — were sentenced as terrorists at Woolwich Crown Court for taking action against a weapons manufacturer linked to Israel’s war in Gaza. Their real offence, in the eyes of the state, was political.

This was not justice.
This was the state demonstrating power.


What Happened at Woolwich Crown Court — And Why It Matters

The sentencing of the Filton 4 has become a defining moment in the debate over protest rights, counter‑terrorism powers, and political repression in the UK.

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A Verdict Built on Secrecy

The retrial of the Filton 6 produced a split verdict that baffled observers. All six defendants admitted the same actions. Two were acquitted, four convicted.

What the jury did not know:

  • the judge intended to apply terrorism powers

  • a guilty verdict could trigger years of surveillance and restrictions

  • jurors had the right to acquit on conscience

They were asked to judge without the full truth.


The Filton 4 Sentences: What Was Handed Down

  • Samuel Corner: 8 years 8 months

  • Charlotte Head: 6 years

  • Leona Kamio: 6 years

  • Fatema Rajwani: 5 years 8 months

Because of the terrorism designation:

  • no automatic early release

  • release controlled by the Parole Board

  • lifetime terrorism‑notification requirements

  • possible obligations to register phones, report relationships, and seek permission to travel

This is the first time in UK history that criminal damage alone has been sentenced as terrorism.


Judge Jeremy Johnson’s Summing Up — A Turning Point

Mr Justice Jeremy Johnson’s summing up and sentencing remarks confirmed what had been hidden throughout the trial.

He:

  • banned any mention of genocide

  • blocked explanations of the defendants’ motivations

  • forbade reference to the terrorism uplift

  • prevented the defence from explaining jurors’ right to acquit on conscience

His background in MI5, MI6, and national‑security litigation shaped the entire process.

This was not a neutral courtroom.
It was a political one.


The “Terrorist Connexion” — The Hidden Mechanism

The public and jury were kept in the dark about the judge’s plan to apply a “terrorist connexion” under Section 69 of the Sentencing Act.

His justification:

  • the protest aimed to influence government policy

  • it could intimidate a “section of the public” (Elbit employees)

  • it was politically motivated

In other words:
The Filton 4 were sentenced as terrorists because their protest had a political purpose.

This is not counter‑terrorism.
This is the criminalization of dissent.


107 Arrests Outside the Court — A Historic Escalation

While the sentences were being delivered, 500 protesters gathered outside Woolwich Crown Court. Police responded with 107 arrests, one of the largest mass arrests outside a British court in modern history.

Several were held for "supporting a proscribed group", for Palestine Action remains technically banned until Monday's Court of Appeal decision.

This is political policing.
This is the state tightening its grip.


Human Rights Organisations Condemn the Sentences

Reactions were immediate:

  • Amnesty International: “completely disproportionate… a punishment which stays with you for life.”

  • Good Law Project: “a grotesque distortion of the law.”

  • Defend Our Juries: “heartbreaking.”

When mainstream human rights groups speak with one voice, something is deeply wrong.


The Human Cost Behind the Filton Sentences

Families wept outside the court.
Supporters chanted through tears.
Young people watched their friends taken away in prison vans.

Inside, Sgt Kate Evans delivered a painful victim impact statement.
Outside, the mother of one defendant pleaded for justice.

This is not abstract.
This is happening to real people — and it will happen to more if we stay silent.


Why Monday’s Court of Appeal Ruling Matters

On Monday, judges will decide whether the government’s proscription of Palestine Action is lawful.

Friday’s sentencing and Monday’s ruling are part of the same political moment:

  • Activists sentenced as terrorists

  • The supporters were taken into custody for "providing support to a sanctioned entity"

  • The legality of that prescription is now under review

This is a single escalation in Britain’s approach to dissent.


The Precedent Britain Has Now Set

If the state can:

  • admit you are not a terrorist

  • charge you with no terrorism offences

  • hide the terrorism designation from the jury

  • and still sentence you as a terrorist

… Then no activist in Britain can assume they are safe.

The Filton sentences mark a dangerous new stage in Britain’s slide toward authoritarian repression.


What Movements Know

“Moments like this hurt, but they also reveal who we are.”
“Movements don’t collapse — they regroup, they learn, and they come back sharper.”
“The Filton 4 will not be forgotten.”


Tuesday, 9 June 2026

The Filton Four Sentenced for Dissent

The Filton Sentencing: When Protest Becomes a Crime

The Filton Four: Why Friday’s Sentencing Is About Criminalising Protest in Britain

What Is Happening on Friday

On Friday, four young activists will be sentenced in Bristol for taking action against Elbit Systems — the UK’s biggest supplier of weapons to Israel.
And let’s be honest: this isn’t about “criminal damage”.
It’s about criminalising dissent.

A jury already acquitted six activists in February. The state didn’t like that outcome.
So the CPS pushed for a retrial, and four were convicted in April — then sent straight back to prison as if they were dangerous extremists.

No terrorism charges.
No threat to the public.
Just a government determined to make protest feel frightening.


Why Friday’s Sentencing Matters

Friday’s sentencing is political.
The judge has signalled he may treat the activists as if their actions were ideologically violent — even though the charges do not support that. Defence lawyers have already challenged his impartiality.

If harsh sentences are handed down, the message is unmistakable:

Protest is no longer a right. It’s a warning.


This Is Bigger Than Filton

The Filton case is part of a wider pattern in the UK:

  • Peaceful protesters jailed under new public order laws

  • Palestine solidarity activists facing unprecedented restrictions

  • Juries instructed not to consider conscience or context

This is deterrence, not justice.
A democracy that fears protest is a democracy in decline.


The Stakes for the Filton Four

The Filton Four stood against a weapons manufacturer.
Now they stand before a court that appears determined to make an example of them.

Whatever happens on Friday, one truth remains:

If the state can do this to them, it can do it to anyone.