Thousands of pro-Palestine demonstrators demanded an immediate ceasefire in Gaza during a march through central London.
The demonstration was coordinated by the Palestine Solidarity Campaign (PSC) in response to Hamas strikes on southern Israel on October 7, which resulted in over 1,200 fatalities and over 240 kidnappings before Israel launched months-long attacks on the Gaza Strip, inflicting thousands of injuries and fatalities.
In order to "show solidarity with the people of Palestine for all that they are suffering through," singer Charlotte Church joined demonstrators at the head of the march.
She said: âI am here today to call for an immediate ceasefire, to ask our government and governments all over the world to send as strong message as we possibly can.
âBut a strong, a peaceful a loving message, thatâs what every single march that Iâve been on for Palestine has been about.
âThereâs been singing thereâs been drumming, yes, thereâs been emotion, but in the majority that emotion has been love, has been compassion because thatâs why weâre all here. Weâre all here because we cannot bear what weâre witnessing.
âWe cannot bear to see civilians, children, women slaughtered. And so we are here because our hearts are so full of love for the Palestinian people.â
Church added: âWeâre also showing that we are absolutely not going to tolerate our government being a part of propping up an apartheid regime. We as citizens of the UK will not tolerate our government being complicit in this.â
Demonstrators waved Palestine flags and carried banners which read âstop the war on Gazaâ and âceasefire nowâ as they marched from Hyde Park Corner to the US Embassy.
Protesters chanted âfree Palestineâ, âwhat do we want? Ceasefire. When do we want it? Nowâ and the slogan âfrom the river to the sea, Palestine will be freeâ.
Female volunteers from Friends of Al-Aqsa (FOA) joined protesters on the march, which falls a day after International Womenâs Day, to âhighlight the Palestinian genocide as a gendered issueâ.
A spokeswoman for FOA said: âTodayâs protest is especially important as it falls just after International Womenâs Day. This is a day intended to promote gender equality around the world, but that cannot be achieved whilst civilians in Palestine are under continued bombardment.â
Former Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn, who now sits as an independent MP, spoke to pro-Palestine protesters and posed for pictures with them after the march.
He said the demonstration âis huge and there will be as many of them as it takesâ, adding: âThe demonstration today is enormous and weâre here because weâre appalled at the bombing thatâs still going on in Gaza.
âItâs all very well for Joe Biden to say theyâre going to build a port to deliver aid, (it would) be far better if they stopped delivering arms to Israel and made sure there was a ceasefire. And this demonstration is huge and there will be as many of them as it takes.
âWeâre also demonstrating our right to demonstrate, thereâs so much talk about people shouldnât be on demonstrations, well today thereâs a lot of us here, all faiths, all ethnic groups, men and women, led by women, no problem, no trouble, itâs a march of love.â
Labour MP Apsana Begum took to the stage after the march to highlight it came after International Womenâs Day, adding: âAs we pay tribute this weekend to our recent history of womenâs struggles, as we look to a future of womenâs liberation, we must be clear that this means liberation for all women.â
It was revealed the cost of policing Gaza-related protests in London has reached over ÂŁ32 million and has required 35,464 officer shifts and more than 5,200 officer rest days to be cancelled, the Metropolitan Police said.
It added that a ârobust policing planâ was in place for a âbusy weekend in the capitalâ.
It comes as the governmentâs counter-extremism tsar warned that Londonâs streets have become a âno-go zone for Jewsâ during pro-Palestine protests.
Robin Simcox said a âpermissive environment for radicalisationâ was developing as he welcomed the Governmentâs forthcoming new definition of extremism.
And last week prime minister Rishi Sunak warned that democracy is being targeted by extremists and said there are âforces here at home trying to tear us apartâ.
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Protesters march in support of Gaza (Getty Images) [/caption]
Mr Sunak, in a message aimed at those taking part in pro-Palestine protests, urged people to reject extremist messages.
Ben Jamal, director of the Palestine Solidarity Campaign, said the march is the 10th national march and it is âunprecedentedâ in recent British political history to see âthis many people marching for this length of timeâ.
He said the protesters think the government is âcomplicitâ in what is happening to the people of Gaza and is âfailing to put pressure on Israelâ and âfailing to call unequivocally for a ceasefireâ.
Mr Jamal added: âThatâs whatâs motivating them to continue to march. And we know the governmentâs telling us âitâs time for you to go away, youâve made your point, youâre all hatemongersâ.
âYouâll see, people here come from all walks of life, young and old, many people here with young children.
âTheyâre looking at whatâs happening, they see childrenâs bodies being pulled out of the rubble, they look like that, they say it could be my child, that could be my brother, that could be my sister. I want it to stop and I want my government to take action. Thatâs why theyâre marching.â
A counter-protest to the pro-Palestine marches was held in Victoria, central London, on Saturday afternoon and organiser Itai Galmudy said they were âhere to exercise our democratic right of making our voices heardâ and that âJews are not afraid and weâve had enough of those anti-Israeli hate marchesâ.