• Disrupting Power Since 2015
  • Donate
  • Login
Sunday, June 1, 2025
  • Login
  • Register
Canary
MEDIA THAT DISRUPTS
  • News
    • UK
    • Global
    • Analysis
    • Trending
  • Editorial
  • Features
    • Features
    • Environment
    • Lifestyle
    • Health
    • Money
    • Science
    • Business
    • Tech
    • Travel
    • Sport & Gaming
  • Media
    • Video
    • Cartoons
  • Opinion
No Result
View All Result
MANAGE SUBSCRIPTION
SUPPORT
  • News
    • UK
    • Global
    • Analysis
    • Trending
  • Editorial
  • Features
    • Features
    • Environment
    • Lifestyle
    • Health
    • Money
    • Science
    • Business
    • Tech
    • Travel
    • Sport & Gaming
  • Media
    • Video
    • Cartoons
  • Opinion
No Result
View All Result
Canary
No Result
View All Result

Violence from the public and arrests for thought crime: Youth Demand face ‘unprecedented repression’

Steve Topple by Steve Topple
10 April 2025
in Editorial
Reading Time: 7 mins read
236 15
A A
0
Home Editorial
466
SHARES
3.6k
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Direct action group Youth Demand has made April the month they ‘shut it down for Palestine’ in London. Rightly so, given the unprecedented scale of violence and war crimes Israel is meting out in Gaza and the Occupied Palestinian territories.

However, Youth Demand have been met with what it calls ‘unprecedented repression’ in London – as its wildcat shut downs clearly start to rattle the state and subservient members of the public.

Youth Demand: mashing up the capital

As the Canary has been documenting, Youth Demand have been taking direct action in London. It’s over Israel’s ongoing genocide in Gaza, and war crimes and human rights abuses in the Occupied Palestinian Territories.

After the now-infamous Met Police raid on a group meeting in a Quaker building, Youth Demand has been unrepentant in its resolve to shut London down. The past few days has seen the group block multiple roads:

Youth Demand

Youth Demand

Members of the public were already getting rattled at this point:

 

View this post on Instagram

 

A post shared by Youth Demand (@_youthdemand)

It also staged a protest outside foreign secretary David Lammy’s home address – in what the group has now dubbed ‘Silence of the Lammy’:

However, it has been the road blocks and rallies that have been most frowned upon by the state and the public.

Cops and the public: cracking down

As the Canary previously reported, a rally outside Senate House Library grabbed the attention of the far right. Then, on Tuesday 8 April another rally, this time at the Ministry of Defence, saw cops nick one activist for ‘conspiracy to cause a public nuisance.

Also on 8 April at a road block a man assaulted members of Youth Demand and tried to steal a journalist’s camera. As one social media user put it:

This man decided it was a good idea to assault activists this morning, throwing several of them to the floor before grabbing a journalist’s camera and attempting to snatch it off his neck.

Imagine being more angered by a 10 minute delay than 20,000 dead children.

 

View this post on Instagram

 

A post shared by Ali Khadr | Photography | Travel (@beardvoyage)

The repression continued on Wednesday 9 April, as another member of Youth Demand was also arrested for conspiracy to cause a public nuisance:

🚨 UNPRECEDENTED REPRESSION CONTINUES

Today at Southwark Crown Court a young person has been arrested for conspiracy to cause a public nuisance.

The state is scared of us telling the truth. We will not be intimidated.

Join us on the streets: https://t.co/rqU3Oswm2K pic.twitter.com/gpfkq2UGPC

— Youth Demand (@youth_demand) April 9, 2025

In UK law, “conspiracy to cause a public nuisance” refers to an agreement between two or more people to intentionally or recklessly cause a public nuisance, which is now a statutory offense under Section 78 of the Police, Crime, Sentencing and Courts (PCSC) Act 2022. This replaced a previous common law offence.

In other words, this is cops and the so-called justice system policing pre-crime: nicking people for planning to do something, rather than actually doing it. Of course, under the Tories PCSC Act this is not new.

The state jailed the Just Stop Oil ‘Whole Truth Five’ for years for organising but not taking part in a protest. Similarly, the state used this argument against a member of Palestine Action.

Just think about this for a minute.

The world is ending – but think of the nuisance from Youth Demand

The Canary has, in the past few hours, reported on Israel burning journalist Ahmad Mansour alive in a tent. He is now dead. Many readers will have seen on social media the image of a decapitated baby; decapitated by Israel when it bombed a UN refugee camp. 50,000 slaughtered Palestinians – mostly women and children – later, yet sycophantic cops and servile members of the public think it’s Youth Demand causing the nuisance in society?

Our world stands on a knife edge – more so perhaps than any time in human history. From the climate crisis to brazen far-right authoritarianism in supposed democracies in the West via Israel’s impunity to commit genocide and a sixth extinction event – the ‘world order’  those in power sell us is falling apart at the seams. Humans will be lucky to make it another half-century.

Youth Demand is rightly responding to this. And let’s be honest, the group’s actions are hardly earth-shattering.

They are peacefully deploying mid-level civil disobedience in the face of cataclysmic world events. Yet here in the West, agents of the state and the public still believe they can go about their daily business like nothing is happening – and that any disruption to this is disastrous.

Think yourselves lucky Lucy Parsons isn’t around

Cops and dumb-ass members of the public (sorry, but they are) are lucky Youth Demand isn’t inspired by Black anarchist Lucy Parsons. As she once said:

Let every dirty, lousy tramp arm himself with a revolver or a knife, and lay in wait on the steps of the palaces of the rich and stab or shoot the owners as they come out. Let us kill them without mercy, and let it be a war of extermination.

Given how the rich and powerful kill the rest of us with impunity day in, day out – well, y’know.

However, for now it’s Youth Demand (and others like Palestine Action) on the front line in the UK at least. And given the scale of persecution and repression that’s building around them. they need all our solidarity and support right now.

Featured image and additional images via the Youth Demand

Share186Tweet117
Previous Post

Benjamin Zephaniah Day: a celebration, but a call to activism too

Next Post

Anti-Islamophobia monitoring group Tell MAMA faces explosive accusations

Next Post
Tell Mama

Anti-Islamophobia monitoring group Tell MAMA faces explosive accusations

Man's legs raised in bed, with a blanket, and electrolyte sports drinks to his side ME/CFS

Poland doesn't even recognise ME/CFS - leaving one man living with it with no way out from domestic abuse

Trump is now wanting to deport US citizens

Now the maniac Donald Trump wants to deport... US citizens

Social housing is in crisis with waiting times through the roof

Social housing on the brink as decades of Labour-Tory failure come to a head

Abolish billionaires Elon Musk Climate Resistance

Elon Musk and his billionaire 'broligarchy' were just at the UK parliament. Kind of...

Please login to join discussion
Israel
News

Director at Gaza Health Ministry tells the Canary Israel used cranes to massacre civilians at aid centre

by Charlie Jaay
1 June 2025
politicians
Opinion

What do people want in politicians? Well, it’s not to hear your dad was a toolmaker.

by Jamie Driscoll
1 June 2025
John McDonnell Guardian Labour Party
Opinion

#SwindonsSundaySermon: the Guardian is not your friend – but John McDonnell is

by Rachael Swindon
1 June 2025
Horoscope today: your 24-hour briefing for life, love, and more
Horoscopes

Horoscope today: your 24-hour briefing for life, love, and more

by Steve Topple
1 June 2025
DWP PIP cuts affecting carers
Analysis

5.7 million unpaid carers save us £184 billion – yet the DWP will cut £650m from them

by Steve Topple
31 May 2025
  • Contact
  • About & FAQ
  • Get our Daily News Email
  • Privacy Policy
  • Cookie Policy

The Canary
PO Box 71199
LONDON
SE20 9EX

Canary Media Ltd – registered in England. Company registration number 09788095.

For guest posting, contact [email protected]

For other enquiries, contact: [email protected]

The Canary is owned and run by independent journalists and volunteers, NOT offshore billionaires.

You can write for us, or support us by making a regular or one-off donation.

© Canary Media Ltd 2024, all rights reserved | Website by Monster | Hosted by Krystal | Privacy Settings

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password? Sign Up

Create New Account!

Fill the forms below to register

All fields are required. Log In

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
No Result
View All Result
  • News
    • UK
    • Global
    • Analysis
    • Trending
  • Editorial
  • Features
    • Features
    • Environment
    • Lifestyle
    • Health
    • Money
    • Science
    • Business
    • Tech
    • Travel
    • Sport & Gaming
  • Media
    • Video
    • Cartoons
  • Opinion

© 2023 Canary - Worker's co-op.

Before you go, have you seen...?

Israel
News
Charlie Jaay

Director at Gaza Health Ministry tells the Canary Israel used cranes to massacre civilians at aid centre

politicians
Opinion
Jamie Driscoll

What do people want in politicians? Well, it’s not to hear your dad was a toolmaker.

John McDonnell Guardian Labour Party
Opinion
Rachael Swindon

#SwindonsSundaySermon: the Guardian is not your friend – but John McDonnell is

Horoscope today: your 24-hour briefing for life, love, and more
Horoscopes
Steve Topple

Horoscope today: your 24-hour briefing for life, love, and more

ADVERTISEMENT
Analysis
Nathan Spears

Vote for the Press Photograph of the Year 2024

Image by Burkard Meyendriesch from Pixabay
Feature
Nathan Spears

Why Santiago Ways is the Leading Choice for Walking the Camino de Santiago

Environment
Nathan Spears

EU elections point to growing public desire for new policymaking approach in Brussels