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Kids referred to counter-terror police amid crackdown on Palestine support

Advocacy group CAGE says more than 100 schoolchildren have come forward in two months over cases of “harsh repression”

Kids referred to counter-terror police amid crackdown on Palestine support
Pro-Palestinian protesters at a 'Global Day of Action' for Gaza on Saturday in central London. Hundreds of thousands of people have marched peacefully calling for a ceasefire since October – but advocacy groups including CAGE and Prevent Watch say more than 100 children have been targeted with repression and censorship for expressing pro-Palestinian sentiments, with some referred to the government's counter-terror programme Prevent | Mark Kerrison/In Pictures via Getty Images
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More than a hundred schoolchildren and university students have faced “harsh repression and censorship” – including referrals to the government-led counter-terrorism programme Prevent – for displaying support for Palestine in the last three months, campaigners say.

openDemocracy has been alerted to reports from across the UK of schools allegedly telling pupils to remove badges, stickers and t-shirts that have “free Palestine” on them; alleged retaliatory measures against college students for tweeting support or joining pickets for Palestine; and claims about university exclusions, suspensions and investigations, as well as the cancellations of pro-Palestinian events.

Anas Mustapha, head of public advocacy at the group CAGE International, said the organisation had witnessed “high levels of repression of Palestine solidarity, with employers, teachers and police acting upon prejudice and increasingly disturbing levels of irrational intolerance”.