Clare Rogers says her daughter Zoe has been branded a terrorist

In August, Clare Rogers’ daughter was arrested after allegedly taking part in direct action at an Israeli defence firm near Bristol.

“I discovered, three days in, still no phone call, that she was held under the Terrorist Act. And that meant seven days in solitary, and no right to a phone call… It was shocking,” she said.

Zoe Rogers, 21, is one of a group of pro-Palestinian protesters charged in relation to an incident at the Elbit UK, part of Elbit Systems, a global Israeli defence firm.

Zoe was eventually charged with criminal damage, violent disorder and aggravated burglary and denied bail. Her trial is not set to take place until November 2025.

A teenage girl stands outside a house on a residential street. Image source, Clare Rogers

Zoe Rogers is one of 10 activists who was arrested by counter terror police

“The idea of my daughter being branded a terrorist just fills me with horror,” Clare said.

She added: "Someone who believes so passionately in justice, is lamenting the deaths of innocent civilians and children. To be called a terrorist?

"That really disgusts me.

“It makes me very angry and it worries me about the future of activists in this country, and the expression of free speech.”

A young woman on the train looking down at her lap. Image source, Clare Rogers

Zoe Rogers is being held without bail

Although Zoe was not charged with a terror offence, she and the other activists arrested at the same time were denied bail because the Crown Prosecution Service claimed there might still be a terror link. It was Zoe’s first alleged offence.

“The day she appeared in court I will remember for the rest of my life. I hadn’t seen her for seven days. I hadn’t been able to speak to her,” recalled Clare tearfully.

"The judge said ‘no bail’, and the next few seconds she was led out of the courtroom.

“That memory, it will stay with me forever. It was literally my child being taken away from me. I will never rid myself of that memory and the trauma that went with it.”

‘Mum, the marches aren’t working’

A mum and daughter smiling into the camera.Image source, Clare Rogers

Clare believes Zoe should have got bail

“She is someone who is very loving and very shy,” Clare says of her daughter.

“She thinks very deeply and cares very deeply about social justice. She started to see what was unfolding in Gaza and that became a huge part of her life.”

Zoe went on most of the pro-Gaza marches calling for an immediate ceasefire, but started to feel disheartened.

“She said to me: ‘Mum the marches aren’t working, the government’s not listening.’”

Counter-terror laws ‘used to intimidate’

A woman wearing a hijab stares into the camera

Sukaina Rajwani’s daughter is also being held without bail

Sukaina Rajwani is from Merton in south London. Her daughter Fatema Zainab was also arrested and charged as part of the same operation, and is also being held without bail.

“I believe the counter-terrorism legislation was used to intimidate and scare them and used as an excuse to keep them for longer,” she told BBC London.

"I honestly thought she would get bail because she doesn’t have a criminal record or convictions. She met all the bail conditions.

“She is literally a baby for me. She had only just turned 20 a week before.”

Neither Clare nor Sukaina say they had any idea that their daughters might have been planning direct action with the group Palestine Action.

In a statement to the BBC, Palestine Action defended direct action and condemned the use of anti-terror laws.

“Elbit Systems, Israel’s largest weapons producer, market their arms as “battle-tested” on the Palestinian people,” it said.

“By misusing counter-terrorism powers against those who take direct action to shut Elbit down, the state is prioritising the interests of a foreign weapons manufacturer over the rights and freedoms of its own citizens.”

Elbit Systems UK told the BBC: "We are proud to provide critical support and advanced technology to the British armed forces from our sites in Bristol, and this work has continued uninterrupted today.

"Any claims that these facilities supply the Israeli military or Israeli Ministry of Defence are completely false.”

‘Law being correctly used’

A man wearing glasses talking to a person off-screen

Jonathan Hall KC is the independent reviewer of terrorism legislation

Some UK human rights organisations are concerned the legal definition of terrorism is too wide and is increasingly being used to crack down on legitimate protest and free speech.

And organisations such as the National Union of Journalists (NUJ) are also worried about the use of counter-terror legislation by police.

Michelle Stanistreet, NUJ general secretary, said: “The rise in the use of counter-terror legislation by British police against journalists is alarming and we are concerned recent cases are without clear or sufficient explanation to those under investigation.

"Being able to report freely on issues in the public interest without fear of arrest is a fair expectation for every journalist abiding by the union’s code of conduct. We have urged an end to the apparent targeting for its harm on a free press and the risks posed to both journalists and their sources.”

However, the independent reviewer of terrorism legislation, external, Jonathan Hall KC, believes the law is being correctly used on the whole.

"Just gluing yourself to the road is never going to be terrorism. Holding a placard is never going to be terrorism unless it’s for a proscribed organisation. It’s got to be serious violence against people or serious damage to property.

“It’s got to hit that seriousness threshold before that could even apply.”

But he says it is a fair criticism that the authorities hold a huge amount of power in the context of terrorism arrests. These situations, he says, are an operational decision for the police.

An elderly man talking on a zoom link

Human rights lawyer Michael Mansfield says the definition of terrorism is “in the eye of the beholder”

Michael Mansfield KC is a leading barrister in human rights and civil liberties. Without commenting on this specific case, he told the BBC that he believed protest was a right, not a crime.

"Genocide is occurring in many areas of the world. Genocide is an international crime. You’ve had a court recently indicating that the occupation of the Palestinian territories has also been unlawful for the past 75 years.

“People are saying, ‘What is happening about this? Where is the accountability?’”

He admits that direct action can sometimes be a crime.

“Whether the crime you’ve committed is terrorism, that is the question,” Mr Mansfield added. “Some of these issues are in the eye of the beholder.”

‘She should be at university now’

The probability of being held without bail until November 2025 has had a dramatic effect on the lives of both Zoe and Fatema, whose university places are at stake.

“She should be at university now. She’d got a place to start this autumn, her first year at university,” said Clare of her daughter, who has been diagnosed as autistic.

"She worked so hard for that place. She had to do an extra year of sixth form because of Covid; she didn’t get the A-levels she needed for her chosen university.

“She did another year of study, got the place, and now she can’t start. She can’t even start next year, because she will be standing trial. That has been devastating for her.”

Fatema Zainab would be doing her final year in media studies at Goldsmith University were she not behind bars.

"God forbid if they do not get bail on their next appeal, then she will try to defer for another year, " said Sukaina. “It’s all unchartered waters. Every day brings a new challenge.”

Two women sitting on a sofa chatting while looking at a photo album

Clare and Sukaina have been supporting each other while their daughters are in jail

I asked Clare whether there is a difference between the right to free speech and direct action.

“Someone taking direct action to disrupt the Israeli arms industry, there is a law that oversees that and it is called criminal damage,” she maintains. “It’s not terrorism.”

"If you look at what the suffragettes did, they were quite violent, they destroyed property, they put bricks through windows. We look on them as heroes.

“I think people will look back at people who took direct action in this context as heroes in the future.”

  • SplashJackson@lemmy.ca
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    3 hours ago

    If doing a protest is terrorism, is holding real estate parties to sell illegal settlement land considered organized crime?

  • MarxMadness@lemmygrad.ml
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    4 hours ago

    When you start locking protesters up for a year, they’re going to start doing something worth getting locked up for a year.

  • LibertyLizard@slrpnk.net
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    15 hours ago

    The crackdown against activists in the UK is getting very serious. If people don’t wake up and push back it may be the beginning of a very dark time.

    • Aceticon@lemmy.world
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      6 hours ago

      This comes from way back: for example, the person who was the Greenparty European Parliament Member about a decades ago (whose name now evades me) used to be under police surveillance for being an Environmentalist.

      It’s long been the case that in the UK anybody who is merelly perceived to threathen the interests of the power elites gets cracked down on hard by the Justice System and surveillance aparatus, and that has only become worse in the aftermath of 9/11 when quite extreme autocratic “anti-terrorism” legislation was passed, doing things like suspending habeas corpous and the right to having a lawyer present during interrogation for those on the wrong side of border control in airports (something used, for example, some years later to crack down on the Snowden Leaks that were bringing to light the extreme nature of digital surveilance of common citizens in the UK for a supposed Democracy - an extreme surveillance which, by the way, the government at the time made legal with retroactive effects, all the while getting the editor of The Guardian that allowed it to come out kicked-out, with the result that nobody ever talked about it anymore).

      I immigrated to and lived in the UK for over a decade and by the time I left the country - about a year after the Leave Referendum vote - I was convinced that the UK was the “Most likely to turn Fascist country in Europe”, as it was very autocratic compared to other countries I lived in. Mind you, Hungary and Slovakia seem to have beaten it to it, though maybe it just seems so because they’re loud brutish Fascists rather than the UK’s Posh Fascists that use the “Law” and talking behind closed doors to their peers in the right places of the System to have dissent crushed without directly getting their hands dirty.

  • WhatAmLemmy@lemmy.world
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    17 hours ago

    It’s quite telling that the Israeli protesters who stormed domestic IDF bases in defense of an officer accused of using rape as torture (aka war crimes) were not even arrested or charged as terrorists in Israel… yet “direct action” against military contractors abroad — involving apparently no violence or intimidation — IS classified as terrorism.

  • shoulderoforion@fedia.io
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    19 hours ago

    Marching in support of Islamic Jihadis sworn to kill half the Jews on earth in Israel, screaming “From The River To The Sea”, geee I wonder why. That’s BEFORE she thought it a great idea to commit criminal damage, lol, she’s just begging to be a terrorists just like those she’s marching with.

    If you march with NeoNazis waiving Swastika flags, and you march with Islamic Jihadis waiving Swastikah flags there is absolute no difference whatsoever to the message and threat you are attempting to communicate.

    Glad the authorities are taking notice. Am YIsrael Chai!

    • TSG_Asmodeus (he, him)@lemmy.world
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      16 hours ago

      I’m always curious how someone can see the Israeli army commit (and video tape themselves committing) genocide, be condemned by many Israeli anti-genocide agencies, and then turn around and go “no. It’s the people protesting who are wrong.”

      This isn’t about being anti-Jewish, it’s about calling out genocide in all of its forms, whether it’s colonial or more direct. People want genocide to stop, that’s what the protests are for.

      My grandfather had nightmares till his death, every night, from seeing the mass graves in Germany in the 40s. My grandmother helped Jewish people escape Holland until she was caught by the Nazis and sent to a camp. She also had nightmares till she died.

      Both of them would have the same reaction to what is happening in Gaza by the Israeli army.

      • Aceticon@lemmy.world
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        6 hours ago

        Haven’t you heard what the governments in the US, UK, Germany and even places like The Netherlands tell us: being against Genocide is being anti-Semitic, which is logically the same as saying that being a Genocider is a Jewish trait.

        Whatever is going on here absolutely is extreme racism, only it’s not anti-racists protecting Jews from Racism (otherwise people wouldn’t be repeatedly implying that being a Genocider is a Jewish thing), it’s people with White Supremacist mindsets defending The Last White Colonialist Nation In The World as they finalize their ethnic cleansing of the Arabs that occupy the land they’re stealing, a land which by the way is were all the Whites-That-Aren’t-Quite-Like-The-Rest-Of-Us are all supposed to move to.

        This is also why I’m not at all surprised that this happens in the UK: the country is incredibly racist (I lived there and know it first hand and from personal stories from friends with Indian, African, Arab and Turkish ancestry, plus I lived elsewhere in Europe so have something to compare it to) and the elites there are especially so, though they usually disguise it behind a thick layer of learned poshness. The way the “anti”-Racisms laws are made there are all about suppressing the visible side of racism (loudy saying or writting racist things) not the actual acting in racist ways (as long as you don’t voice it as such and hide it with some kind of “it’s procedure” excuse, you can act as racist as you want) and even that “keeping of appearances” on Racism has stopped being enforced by the Justice System (were it wasn’t even properly practiced to begin with) in the last decade or so, especially anti-Muslim Racism.

  • Jackthelad@lemmy.world
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    20 hours ago

    Imagine being labelled a terrorist after taking part in violent action in pursuit of a political goal…

    Oh wait…

    • mindlesscrollyparrot@discuss.tchncs.de
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      14 hours ago

      She wasn’t charged with a terrorist offence, though. She was held because the police thought that there might be a terrorist link.

      You have read the word “terrorist” and assumed that what she did falls under that definition, which was the whole idea, of course.

      • Aceticon@lemmy.world
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        5 hours ago

        The anti-Terrorist legislation is worded in an extremelly broad way and abused like crazy to do things to people that a mere two decades ago would’ve been considered extreme abuses of power (such as holding people without charge for long periods and suspending habeas corpus and the right to the presence of a lawyer during interrogation in airports) even in the UK which is a country with strong know-your-place autocratic tendencies compared to most of Europe.

        Further, there has long been “disturbing of public order” legislation that is so broadly defined that shouting is enough to fall foul of it, so that’s what they tend to end up charging anti-system demonstrators (such as environmentalists and anti-war protestors) with, but not before they did the whole “holding them without charge and the right to a phone call thing” (basically psychological torture when applied to people who aren’t hardenned criminals) to try and get them to confess in an “interview under caution”.

        By the way, the abuse of this legislation was more than forecasted back when it was passed in the aftermath of 9/11.

        Granted, this article has been spinned to make it seem like “Anti”-Terrorism Legislation has been used to do even more autocratic shit than it is already used for.

    • LibertyLizard@slrpnk.net
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      15 hours ago

      The conflation of property destruction (especially of extremely wealthy businesses) and violence against people is extremely silly.

    • Xavienth@lemmygrad.ml
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      13 hours ago

      So you’re saying cops are terrorists? They violently silence dissent in service of suppressing political expression. Sounds like we can use “terrorism” as a stand-in “for any political group I don’t like”.

      Glad we’re on the same page. Or does state violence not count for some arbitrary reason?