Thousands of pro-Palestine protesters have marched through Central London today yellow ‘shame on you’ and ‘stop bombing Iran‘ at pro-Israeli counter-demo.
Demonstrators were heading to Whitehall from Russell Square in central London and waved Palestinian flags and chanted ‘free, free Palestine,’ ‘occupation no more, ‘Israel is a terrorist state,’ and ‘stop bombing Iran’.
Campaigners gathered in large numbers under the banner of the Palestine Coalition.
Many shouted ‘shame on you’ as they passed a group of counter-protesters assembled near Waterloo Bridge by the pro-Israeli group Stop the Hate.
The march, which began around midday in Russell Square, is moving through Aldwych and the Strand before concluding with a rally and speeches in Whitehall.
The protest is one of several demonstrations taking place in central London this weekend, and police have introduced a number of restrictions aimed at limiting disruption.
The Metropolitan Police have set conditions on where and when protests can take place.
Those taking part in the Palestine Coalition march were required to remain in a designated part of Russell Square before the march set off.
The protest is one of several demonstrations taking place in central London this weekend
The march, which began around midday in Russell Square, is moving through Aldwych and the Strand before concluding with a rally and speeches in Whitehall.
Demonstrators were heading to Whitehall from Russell Square in central London and waveds Palestinian flags and chanted ‘free, free Palestine ,’ ‘occupation no more, ‘ Israel is a terrorist state,’ and ‘stop bombing Iran’.
It follows a specific route through central London, and gather only within a defined area in Whitehall for the rally.
The final assembly is permitted to continue until 5:30pm, with the stage positioned in a police-approved location.
The Stop the Hate counter-protest is being held near the junction with the Strand, just north of Waterloo Bridge.
That demonstration was not allowed to begin before 12:30pm and must also finish by 5:30pm, with participants confined to a set area.
Police say additional conditions may be imposed on other demonstrations over the weekend if needed.
Israel and Iran are locked in a phase of conflict marked by deadly strikes, missile barrages, and rising fears of regional war.
So far, Israel has targeted multiple Iranian nuclear sites and has damaged the Natanz FEP.
Tel Aviv used fighter jets and a secret drone base near Tehran to batter nuclear facilities, missile launch sites and decapitate military command – in a move that Netanyahu has dubbed Operation Rising Lion.
In response Iran fired back a barrage of ballistic missiles including at capital Tel Aviv, some of which were intercepted by the country’s defence system.
ro-Palestinian demonstrators are seen in Whitehall during a national demonstration for Palestine
Flags and placards are waved up during the protests filling the streets of the capital
More signs from protestors in Central London during today’s demonstration
People holding up placards defending Iran as well Iranian flags being waved around
Singer Paloma Faith was seen speaking at the march organised by the Palestine Solidarity Campaign
The ‘Only Love Can Hurt Like This’ star at the pro-Palestine demo
People take part in a march organised by the Palestine Solidarity Campaign
A man uses a megaphone as pro-Palestinian demonstrators march through central London
Police say additional conditions may be imposed on other demonstrations over the weekend if needed
Several signs calling for Israel to not be armed and for freedom in Palestine during a protest in central London today
Protestors were even seen waving an Iranian flag as the conflict between the two countries continues to escalate
Demonstrators hold Palestinian flags and placards during the protest
Group of women hold up sign saying ‘Youth demand an end to genocide’
The streets of Cental London are packed with protests this Saturday
Demonstrators hold Palestinian flags and placards during a protest in support of Palestine
emonstrators hold Palestinian flags and placards and shout slogans
Thousands attend at the National March for Palestine in London
People listening to speakers in Whitehall after a march organised by the Palestine Solidarity Campaign, from Russell Square to Whitehall in central London
The final assembly is permitted to continue until 5:30pm, with the stage positioned in a police-approved location.
Former Labour MO jeremy Corbyn speaks at pro-Palestine rally in London
Pro-Palestinian demonstrators march during the protest
Mr Corbyn giving an interview to Iranian Press TV during the protest
More protestors at the demonstration in central London
Dramatic footage showed Israel’s Iron Dome intercepting the salvo of missiles above the city’s skyline – but some could not be stopped including one that blasted into the side of a building with people reportedly trapped inside.
Iran claimed they fired ‘hundreds’ of missiles, however the IDF insisted fewer than a hundred were launched, with most either ‘intercepted or fallen short’.
Today Israel has said it has killed an October 7 mastermind and struck a nuclear site in its latest wave of strikes against Iran, a day after Tehran said it would not negotiate over its nuclear programme while under threat.
The state warned the conflict will be prolonged as US President Donald Trump said Iran could launch a nuclear war in just ‘weeks’ due to its nuclear capabilities.
Saeed Izadi, who led the Palestine Corps of the Quds Force, the Iranian Revolutionary Guards’ overseas arm, was killed in a strike in an apartment in the Iranian city of Qom, said Israeli Defense Minister Israel Katz.
It comes after a 5.1-magnitude earthquake hit northern Iran today as Israel pounded the country with repeated waves of air strikes.
Israeli strikes on Iran have killed more than 400 people since they began last week, Iran’s health ministry said in an updated toll on Saturday, as fighting raged between the two nations.
This week Israeli security officials confirmed they have not targeted Iran’s underground Fordow nuclear facility.
Ctizens were urged to go to their nearest bomb shelter as hundred of ballistic missiles rain down on Tel Aviv
Missiles launched from Iran are intercepted as seen from Tel Aviv, Israel
Israel’s Iron Dome intercepting hundreds of missiles on June 13 above Tel Aviv as Iran’s Supreme Leader blames Israel for starting a war
Israeli army, dispatched to the area, evacuate residents from damaged buildings following Iran’s retaliatory missile strikes against Israel
A missile was seen exploding into a building in Tel Aviv after Iran launched a salvo of missiles against Israel
The Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei said ‘the Zionist regime has made a big mistake, a grave error, and committed a reckless act. By God’s grace, the consequences of this will bring that regime to ruin’
White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt read a statement from President Donald Trump during Thursday’s press briefing articulating that he would make a decision whether to join Israel and strike Iran in the next two weeks
Based on the fact that there’s a substantial chance of negotiations that may or may not take place with Iran in the near future, I will make my decision whether or not to go within the next two weeks,’ the Trump statement read
To have any hope of eliminating it without resorting to its own nuclear weapons, Israel would likely need to harness the power of some of the world’s most powerful conventional bombs.
The 30,000-pound (14,000-kilogram) GBU-57 Massive Ordnance Penetrator (MOP), a US-made bunker-busting bomb that uses its weight and sheer kinetic force to reach deeply buried targets, could manage to take Fordow out.
This terrifying munition can penetrate some 200 feet (61 meters) below the surface before exploding, and the bombs can be dropped one after another, effectively drilling deeper and deeper with each successive blast.
The US has not yet entered the conflict, but President Trump has said a decision on military involvement could come within two weeks.
The decision was announced by the White House’s press secretary Karoline Leavitt in which she said the president was still holding out on a diplomatic solution, though wouldn’t provide details about what U.S.-Iran talks would look like.
Based on the fact that there’s a substantial chance of negotiations that may or may not take place with Iran in the near future, I will make my decision whether or not to go within the next two weeks,’ the Trump statement read.
Leavitt also said she welcomed a question when a journalist asked if Iran was a few weeks away from ‘obtaining enough enriched uranium to start building a weapon’ or ‘completing production of a weapon.’
‘Let’s be very clear, Iran has all that it needs to achieve a nuclear weapon,’ Leavitt answered. ‘All they need is a decision from the Supreme Leader to do that.’
‘And it would take a couple of weeks to complete the production of that weapon, which would, of course, pose an existential threat not just to Israel but to the United States and to the entire world,’ Leavitt continued.