As a retired Metropolitan police detective, I’m alarmed that senior officers might ban Palestine marches in central London in the wake of the Golders Green stabbings.
Every march I have attended as a citizen has been nothing but peaceful. There are children in buggies, strangers helping elderly people and LGBTQ groups with their beautiful pride flags raised in the air. There is dancing and music. It is full of diversity and unity.
I have spoken to dozens of serving officers who have policed the marches. All of them have said that they are peaceful. One even said that policing them is “a doddle – easy overtime.”
This chimes with openDemocracy’s February 2024 analysis that put per-attendee arrest rates below Glastonbury’s. Representatives from Jewish groups like Na’amod, Jews for Justice for Palestinians and Jewish Bloc for a Free Palestine have been marching alongside everyone else and have been applauded and cheered. I have also met orthodox Jewish groups at the rallies and the descendents of Holocaust survivors. Nailah Sharif spent 13 years in the Met Police, meeting senior officers such as Mark Rowley. (Photo: Supplied) Senior police now claim that the marches have driven the rise in antisemitism, without explaining how protests that include Jewish groups can be deemed to be terrorising the same community it is asked to keep safe. The Community Security Trust (CST) has recorded 3,700 antisemitic incidents in 2025, the second-highest annual total ever. Fifty-three percent of CST’s 2025 incidents reference Israel, Gaza or 7 October — meaning the war, not a London march, is the triggering factor. The single largest vector is online: 1,541 incidents on social platforms, 70% tied to Middle East events. The biggest 2025 spikes coincided with the Israel–Iran war and a Glastonbury performance, not with Palestine marches.
Correlation is not causation. To prove the marches – rather than an external conflict – drive antisemitism, the Met would need offence-level data linking specific demonstrations to specific incidents. That data has not been published, if it even exists. Anti-Muslim hate Meanwhile, Muslim group Tell MAMA recorded 6,313 cases of Islamophobia in 2024, a 43% rise. It is telling that this statistic seems to receive less attention from senior police than antisemitism statistics. In fact, they have granted far-right figurehead Tommy Robinson permission to hold his “Unite the Kingdom” march on 16 May. It will pass through Trafalgar Square, Whitehall and Parliament Square – the political centre of London.
This will happen on the same day that the Palestine Solidarity Campaign (PSC) wanted to hold a rally to commemorate Nakba Day, which marks Israel’s ethnic cleansing of much of historic Palestine in 1948.
The PSC’s preferred route, including one used at least twice without incident, was rejected by police .
Last year, Robinson held a rally that produced clashes between protesters and police. Robinson’s supporters called for a ban on Islam and shutting down mosques. Imagine if the same threats were made towards the Jewish community?
Yet there is no public briefing about banning Robinson’s rally on 16 May. Only about the Palestine march on the same day. Two assemblies, two standards. For me, the Met Police is responsible for this by being active cheerleaders. The Commissioner himself has spoken at length, repeatedly, about chants from the Palestine protests and misleadingly claimed that organisers want to march near synagogues. While Mark Rowley is entitled to brief on operational risk, he is not entitled to characterise the moral standing of protesters. The role of senior police in a democracy is to facilitate lawful assembly. To police the threat. To police the law. Not to police the politics.
This comes at a crucial time when police need to be seen uniting people – not to be complicit in divisive rhetoric. The damming Casey Review , published in 2023, found the Met Police relationship with Londoners is fragile and their communications are too often perceived as taking sides.
I had hope after the Casey review to see continued progress, but it seems the hierarchy is intent on not listening to its public.
The post I’m ex-police. Banning Palestine marches is wrong appeared first on Declassified UK .