But with hours to go the Crown Prosecution Services told her solicitor it had decided to "discontinue these charges . . . because a prosecution is not needed in the public interest".
"This decision is welcome, of course, but it raises the question, why
was the case brought in the first place?" said Wimborne-Idrissi. "I
have taken legal advice and am now considering whether to bring legal
action against the police for wrongful arrest".
Her arrest occurred after she displayed the slogan "Palestinian blood on Israeli hands", and silently held up her hands dyed red with food
colouring as the pro-Israel parade passed down the Haymarket in central London.
"Within minutes I was attacked by three separate Israel supporters, one
of whom threatened to slit my throat," Wimborne-Idrissi said. "The
police should have defended my right to freedom of expression. Instead I was arrested and charged under Section 5 of the Public Order Act with 'causing harassment, alarm and distress'".
Solicitor Simon Natas, representing Wimborne-Idrissi, said his client's action had been "entirely peaceful and legitimate" . The arrest had undermined her right to free speech.
Daniel Machover, Chair of Lawyers for Palestinian Human Rights (LPHR),
commenting on the case last week, said legitimate protest should not
be criminalised.
"Given Israel's illegal occupation of Palestinian land and the
persistent brutality of the Israeli authorities towards Palestinians, as witnessed in Gaza just weeks ago, supporters of these policies cannot expect their celebrations or marches to be held without reasonable dissent", Machover said.
NOTES
1. The Salute Israel parade on 29 June 2008 was organised by the British Board of Jewish Deputies and the Zionist Federation, supported by the Israeli Embassy. It was a carnival-style event culminating in a political rally in Trafalgar Squarecelebrating the 60 years since Israel's foundation in 1948.
2. For almost 10 million Palestinians around the world, 70 percent of whom are refugees, the foundation of the State of Israel was a catastrophe they call the Nakba. At least 700,000 Paelstinians were driven from their homes.
3. In his book The Ethnic Cleansing of Palestine (One World, Oxford, 2006) Israeli historian Ilan Pappe documents the many killings of Palestinians during the year of the Nakba. He concludes (p.197): "Thousands of Palestinians were killed ruthlessly and savagely by Israeli troops of all backgrounds, ranks and ages. None of these Israelis was ever tried for war crimes, in spite of the overwhelming
evidence".
4. Ethnic cleansing continued sporadically from 1948, reaching a crescendo in 1967, when thousands of Palestinians were again driven out by Israeli forces. The Badil Resource Centre for Palestinian Residency and Refugee Rights records in its 2005 Survey (p.20-21):
"Refugee camps in Jericho, for example, were bombed by the Israeli air
force, leading to an exodus of tens of thousands of refugees. . . By the time the 1967 war came to an end 430,000 Palestinians were displaced, among them some 193,500 refugees displaced for a second time, and 240,000 residents displaced from the West Bankand Gaza Strip for the first time".
5. Israel has continued to kill, displace, humiliate and impoverish
Palestinians in the occupied West Bankand Gaza.In 2000, the US-based website www.rememberthesechildren.com began cataloguing all the deaths of Palestinian and Israeli children, from 0 to 17 years of age. Between September 2000 and the end of 2008, 1,056 Palestinian children were killed. In the same period 123 Israeli children were killed.
This precedes the slaughter which took place in Gaza in the three weeks starting 27 December 2008, taking a further 1,300 Palestinian lives, more than 200 of them children.