Dec 23, 2025
By DANICA KIRKA, Associated Press LONDON (AP) — Greta Thunberg was arrested in central London on Tuesday while supporting pro-Palestinian activists who are staging a hunger strike to protest their imprisonment while awaiting trial on charges related to a series of earlier demonstrations. Related A rticles Today in History: December 23, Franco Harris makes the ‘Immaculate Reception’ Banksy unveils new art in London following speculation over murals depicting stargazing figures US signs new health deals with 9 African countries that mirror Trump’s priorities Ukraine’s Zelenskyy says progress in US-led peace talks is ‘quite solid’ Ukraine is leveraging its powerful – and cheap – new drone killers for air defense The protest group Prisoners for Palestine shared a video showing the 22-year-old Swede holding a sign supporting the hunger strikers and their organization, known as Palestine Action. The British government earlier this year banned Palestine Action as a terrorist organization. The protests were part of a larger demonstration in which two other activists sprayed red paint in front of an insurance company in the City of London, the area of central London known as hub of Britain’s financial services industry. Prisoners for Palestine says they targeted the insurer because it supports the Israel-linked defense firm Elbit Systems. City of London police said a man and a woman have been arrested on suspicion of criminal damage. A third woman was later arrested on suspicion of supporting a banned organization. British police generally do not identify suspects by their names prior to their being charged. Eight Palestine Action members have staged a hunger strike to protest their detention without bail as they await trial on a variety of charges related to earlier protests around the country. The first two prisoners to join the protest have now been on hunger strike for 52 days and are at a “critical stage, where death is a real possibility,” Prisoners for Palestine said in a statement. The scene at Aspen Insurance at Plantation Place in the City of London, after two activists sprayed red paint over the front of the building, in support of the Palestine Action protesters on hunger strike in prison, Tuesday, Dec. 23, 2025. (Shivansh Gupta/PA via AP) The British government has so far refused to intervene in the judicial process, saying questions about bail and detention are matters for the courts to decide. ...read more read less
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