Source: The Electronic Intifada
Activists celebrated another victory against Israeli drone giant Elbit on Thursday, as a British court dropped all charges.
Birmingham Magistrates Court ordered that three activists go free, despite charges of criminal damage, resisting arrest and a charge related to suspected aggravated trespass.
The Palestine Action campaigners had targeted an Elbit landlord, Vine Property Management in Birmingham, in the English Midlands.
The case is the second against Palestine Action to come to trial. Last month, the groupās first trial also ended in full acquittal with protesters found not guilty of criminal damage.
The activists in the first trial successfully argued that damage they caused to Elbitās Shenstone factory near Birmingham was proportionate action to halt the factoryās involvement in Israeli war crimes against Palestinians.
The group had chained themselves to the gates of Elbit subsidiary UAV Engines in Shenstone and splattered the building with blood-red paint in January last year.
The three activists cleared in the second trial on Thursday had taken action to shut down Vine Property in July last year, āas part of a wider campaign targeting the suppliers, partners and landlords of Elbitā the group said in a statement.
Vine is the landlord of the Shenstone factory.
āActivists chained the gates shut, occupied the roof and sprayed the site with red paint to signify its complicity in the murder of the Palestinian people,ā they recalled.
They dropped a large sign calling on the landlord to āEvict Elbit.ā
Palestine Action said the legal victory was āhugely significantā and was more proof that even the British courts system appears to āunderstand the necessity, and proportionality, of taking action to undermine British complicity in Israeli war crimes.ā
Activists said on Thursday that the Crown Prosecution Service had failed to offer any evidence, leading to the charges being dropped before their political defence of proportionate action against Israeli war crimes could be put forward in court again.
Palestine Action said in its statement that there had been āserious failings by the policeā and an āabuse of processā by prosecutors.
Their solicitor Lydia Dagostino told The Electronic Intifada that there had been āmajor failings in disclosureā by prosecutors, leading to activists walking free.
The Crown Prosecution Service did not respond to requests for comment.
The groupās latest legal victory follows hot on the heels of its first Elbit factory shutdown last week.
On 10 January, Elbit announced that it had sold off its Ferranti factory in Oldham, in the north of England.
Activist Max Geller told the most recent episode of The Electronic Intifada Podcast that, āif the UK is not going to prosecute Palestine Action, Elbit is going to be left with very little options besides quitting the country.ā
Editorās note: This story initially stated that the three that been charged with aggravated trespass. This has now been corrected to āa charge related to suspected aggravated trespass.ā
One of their lawyers clarified to The Electronic Intifada after publication that the charge was actually section 69 of the Criminal Justice Act, which specifies an offense of disobeying police orders to leave the scene where they reasonably suspect aggravated trespass. Aggravated trespass itself is a separate offense with which they were not charged.
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