London’s Metropolitan Police (Met) defended radical Muslims who called for “Jihad” against Israel on the streets of Britain’s capital city over the weekend, claiming that the word has “a number of meanings” beyond the violent action or terrorism, with which it is most commonly associated.
The Met responded to a video on X (formerly Twitter) in which a large group of Muslims are seen demanding Jihad to “liberate people from the concentration camp called Palestine” outside the Egyptian Embassy on Saturday.
It claimed, “We have specialist counter terrorism officers here in the operations room who have particular knowledge in this area. They have assessed this video, filmed at the Hizb ut-Tahrir protest in central London… and have not identified any offences arising from the specific clip.”
“However, recognising the way language like this will be interpreted by the public and the divisive impact it will have, officers have identified the man involved and will be speaking to him shorty to discourage any repeat of similar chanting,” the Met added.
The word jihad has a number of meanings but we know the public will most commonly associate it with terrorism. We have specialist counter terrorism officers here in the operations room who have particular knowledge in this area.
They have assessed this video, filmed at the Hizb…
— Metropolitan Police (@metpoliceuk) October 21, 2023
The response quickly caused a backlash, with British Immigration Minister Robert Jenrick stating that chanting “Jihad!” in Britain is “inciting terrorist violence” and that the government would speak directly to the police about the issue.
Pro-Hamas protests occurred throughout the United Kingdom on Saturday, with hundreds of thousands of people attending. A number of banners were displayed by attendees calling on others to assemble “Muslim Armies” to wage “Jihad,” with others proudly flying the flag of Al-Qaeda. Men and women were also segregated at the London protests.