Lawyers and legal scholars On 13 and 16 October 2023, lawyers at the International Centre of Justice for Palestinians issued notice to prime minister
Rishi Sunak,
leader of the opposition Keir Starmer, and
Labour politicians
Emily Thornberry and
David Lammy, outlining their intention to prosecute politicians who might aid and abet
war crimes. The notices were issued following statements by Starmer and Thornberry,
Shadow Attorney General, that appeared to justify the war crime of
collective punishment based on "Israel's right to defend itself". The letters were written by the group's co-chairs,
Conservative MP Crispin Blunt and lawyer Tayab Ali, a partner at Bindman law firm. Eight prominent
British Jewish lawyers – Lord
David Neuberger,
Philippe Sands KC,
Richard Hermer KC, Danny Friedman KC, Anthony Metzer KC, Jon Turner KC,
Adam Wagner and
Sandra Fredman — wrote a letter, dated 17 October, to the
Financial Times expressing "significant concerns" over Israel's conduct in Gaza, noting that "[i]t would be a grave violation of international law to hold them [that is, the two million residents of Gaza] under siege and whilst doing so deprive them of basic necessities such as food and water", that "collective punishment is prohibited by the laws of war", and that it was not "insensitive or inappropriate" to remind Israel of its obligations. The same day, 39 legal scholars from
British universities, including
Phil Scraton,
Professor Emeritus at
Queen's University Belfast's School of Law, wrote to Keir Starmer asking him to clarify Labour's position on war crimes – particularly collective punishment – in light of Starmer's statement on
LBC Radio that Israel had the right to
cut off water and electricity to Gaza. Two days before, British scholars of law,
conflict studies, and
Holocaust and
genocide studies, including
Alison Phipps,
UNESCO chair at the
University of Glasgow,
Nadine El-Enany, Professor of Law at the
University of Kent, and
Damien Short, professor of human rights at the
School of Advanced Study, had been among signatories of a statement, published on the
Third World Approaches to International Law Review website, stating they felt "compelled to sound the alarm about the possibility of the crime of
genocide being perpetrated by Israeli forces against Palestinians in the Gaza Strip". Later that month hundreds of lawyers signed an open letter, dated 26 October 2023, to the British government expressing concern over breaches of
international law by Israel, calling for it to press for a ceasefire and stop
arms sales to Israel. Signatories included
Geoffrey Bindman KC, a solicitor specialising in
human rights law, Andrew Hall KC, former chair of the Criminal Bar Association, and
Theodore Huckle KC, former
Counsel General for Wales, along with partners and directors of law firms and
professors of law.
Charities and NGOs British charities and
NGOs join in calls for a ceasefire and for
humanitarian aid to be provided in Palestine. Ahead of the Global Food Security Summit in London, the heads of 12 charities wrote to the Prime Minister, urging him to use his opening remarks at the summbit to "call for an immediate ceasefire, condemn Israel's ongoing siege and insist that food, fuel, water and other aid vital for survival is allowed into Gaza with immediate effect". The charities included
Oxfam,
War Child,
Christian Aid,
Medical Aid for Palestinians,
Islamic Relief,
CAFOD,
Council for Arab-British Understanding,
Humanity & Inclusion,
Plan International and
Action Against Hunger.
Medical Aid for Palestinians organised a protest outside the
Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office in
Lancaster House, where a Global Food Security Summit was being held, attended by the prime minister Rishi Sunak,
Minister of State for Development and Africa Andrew Mitchell and newly appointed
foreign secretary David Cameron. Protestors held signs saying, "Feed Gaza, Ceasefire Now", highlighting the
food and
water insecurity experienced by people in Gaza due to Israel's siege and bombardment.
Save the Children and Islamic Relief, who had teams in Israel and Palestine, called for a ceasefire because people in the region, including their staff, were terrified, and so that aid could be provided.
Amnesty International said the government's and Labour's refusal to condemn Israel diminished the gravity of the war crimes committed by the state. The charity called on British politicians to "explicitly oppose all war crimes" committed by Palestinians and Israel. The
Refugee Council, Safe Passage International,
Doctors of the World, the
Helen Bamber Foundation,
City of Sanctuary and other NGOs raised concerns about the crisis, particularly for
Palestinian refugees, and drew up a plan for the resettlement of Palestinian and Israeli
refugees modelled on the government's
initiative for Ukrainians following
Russia's invasion of Ukraine.
Financial Secretary to the Treasury Victoria Atkins said a Palestinian refugee scheme was "not the right response because we need to keep the pressure on this terrorist organisation to stop their hostilities, to release hostages and to come back to the diplomatic negotiating table. At this stage, I'm not sure that another humanitarian route is the answer". Following the
explosion at the Al-Ahli Arab Hospital in Gaza, 70
international NGOs, including
ActionAid UK,
Bond, CAFOD, Christian Aid, Islamic Relief,
Médecins Sans Frontières UK, Oxfam, Save the Children UK,
WaterAid UK and
Tearfund, released a statement urging the British government to secure a ceasefire.
Amnesty International held a protest outside
10 Downing Street in solidarity with Palestinians in
Rafah ahead of Israel's expected
Rafah offensive. Following the start of Israel's
Rafah offensive, Oxfam called on the U.K. to cease arms transfers to Israel, stating, "The UK government will be complicit in this carnage as long as it continues to sell arms to Israel, in the knowledge that they are likely being used to kill and maim Gaza’s population."
Health care workers The
Royal College of Nursing released a statement condemning "atrocities" against civilians and health care workers in Israel and Gaza, and demanding health care workers be able to care for the sick and injured without the threat of violence because health care is a human right. To commemorate the nearly 200 health care workers killed by Israel's bombardment of Gaza, health care workers gathered outside
Downing Street to demand a ceasefire. The health care workers held signs with the names of each their 189 colleagues killed in Gaza. Thousands of doctors signed an open letter to the government condemning its support for Israel as a "flagrant disregard of international law violations and healthcare crises". == Trade unions ==