Palestine’s action will be banned from midnight when a judge denied the government to temporarily block it as a terrorist group.
On Friday, a judge of the High Court refused the group for a longer time to take legal action against the government’s decision.
The proposed sanctions, which amends the Terrorism Act 2000, will apply after being approved by both the House of Commons and House of Lords earlier this week.
This means that supporting Palestine’s action will become a criminal offense, with membership or expressing support for the direct action group for jail sentence up to 14 years.
The action claimed by Palestine Action was taken to ban the group in RAF Bryz Norton last month after a loss of an estimated £ 7 meter in the RAF Brise Norton.
In a hearing on Friday, Raza Hussain KC, for the Palestine Action co-founder Huda Ammori, said that the court banning the group would “sick” and “powerful misconduct” of power.
He said, “This is the first time in our history that a direct action civil disobedience group, which does not advocate violence, has been demanded to prosecute as terrorists,” he said.