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'Prejudiced policing’: Jewish man charged over placard mocking late Hezbollah leader

The protester has claimed that police searched his fiancée's underwear drawer and barred him from picking up his mother for Shabbat dinner

May 27, 2025 19:17
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A man arrested for holding an anti-Nasrallah placard was questioned by police, who asked if he minded offending pro-Hezbollah protesters
6 min read

A Jewish man who was arrested and charged with a public order offence after holding what he claims was a satirical sign mocking the late leader of Hezbollah has spoken out about his ordeal, describing months of anxiety that the case would go to trial.

The man, who wishes to remain anonymous, was detained by police, held overnight, and had police officers search his fiancée's underwear drawer when they searched his home, despite only holding the placard for less than three minutes during a pro-Israel counter-protest in Swiss Cottage last September.

Referencing Israel’s Operation Grim Beeper, the cartoon on the sign depicted Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah alongside a pager and the words “beep, beep, beep” – a nod to the campaign targeting terrorists using their handheld communication devices. The image was apparently intended as satire, but the man was charged under the Public Order Act for allegedly causing racially or religiously aggravated harassment.

As first reported in the Telegraph, the man denied intending to incite racial hatred or insult or distress supporters of the banned terrorist group and told officers that the sign was “political satire”.