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Human rights lawyer detained at Liverpool airport for opposing genocide



This AFPTV video grab shows Daniel Kovalik, legal representative of the Colombian president Gustavo Petro, speaking from an undisclosed location during an interview with AFP via Zoom, in Bogota on October 30, 2025.

UK ‘counter-terror’ police have detained distinguished US human rights professor and international law expert, Dan Kovalik, at Liverpool’s John Lennon Airport.

Kovalik, a well-known author and activist, said on X that he had been grilled about his opposition to Israel’s Gaza genocide and to the illegal war on Iran.

Human rights threatened under authoritarian war on speech

The Starmer regime extensively abuses anti-terror laws to detain — not arrest — journalists, activists and others who speak out against Israel’s crimes and the UK’s collaboration. By avoiding arrest and seizing victims at ports or airports, the state denies the detainee access to lawyers and the right to silence.

Refusal to disclose passwords is punishable by two years in jail. Devices are routinely seized, as in Kovalik’s case.

All these abuses are perpetrated by a regime seeking to protect Israel from scrutiny and criticism, despite wholesale condemnation from the UN, human rights groups and international law experts. None have so far been charged, but multiple UK journalists and authors have been targeted.

One journalist, Asa Winstanley, refused to disclose passwords to protect sources, but he was raided at home where protections are greater. Winstanley has not, so far, been prosecuted. A court ruled the seizure of his devices unlawful.

Liverpool stands with Kovalik

Scousers reacted furiously to the war on free speech on their ‘patch’ and were quick to express solidarity with Kovalik against the shameful detention.

National Security (State Threats) Bill

Not satisfied with abusing anti-terror laws to wage war on UK rights for Israel, the Starmer regime is ramming through further legislation allowing it to quickly designate any group it doesn’t like as ‘terrorist’.

Starmer is pushing the National Security (State Threats) Bill through Parliament in a single day without scrutiny. The bill puts the onus on its victims to prove they didn’t know a group the government later ‘designates’ was going to be banned.

Using information is included as a crime and there are no protections, even for journalists, who quote facts obtained from sources the UK government dislikes.

Craig Murray, himself a victim of an airport detention, pointed this out:

Britain is an authoritarian terror state. Shamefully, presumptive new PM, Andy Burnham, has given no indication he intends to end this reign of state terror. In fact, Burnham has accepted funds from the director of an arms firm involved in the genocide.

Featured image via AFPTV TEAMS/AFP via Getty Images

By Skwawkbox





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