Foreign-Funded NGO Network Driving Britain’s Anti-Israel Protests
Key Facts
- NGO Monitor found that approximately 80% of major post-October 7 anti-Israel protests in Britain were organized by NGOs.
- At least 11 organizations reportedly had extremist connections or interactions involving Iran, Hamas, Hezbollah, the PFLP, or the Muslim Brotherhood.
- Nineteen groups received British government support through direct funding or the Gift Aid system.
NGO Monitor says the demonstrations presented as grassroots activism are largely organized by coordinated groups with foreign funding and extremist connections
by Emmitt Barry, Worthy News Washington D.C. Bureau Chief
LONDON (Worthy News) – The massive anti-Israel protest movement that swept Britain after Hamas’ October 7 attack has been driven largely by a coordinated and internationally financed network of activist organizations, according to a major new report presented Wednesday at the House of Lords.
The 129-page NGO Monitor investigation mapped 40 organizations involved in post-October 7 demonstrations and mobilization campaigns across the United Kingdom. Researchers concluded that roughly 80% of the protests were organized by NGOs rather than emerging spontaneously from grassroots activists. (ngomonitor)
The report, titled Imported Influence, found that at least 11 of the organizations had alleged links to extremist groups or officials who had met or cooperated with figures connected to Iran, the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, Hamas, Hezbollah, the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, or the Muslim Brotherhood.
NGO Monitor also reported that 19 organizations received some form of British government support through direct funding or the Gift Aid tax-relief program. Other groups reportedly received taxpayer-backed funding from the United States, European governments, or the European Commission.
Researchers warned that much of the protest infrastructure operates with little financial transparency. Of the 40 organizations examined, 13 reportedly function outside any formal British regulatory framework despite soliciting public donations, while several groups used American charitable entities or cryptocurrency to raise funds.
Anne Herzberg, NGO Monitor’s legal adviser, told the House of Lords gathering that protests portrayed as spontaneous campaigns for Palestinian rights were instead supported by “a globally connected and financed network” promoting Iranian, Islamist, anti-Western, and anti-Israel narratives.
Lord Walney, who moderated the discussion, said the findings strengthened the case for British regulators to act more quickly against organizations facing credible investigations over extremist connections.
The report raises serious questions over whether British taxpayers and charitable systems have indirectly financed organizations working alongside movements hostile not only to Israel, but also to the democratic institutions of the West.
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