Sun. Sep 7th, 2025


BBC Mary Kelly and family members at the Belfast protest on Saturday.  Three women with blonde hair, a young girl with long blond hair and a young boy with short red hair stand in front of St Anne's Cathedral.  The woman in the middle is  carrying a Palestinian flag. The boy is blowing into a whistle.BBC

Mary Kelly attended Saturday’s protest march with members of her family

Several thousand people are taking part in a Palestine solidarity protest in Belfast demanding sanctions against Israel.

The demonstration has been organised by the Ireland Palestine Solidarity Campaign as part of a series of protests in towns and cities on both sides of the Irish border.

In Dublin, protesters are marching from the US embassy to the Department of Foreign Affairs.

Other protests are being staged in Londonderry, Galway, Cork, Limerick, Navan, Carlow, and Waterford.

‘This is about humanity’

Eftaima Najjair at the protest in Belfast, with St Anne's Cathedral in the background.  She is wearing a black hijab scarf on her her and a black and white pattered coat with red and black panels at the front.  Protesters holding Palestinian flags are standing in the distance behind her.

Eftaima Najjair said the people attending the protest gave her “hope for the future”

Among those attending the Belfast protest was Eftaima Najjair from Portadown, County Armagh.

“Showing solidarity is very important and coming out today, even as a Muslim-Arab lady, looking at all these different people from different places – young, old, babies, elderly – it really gives a lot of hope for the future,” she said.

“This is about humanity, it not about just the Palestinian people.

“It’s about our humanity and looking at these people who are starving… just sitting back home doing nothing is not an option,” Ms Najjair added.

“So the least we can do is come out in solidarity and show that we’re here and that we really care and that we’re trying our best.”

Protest outside BBC

Demonstrators at the Belfast protest walked through the city to the BBC NI headquarters to express dissatisfaction at BBC coverage of events in Gaza.

Israel launched a military campaign in Gaza in response to the Hamas-led 7 October attack in 2023, in which 1,200 people were killed and 251 more were taken hostage.

At least 64,300 people have been killed in Israeli attacks in Gaza since then, according to the territory’s health ministry.

The ministry also said 376 people have died during the war so far as a result of malnutrition and starvation.



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