LONDON-The British actor who played the role of Princess Diana in the Netflix “The Crown” series said he was called to interrogate him by the police after he attended a supportive gathering of the Palestinians in central London.
Khaled Abdullah, who played Dodi Fayed in the popular show, said in a statement It was published on his social media channels that the London Police Service in London had sent him a letter asking him to attend an “official interview”, regarding the “protest of the Palestinian Solidarity Campaign” on January 18.
“It remains to see whether this will lead to charges,” he added, who played the starring role in “UNITED 93” and “The Day of the Jackal”. He added that the right to protest was “under attack” in the United Kingdom.
Abel was among the tens of thousands of people who attended the demonstration, which was held the day after Israel and Hamas to stop the shooting of the war in the Gaza Strip, which killed more than 48,000 people, according to health officials in the Palestinian enclave.
Israel launched its military campaign after Hamas’s terrorist attacks on October 7, 2023, which killed 1,200 people and saw about 250 hostages, according to Israeli officials.
The Capital Police confirmed to NBC news via e -mail that they had arrested 77 people on suspicion of violating the protest conditions after some of them penetrated a police line that day. He added that 21 people have been charged so far.
As part of the “ongoing investigation”, the force said it “called for eight other people to conduct an interview under caution at a police station.” Usually, the British police do not confirm the identity of anyone under investigation.
Abdel Ela, 44, attended many of the supporters of the Palestinians in the past and publicly called for a permanent ceasefire in the Gaza Strip.
Address the crowds in the January 18th Rally, A slave said“The first stage of this ceasefire begins. It remains to see whether the ceasefire will keep, or if the blood has been thrown since what will be announced.”
In February, one of the signers of an open letter written to the BBC by the Da`wah group, artists in Palestine, which criticized the broadcaster to withdraw a documentary on Gaza’s children.
The Palestine Alliance, the activist group that organized the gathering, condemned the message sent to Abdullah in A statement issued on MondayThe police were accused of carrying out a “apparent coordinated attack against the Palestinian Solidarity Movement.”
She said that the force was “seeking to stop the general protest against the issue by harassing those involved in the movement, and through the increasing restrictions on the demonstrations.”