A pro-Palestine protester has caused outrage by dressing up as a Holocaust victim at a protest in London’s Trafalgar Square.Â
Activist Maria Gallastegui was recently spotted wearing a striped uniform reminiscent of those worn by Holocaust victims in Nazi concentration camps in Europe.
But instead of the Star of David, Gallastegui placed a star and crescent, a symbol often associated with Islam.Â
She also held a sign referring to Palestine Action, which was designated a terror group following a stunt at an RAF airbase that saw its membersÂ
Although 13 individuals were arrested and seven were charged after a protest supporting Palestine Action in London, Gallastegui was not among them.
According to the Telegraph, 66-year-old Gallastegui is a full-time protester who left her life as a coach driver behind nearly 20 years ago.Â
Throughout the last twenty years, she has been arrested multiple times, including during a protest advocating for the right to demonstrate in August 2005.
She became infamous for living in a tent in Parliament Square for six years after joining a campaign against proposals to restrict protests in front of the Houses of Parliament.Â

Activist Maria Gallastegui was seen wearing a striped uniform that hearkens back to those worn by the tragic victims of the Holocaust at concentration camps in Nazi-occupied Europe

Members of the Metropolitan Police encourage Pro-Palestine supporters to leave Trafalgar Square on June 23, 2025 in London, England

Protestors clash with MET police officers during a rally in support of pro-Palestinian group Palestine Action after British government announced the group’s ban, in Trafalgar Square, in central London, on June 23, 2025
Gallastegui was also interviewed by the BBC in 2021 over a live-in protest that saw her sleep in a 150-year-old tree in Hackney that was set to be felled to make way for a 600-home development.Â
She said at the time: ‘We are passionate people. Any campaign that we can think of doesn’t start overnight. There are a lot of underlying issues that the system is not dealing with.’
Monday’s protest saw Palestine Action activists clash with police in ugly scenes during a mass protest in London as the Government moves to proscribe the group as a terrorist organisation.
Hundreds of protesters waving Palestinian flags and holding placards gathered at Trafalgar Square as the group’s leaders called for an ’emergency mobilisation’ in response to the Government’s plans.
The Palestine Action protest came just days after two of its members broke into RAF Brize Norton and damaged two military planes in a stunt condemned by MPs including Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer and Home Secretary Yvette Cooper.Â
It is feared one engine of a plane targeted at Britain’s largest RAF base is damaged beyond repair and could cost £25million to replace.
The group, whose Brize Norton ambush is being treated by counter-terrorism police, have conducted 356 attacks on sites across the UK in the last five years – with Ms Cooper revealing the damage caused is ‘running into the millions of pounds’.
Monday’s demonstration was initially due to be staged outside Parliament but protesters were forced to descend on Trafalgar Square instead after the Metropolitan Police imposed an exclusion zone.

Members of the Pro-Palestinian demonstration are removed from Trafalgar Square on June 23, 2025 in London, England

Monday’s protest saw Palestine Action activists clash with police in ugly scenes during a mass protest in London

Officers were seen surging into the crowd to detain masked protesters, prompting activists to respond by pushing back

Protesters, some wearing black face coverings or Palestinian keffiyehs, were seen scuffling with police and shouting up close into their faces
Protesters, some wearing black face coverings or Palestinian keffiyehs, were seen scuffling with police and shouting up close into their faces, with officers forced to drag activists out of the crowds.
Officers were seen surging into the crowd to detain masked protesters, prompting activists to respond by pushing back, throwing water and chanting at police.
Pro-Palestine protesters also clashed with a small group of pro-Israeli counter-demonstrators who were swiftly escorted out to the sound of jeers.Â