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Allianz Sues Six People for £300K Over Palestine Action Protests

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Summary

Allianz, one of the world's largest insurance companies, has filed a civil lawsuit seeking nearly £300,000 in damages against six individuals alleged to have participated in Palestine Action protests at the company's UK offices in Guildford and City of London in October 2024 and March 2025. The protests involved red paint being daubed on buildings and an occupation of the Guildford office. All six defendants have been criminally charged and are applying to stay the civil case until after their criminal trials conclude.

What changed

Allianz has initiated civil proceedings against six individuals allegedly involved in direct action protests targeting the insurance company's UK offices. The protests, organized by Palestine Action, were directed at Allianz's former provision of insurance to Elbit Systems UK, Israel's largest arms manufacturer. Red paint was daubed on buildings, and activists occupied the Guildford headquarters during the October 2024 protest.

The defendants face parallel criminal charges and have applied to stay the civil case pending the outcome of their criminal trials, citing concerns about the lower burden of proof in civil court combined with their inability to afford legal representation. The case represents an unusual tactic of pursuing civil recovery against protest participants alongside criminal prosecution, raising questions about access to justice and the right to protest.

What to do next

  1. Monitor for developments in the civil case proceedings
  2. Review corporate security and protest response policies
  3. Track criminal trial outcomes that may affect civil proceedings

Penalties

Allianz seeking nearly £300,000 in civil damages

Archived snapshot

Apr 10, 2026

GovPing captured this document from the original source. If the source has since changed or been removed, this is the text as it existed at that time.

During the two protests that form the basis of the civil case, red paint was daubed over Allianz’s UK headquarters in Guildford, Surrey and its City of London office (pictured). Photograph: Hannah McKay/Reuters

During the two protests that form the basis of the civil case, red paint was daubed over Allianz’s UK headquarters in Guildford, Surrey and its City of London office (pictured). Photograph: Hannah McKay/Reuters

UK news

Allianz sues six people alleged to have been part of Palestine Action protests

Insurance company seeking almost £300,000 for protests at UK offices, during which red paint was daubed on buildings

Haroon Siddique Legal affairs correspondent

Wed 8 Apr 2026 11.28 EDT

Last modified on Wed 8 Apr 2026 11.46 EDT

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One of the world’s largest insurance companies is suing six people alleged to have taken part in Palestine Action protests against the company.

Allianz is seeking damages of almost £300,000 for protests at its UK offices in October 2024 and March 2025, in what is believed to be the first civil case brought against people accused of involvement in direct action with the protest group.

Palestine Action repeatedly targeted the German insurance company over its provision of insurance to the UK subsidiary of Israel’s largest arms manufacturer, Elbit Systems. During the two protests that form the basis of the civil case, red paint was daubed over Allianz’s UK headquarters in Guildford, Surrey and its City of London office.

Palestine Action claimed to have occupied the Guildford office during the 2024 protest, while activists scaled the building with a flag reading “Drop Elbit” in last year’s action. Allianz ended its contract with Elbit Systems UK last year.

The six defendants, who have all been charged with criminal offences and pleaded not guilty, are applying to the civil court to stay the case brought by Allianz until after their criminal trials, which they say the insurer has refused to do.

Onlookers gathering near the London office after the red paint protest in 2024. Photograph: Hannah McKay/Reuters

An Allianz spokesperson said it did not comment on legal proceedings and respected the right to lawful protest, but added it would not tolerate alleged “intimidation of our staff, threats or any behaviour that endangers the safety and security of our people, business or property”. They added: “We reserve the right to take lawful action, including civil proceedings against individuals, to recover for damage caused to our buildings and business.”

Seren John-Wood, a 30-year-old community worker who is charged with criminal damage alongside two other defendants in relation to the City of London protest, said: “This is an unprecedented and unusual extra step that is being conducted parallel to criminal proceedings.

“The burden of proof is significantly lower in civil courts. We believe that in a criminal court we will be found not guilty. In a civil court, they will have an extremely unfair advantage; we are unable to afford legal representation whereas, according to their own annual report, they made a record operating profit of €17.4bn (£15.1bn) last year. There is no legal aid available for civil courts.”

Anna Letts, 44, a teacher charged in relation to the same protest, said: “We are people who work and volunteer with refugees and asylum seekers, in homelessness services, with children and young people and, like most working people in the UK, live paycheck to paycheck. Being forced to pay hundreds of thousands of pounds means decades of money being deducted from salaries that barely cover our rent as it is.”

George Elliott, a 29-year-old writer and performer charged with criminal damage, aggravated trespass and going equipped to lock-on alongside two other defendants in relation to the Guildford protest, said: “Allianz brought on its own reputational damage and embarrassment, as well as any other alleged harm to its business and/or employees, by opting to insure Elbit Systems.”

A decision to ban Palestine Action under the Terrorism Act was overturned in February by the high court, which ruled that it was unlawful. It remains in place pending the home secretary’s appeal, which will be heard on 28 and 29 April.

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Last updated

Classification

Agency
Guardian
Published
April 8th, 2026
Instrument
Notice
Legal weight
Non-binding
Stage
Final
Change scope
Minor

Who this affects

Applies to
Insurers Criminal defendants Courts
Industry sector
5241 Insurance
Activity scope
Civil litigation Criminal defense Protest activities
Geographic scope
United Kingdom GB

Taxonomy

Primary area
Civil Rights
Operational domain
Legal
Topics
Judicial Administration Corporate Governance

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