Five Takes logo
Five Takes News
HomeArticlesAbout
Michael
•
© 2026
•
Five Takes News - Multi-Perspective AI News Aggregator
Contact Us
•
Legal

news
Published on
Sunday, April 12, 2026 at 01:10 PM
Court Lets Anti-War Protests Proceed, State Delays

Israel’s High Court of Justice on Friday allowed broader anti-war demonstrations to go ahead over the weekend under wartime restrictions, while making clear that the state still had not formulated a policy that balances security considerations with the fundamental rights at stake in the case. The ruling exposed the familiar machinery of control: the state dragging its feet, the court managing the damage, and protesters left to navigate whatever scraps of permission remain.

Who Gets to Decide

In its latest decision, issued after a Friday hearing in the joined protest and Western Wall cases, the court said it had taken note of the state’s declaration that “at this stage” no policy had yet been formed that balances security considerations against the relevant rights, including freedom of protest and demonstration and freedom of religion and worship. That is the state’s own admission, placed on the record by the court: no settled policy, just wartime restrictions and the usual administrative fog around basic rights.

Given that position, and in light of clarifications provided by Home Front Command representatives during the hearing, the justices ordered that, absent a concrete warning, a protest at Haifa’s Horev Center must be permitted with no fewer than 150 participants, and that a protest at Tel Aviv’s Habima Square must be permitted with no fewer than the number approved by Home Front Command for gatherings in that area at the time of the protest. The court added that this should take into account the existence of a protected on-site space capable of accommodating a significant crowd.

The justices further clarified that turnout above those numbers does not necessarily mean the protest must be dispersed. Any such situation, they said, is subject to the discretion of the police commander on the ground, based on the assessed risk to protesters and to public order, while giving appropriate weight to the full range of relevant considerations. So even when the court opens the gate a little, the police still stand there with the keys.

What the State Delayed

The ruling followed a procedurally fraught stretch in which the state repeatedly sought additional time and drew open judicial criticism. On Thursday, the court said it was regrettable that “countless” extension requests had been filed in the proceedings, and warned that the latest request effectively cast doubt on the practical utility of holding the hearing the following day.

Despite what it described as considerable discomfort with the respondents’ conduct, the bench gave the state until 7 p.m. that evening to file response affidavits, and ordered the petitioners to submit an update by 8:30 p.m. addressing, among other things, whether there was still a need to hold the Friday hearing as scheduled. The whole process reads like a bureaucracy trying to outlast the people demanding space to gather, speak, and worship.

Friday’s decision also makes clear that the case is not over. The state was ordered to submit full response affidavits by April 26. Those affidavits must address, among other things, questions raised by the bench regarding the enforcement of Home Front Command instructions elsewhere, as well as the distinction raised during the hearing by Home Front Command representatives between a standard protected space and other kinds of protected areas, including the underground parking levels at Habima. The petitioners in both cases, along with the fourth respondent in the Western Wall case, were given until April 29 to reply.

Following the ruling, protest organizers announced that demonstrations would be held at multiple locations over the weekend. That is the part the official apparatus never quite controls: people still organizing, still showing up, still forcing the issue.

What Else Was Happening

Separately, Iranians rallied outside U.S. embassies and consulates around the world to urge policymakers not to strike deals with Tehran and to stay the course in confronting the regime. The protests outside diplomatic missions show another layer of the same global order: people mobilizing around war, while policymakers and institutions keep deciding the terms from above.

Previous Article

Putin’s Easter Truce Meets More War, Not Peace

Next Article

Cultural Icon Dies as Power Keeps the Spotlight
← Back to articles