That the Parliament acknowledges the Scottish Community & Activist Legal Project (SCALP) and Network for Police Monitoring's (Netpol) report, From Scotland to Gaza, published on 23 October 2025, which offers analysis of policing pro-Palestine solidarity protests; is concerned by the report's findings that policing of these protests has become “increasingly intimidatory, violent and unpredictable” in the period October 2023 to October 2024; regrets that, according to the report, the interests of picketed private businesses, such as arms companies, were found to be prioritised above the right for protesters to continue their peaceful protest, which, it believes, is their right; is concerned that, according to the report, mechanisms for safeguarding were compromised, including the intimidation of journalists and legal observers; believes that there is an inherent and identified racial element to the policing of these protests, with, it understands, accounts of racial biases being reported to the police but not followed up; commends the work of SCALP and Netpol to undertake this research, using FOIs and a range of testimonies from protesters, as well as secondary literature; agrees with the findings of the report that Palestinian solidarity protests have been overpoliced, and commits to address what it considers is an egregious example of human rights suppression.