Moment organiser of London’s Al-Quds ‘hate rally’ shouts ‘death to the IDF’ at Iran protest before leading chants of ‘Khamenei makes us proud’


A fundraiser for the group leading the Al-Quds Day rally in London shouted ‘death to the IDF’ and ‘Khamenei makes us proud’ at a protest last weekend.

Raza Kazim attended a pro-Iran demonstration outside the US embassy last Saturday after the country’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, was killed in an Israeli drone strike. 

Footage shows him leading crowds with a chant of ‘say it clear, say it loud, Khamenei makes us proud’. In another video, he is seen yelling ‘death to the IDF [Israel Defence Forces]’ – a slogan described as hate speech last year by Sir Keir Starmer.

This week, the Home Secretary banned a planned Al-Quds Day march through London by the Islamic Human Rights Commission (IHRC) due to the risk of serious disorder, but it will still go ahead on Sunday as a static protest. 

Mr Kazim – who leads a course training maths teachers at Middlesex University – is a trustee of the IHRC trust, the charitable arm that funds the IHRC. 

The IHRC was described in the independent review of the Prevent strategy as an ‘Islamist group ideologically aligned with the Iranian regime, that has a history of extremist links and terrorist sympathies’. 

It claims it is a separate entity to the IHRC trust, although they share the same business address and phone number.

Moment organiser of London’s Al-Quds ‘hate rally’ shouts ‘death to the IDF’ at Iran protest before leading chants of ‘Khamenei makes us proud’

Raza Kazim attended a pro-Iran demonstration outside the US embassy last Saturday. He is seen in the centre of this image, with grey hair and wearing a white scarf 

In a statement reported, Mr Kazim praised Khamenei – whose regime has killed thousands of protesters – for ‘his principled opposition to systems of racial and political oppression’. 

He said the IDF chant was a ‘creative and forceful expression calling for the dismantling of a genocidal military institution responsible for terrorising, killing, raping and torturing Palestinians, while enforcing a system of apartheid that denies their basic humanity’. 

Lord Walney, the Government’s former extremism adviser, called his comments ‘deeply disturbing’.  

He told The Times: ‘These kinds of remarks are not remotely acceptable and not remotely peaceful and they make a mockery of those who claim there is no link between regime supporters and charities.’

Mr Kazim has organised previous Al-Quds Day marches. The event – named after the Arabic word for Jerusalem – was created by Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini after Iran’s 1979 revolution to express opposition to Israel. 

Other IHRC figures have gone on the record to praise the Iranian regime.  

They include its co-founder and chair Massoud Shadjareh, who was previously filmed recalling a meeting he had with Khamenei. 

Mr Shadjareh, who was born in Iran in the 1970s, said he had been summoned to describe the findings of an IHRC report, entitled Environment of Hate: The New Normal for British Muslims in the UK.

He told an audience at an event: ‘We did a report about Islamophobia, how the environment is created by politicians by the media and in that environment people became so bad that even sometimes themselves they were shocked at how they had become so racist.

Massoud Shadjareh, chair of the Islamic Human Rights Commission, speaking under a banner lauding Ayatollah Ali Khamenei

Massoud Shadjareh, chair of the Islamic Human Rights Commission, speaking under a banner lauding Ayatollah Ali Khamenei

‘I was asked to explain this research, this book, to Ayatollah Khamenei and in the small gathering I explained the whole findings of this.’

The IHRC chairman said the despot had listened ‘very attentively’ before replying: ‘This is because they want to destroy your confidence in yourselves as Muslims and in your deen [all-encompassing faith]. Don’t let it happen.’ 

Revealing how inspired he was by Khamenei’s words, Mr Shadjareh said: ‘Day in day out, when these Zionists and neocons are attacking us, abusing us, writing and demonising us, it is because they want to remove this confidence from you.

‘Our confidence comes in the fact that we have got the most powerful entity backing us and guiding us and this is why we are here and this is why we will be victorious if we unite.’

Faisal Bodi, the IHRC’s spokesman, described the late dictator as a man of ‘principle and integrity’.

Asked if he would hold a picture of Khamenei, Mr Bodi told the BBC earlier this week: ‘Happily. I would rather hold a picture of the Ayatollah than Keir Starmer or Donald Trump. He was a man of principle, a man of integrity, a man who stood for justice.’

He added: ‘In the same way I would happily hold a picture of Nelson Mandela and Malcolm X and many other towering personalities.’

Mr Bodi added that Khamenei ‘stood on the side of Palestine’. He also quoted Tehran’s figures for the number of protesters that had been killed during a recent wave of street protests – rather than independently verified figures that are in the tens of thousands. 

The IHRC said on Wednesday that it ‘strongly condemned’ the decision to ban its march and would continue with a static protest.

Shabana Mahmood had said the move was necessary ‘to prevent serious public disorder, due to the scale of the protest and multiple counter-protests, in the context of the ongoing conflict in the Middle East’. 

The Home Secretary added: ‘Should a stationary demonstration proceed, the police will be able to apply strict conditions.

‘I expect to see the full force of the law applied to anyone spreading hatred and division instead of exercising their right to peaceful protest.’

Neither the Government nor police have powers under the Public Order Act to ban a static demonstration.

Police chiefs believe the demonstration could potentially attract 12,000 people or more and are planning to use the River Thames as a barrier to keep rival groups apart. 

At least a thousand officers from the Metropolitan Police and forces around the country are being drafted in to patrol the crowds, with more made available if needed.

Met deputy assistant commissioner Ade Adelekan warned the measures taken by police cannot ‘guarantee’ disorder will not take place but it is hoped the measures will mitigate disruption.

Speaking to reporters today, he said: ‘While we will protect the right to freedom of speech, there is a zero-tolerance approach to hate crime and anyone who crosses the line can expect to face arrest.’

The protest has drawn criticism over apparent backing for the Iranian regime after its organisers expressed support for the country’s late leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.

The Government banned the march but people can still legally assemble and take part in a so-called ‘static protest’.

Mr Adelekan said this would be ‘immeasurably easier to police’.

But Lord Walney has warned this could still cause serious disorder and blamed a ‘loophole’ in public order laws depriving ministers of the power to stop rallies that stay in one location.

All protests and counter-protests will take place between Vauxhall and Lambeth bridges and are permitted between 1pm and 3pm, the Met said.

People take part in an Al-Quds march in London on March 23, 2025

People take part in an Al-Quds march in London on March 23, 2025

Counter protesters can assemble on the Millbank side of the Thames. Lambeth Bridge will be closed, with access only for emergency vehicles.

The force needed a ‘unique plan’ to respond to ‘unique circumstances’, Mr Adelekan said – but he stressed this would not set a precedent.

‘I’ve been in this organisation for 31 years, I cannot think of a time when we used it.

‘So as far as I’m concerned it’s new, it’s new in my generation of policing,’ he said, adding: ‘It will keep both sides apart whilst also allowing people to protest within the law.’

Mr Adelekan said anticipating protest turnout was ‘not an exact science’ but that it was his ‘professional judgment that numbers I think will go up to 6,000 in terms of the counter protest, which is a significant number when you combine all of those groups’.

He said: ‘I caveat that by saying you could see significantly more based on the current political situation.’ 

Mr Adelekan later added that police anticipate a ‘similar number or more’ supporting the protest.

Officers are having to be redeployed from neighbourhood policing to cover the event and patrol Jewish neighbourhoods in the capital, Mr Adelekan said.

Middlesex University has been contacted for comment.  

What is Al-Quds Day?

Al-Quds Day – named after the Arabic word for Jerusalem – was created by Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini after Iran’s 1979 revolution.

Falling on the last Friday of Ramadan, it was billed as an international day to express support for Palestine and opposition to Israel and Zionism.

The London march has taken place for more than 40 years and is organised by the UK al-Quds Committee led by the Islamic Human Rights Commission (IHRC).

It is seen by many as a hate march, and each year sees numerous arrests for supporting terrorist organisations and anti-Semitic hate crimes. 

The IHRC has backed Iran’s late despot Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, describing him as having been ‘on the right side of history’.