Kneecap defiant at first major gig since terror charge

Kneecap fans turned out in force on Friday to the Irish-language hip-hop trio at their biggest ever festival headline gig, which came just days after a band member was charged with a terror offence.
Liam Óg Ó hAnnaidh was charged by the Metropolitan Police for having allegedly displayed a flag in of proscribed Lebanese organisation Hezbollah at a gig last year.
The band denied the offence, calling it "political policing" and "a carnival of distraction" away from Gaza.
Speaking on stage at London's Wide Awake, the rapper - due to appear in court next month - said the authorites were "trying to silence us" before Glastonbury and urged fans not to be "on the wrong side of history."
"I know we're out, we're enjoying ourselves and we're trying to listen to some tunes at a festival... believe me lads, I wish I didn't have to do this," he said at the south London event.
"But the world's not listening. The world needs to see solidarity of 20,000 people in a park in London chanting, 'free free Palestine!'"
The chant echoed out around Brixton's Brockwell Park.
The UN said on Friday that Gaza was in the "cruellest phase" of war, with 9,000 trucks' worth of aid ready at the border for the Palestinian territory.
"Let's how lucky we are to be in a field with our friends and not being bombed from the sky," Kneecap's frontman, who goes by the stage name Mo Chara, told the audience on Friday night.
Israel launched a military campaign in Gaza in response to the Palestinian group Hamas's cross-border attack on 7 October 2023, in which about 1,200 people were killed and 251 others were taken hostage. Fifty-eight hostages remain in Gaza, and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said on Wednesday that 20 are believed to be alive.
At least 53,762 people, including 16,500 children, have been killed in Gaza since then, according to the territory's Hamas-run health ministry.
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To their many fans, Kneecap are relatable, hedonistic provocateurs, mixing rapid-fire anti-establishment lyrics with danceable bass-heavy beats. Following in the footsteps of anti-establishment rap groups like NWA and Run The Jewels, the trio present themselves as dissident underdogs, giving a voice to the oppressed.
To their critics they are dangerous upstarts who have now gone too far.

Some politicians, including Tory leader Kemi Badenoch, have called for them to be banned. And they were called antisemitic and "terrorist sympathisers" after they described Israel's military action in Gaza as a US-funded genocide at the Coachella music festival in California last month.
Then in the UK, footage from two of their past gigs was assessed by counter-terrorism police. One appeared to show a band member shouting "up Hamas, up Hezbollah" - both groups are banned in the UK and it is a crime to express for them. Hezbollah is a Shia Muslim political and military group which has been involved in violent conflicts with Israel - it has strong backing from Iran and opposes Israel's right to exist.
Another video allegedly showed them calling for Conservative MPs to be killed. Kneecap apologised to the families of murdered MPs Sir David Amess and Jo Cox but claimed footage of the incident had been taken out of context and "exploited and weaponised", adding they had have "never ed" Hamas or Hezbollah.
They repeated the claim they were "being made an example of" on stage on Friday.
Friday's concert - Kneecap's first big gig since the investigation was launched - followed a smaller "secret" set at London's 100 club the night before.
It saw the band - comprised of Chara, Móglaí Bap (Naoise Ó Cairealláin) and balaclava-wearing beatmaker DJ Próvaí (JJ Ó Dochartaigh) - rip through tracks from their acclaimed album Fine Art, which has seen a surge in streaming in recent weeks since the controversy began.
This included a brand new track called The Recap which dropped online only hours earlier, and begins with a clip of a news report about the counter-terrorism investigation.
Fans, many of whom were wearing Irish and Palestinian flags and shirts, bounced and sang along to their tracks which find the west Belfast act rapping in English and Irish about everything from drug-fuelled parties to Northern Ireland and Gaza.

One such fan, Myrtle from Brighton, told BBC News she agreed with the band's views on Gaza.
"I think it's amazing. I think they're completely right," she said.
"Imagine in a few years if we get to a state where it's [even worse] and you can't say that you've been on the right side of history and you've not made an effort to make that change, how do you not feel guilty":[]}