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Scuffles in London as thousands join 'kill the bill' rallies across Britain

Published 03/04/2021, 01:38
Updated 03/04/2021, 21:12
© Reuters. Protest against policing bill in Bristol

By Guy Faulconbridge

LONDON (Reuters) -Thousands of demonstrators joined rallies across Britain on Saturday against a proposed law that would give police extra powers to curb protests, with some scuffles breaking out following a march in London.

The Police, Crime, Sentencing and Courts bill aims to toughen measures officers can take to disperse demonstrations, such as imposing time and noise limits, which campaigners and activists fear would be used to curb dissent.

"Kill the bill" marches were held in dozens of towns and cities, supported by big campaign groups such as climate change campaigners Extinction Rebellion and the Black Lives Matter movement.

Nearly all passed off peacefully but there were minor clashes in central London between protesters and police following a rally attended by several thousand people.

London's Metropolitan Police, which deployed a large number of officers in the capital to bring the protest to an end, said there had been 26 arrests and 10 officers were injured, although none seriously.

"The vast majority of people who turned out in central London today did so while adhering to social distancing," said Commander Ade Adelekan. "However, a small minority did not engage despite the repeated efforts of officers on the ground.

"This left us with no option but to move to an enforcement stage and arrests have been made."

FREE SPEECH

The new bill follows action by Extinction Rebellion which paralysed parts of London in early 2019 and fuelled calls from some politicians for the police to be given tougher powers to prevent excessive disruption.

Since the proposed law was brought before parliament last month, there have been sporadic demonstrations across the country, with Saturday's rallies being part of what organisers said was a national weekend of action.

"(I'm here) to defend the rights of free speech, and the rights of organisations in our society," said Jeremy Corbyn, former leader of the main opposition Labour Party, who was among those who took part in the London protest.

"These demonstrations, 50 of them today, will make a difference," he told Reuters opposite the Houses of Parliament.

Much of the protest so far has been focused in the southwestern English city of Bristol. Some demonstrations there have turned violent, with officers bombarded with missiles and police vehicles set on fire, which Prime Minister Boris Johnson described as "disgraceful attacks".

© Reuters. Protest in Bristol

A large crowd gathered again in Bristol on Saturday evening, although the rally remained peaceful.

Some senior officers have said the "kill the bill" tag was deliberately provocative as "the bill" is a nickname in Britain for the police.

Latest comments

Looks like the 'China Model' is spreading indeed.
whilst I agree people have the right to protest peacefully. Many groups believe it's their right to stop other citizens from going about their lawful business and that's not on...
if this was in Hong Kong it would be reported very differently. like evil CCP introduces bill to crush peaceful Pro democracy
if this was in Hong Kong it would be reported very differently. like evil CCP introduces bill to crush peaceful Pro democracy
Can’t wait for the bill to be passed👌🏽
If this virus mutates to ******only teens and early 20 somethings, who knows.
I live near London and am appalled at these people. They mix in groups when they know there is a lock down, they break the rules and then pretend they are protesting for the whole of the UK. I would just like to say that, 'they do not represent the majority of the population'. Anything worth protesting about will still be worth highlighting after Covid has passed. Stay home, if not then make sure you are not making a party out of the trip you need to take. These protesters do not care about the health of their nation and are completely selfish.
Well said........and why do you need to protest at all, just submit your petition to gov.uk and if enough people agree with you it gets debated in parliament........simple solution for a civilised society.
only a minority of them a actually know what they are protesting against. the majority are just there for a tear up.
Ironically it also conpkwtely undermines the point of the protest.
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