British far-right group clashes with police, 60 arrested
UK: Members of a British far-right group clashed with police
at a rally in London on Saturday, despite a government ban on marches
imposed after deadly riots that rocked the country last month.
Police said they arrested 60 people after scuffles broke out and
firecrackers were thrown by the crowd of more than 1,000 activists from
the English Defence League.
EDL leader Stephen Lennon addressed the crowd in Aldgate, east
London, saying he had defied bail conditions imposed for an earlier
football hooliganism offence in order to appear at the rally.
“I’m meant to sign on at a police station on a Saturday, I’m not
doing that ... The credible outcome is I will be put on remand in prison
for my democratic right,” Lennon said. “That’s what’s going to happen
and when I go to court, if they let me out of court with any bail
conditions that restrict my democratic right to oppose militant Islam, I
will break them the minute I walk out.”
Around 1,500 counter-protesters from an anti-fascist group gathered
nearby in the Whitechapel area while more than 3,000 police monitored
both protests in the overall area, which is home to large ethnic
minority populations.
At the protest police arrested 16 people for offences including
affray, drunk and disorderly and assault on a police officer, London’s
Metropolitan Police said in a statement.
They later arrested another 44 people on a coach on suspicion of
violent disorder after the vehicle carrying EDL members broke down in
east London and there was a clash with local youths, police said.
The EDL has held a number of demonstrations around the country since
it was formed two years ago, many of which have turned violent.The
protests were the first since riots erupted in London and several other
English cities in August, leaving five people dead, and the government
has been on high alert ever since.
Home Secretary Theresa May imposed a 30-day ban on marching in six
areas of London following the violence but police said they had allowed
the EDL to go ahead with a “static demonstration”.
London,Sunday, AFP |