Over 1,00,000 join Robinson's anti-migrant rally in London; Musk backs protest
Elon Musk, the Tesla CEO and owner of the X platform who has waded into British politics several times this year, was beamed in by video and condemned the left-leaning UK government.
PTI
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Tommy Robinson is a far-right activist. Photo: PTI
London, 14 Sept
A London march organised by far-right activist Tommy
Robinson drew more than 1,00,000 people and became unruly on Saturday as a small
group of his supporters clashed with police officers who were separating them
from counter protesters.
Several officers were punched, kicked and struck by bottles
tossed by people at the fringes of the “Unite the Kingdom” rally, Metropolitan
Police said. Reinforcements with helmets and riot shields were deployed to
support the 1,000-plus officers on duty.
At least nine people were arrested, but police indicated
that many other offenders had been identified and would be held accountable.
Police estimated that Robinson drew about 110,000 people,
while the rival “March Against Fascism” protest organised by Stand Up To Racism
had about 5,000 marchers.
Anti-migrant theme
Robinson, whose real name is Stephen Yaxley-Lennon, founded
the nationalist and anti-Islam English Defense League and is one of the most
influential far-right figures in Britain.
The march was billed as a demonstration in support of free
speech — with much of the rhetoric by influencers and several far-right
politicians from across Europe aimed largely at the perils of migration, a
problem much of the continent is struggling to control.
“We are both subject to the same process of the great
replacement of our European people by peoples coming from the south and of
Muslim culture, you and we are being colonized by our former colonies,”
far-right French politician Eric Zemmour said.
Elon Musk, the Tesla CEO and owner of the X platform who has
waded into British politics several times this year, was beamed in by video and
condemned the left-leaning U.K. government.
“There's something beautiful about being British and what I
see happening here is a destruction of Britain, initially a slow erosion, but
rapidly increasing erosion of Britain with massive uncontrolled
migration," he said.
Robinson told the crowd in a hoarse voice that migrants now
had more rights in court than the “British public, the people that built this
nation.”
The marches come at a time when the UK has been divided by
debate over migrants crossing the English Channel in overcrowded inflatable
boats to arrive on shore without authorization.
Numerous anti-migrant protests were held this summer outside
hotels housing asylum-seekers following the arrest of an Ethiopian man who was
later convicted of sexually assaulting a 14-year-old girl in a London suburb.
Some of those protests became violent and led to arrests.
Sea of flags
Participants in the “Unite the Kingdom” march carried the
St. George's red-and-white flag of England and the union jack, the state flag
of the United Kingdom, and chanted “we want our country back.”
UK flags have proliferated this summer across the UK — at
events and on village lampposts — in what some have said is a show of national
pride and others said reflects a tilt toward nationalism.
Supporters held signs saying “stop the boats,” “send them
home,” and “enough is enough, save our children.”
At the counterprotest, the crowd held signs saying “refugees
welcome” and ”smash the far right,” and shouted “stand up, fight back.”
Robinson supporters chanted crude refrains about UK Prime
Minister Keir Starmer, leader of the center-left Labour Party and also shouted
messages of support for slain US conservative activist Charlie Kirk.
Several speakers paid tribute to Kirk, who was remembered in
a moment of silence, followed by a bagpiper playing “Amazing Grace.”
One demonstrator held a sign saying: “Freedom of speech is
dead. RIP Charlie Kirk.”
The crowd at one point stretched from Big Ben across the
River Thames and around the corner beyond Waterloo train station, a distance of
about three-quarters of a mile (around a kilometre).
The marches had been mostly peaceful, but toward the late
afternoon, “Unite the Kingdom” supporters threw items at the rival rally and
tried to break through barriers set up to separate the groups, police said. Officers
had to use force to keep a crowd-control fence from being breached.
Counterprotesters heckled a man with blood pouring down his
face who was being escorted by police from the group of Robinson supporters. It
wasn't immediately clear what happened to him.
While the crowd was large, it fell far short of the one of
the biggest recent marches when a pro-Palestinian rally drew an estimated
300,000 people in November 2023.
Robinson had planned a “Unite the Kingdom” rally last
October, but couldn't attend after being jailed for contempt of court for
violating a 2021 High Court order barring him from repeating libelous
allegations against a Syrian refugee who successfully sued him. He previously
served jail time for assault and mortgage fraud.
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