Clashes, arrests at immigration protests in London and Manchester

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Police officers clashing with counter protesters in London in an attempt to move them off the street, as an anti-immigration march takes place outside the Barbican Thistle hotel on Aug 2.

Police officers clashing with counter-protesters in London, as an anti-immigration march took place outside the Barbican Thistle hotel on Aug 2.

PHOTO: REUTERS

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  • Anti-immigration and anti-racism groups clashed in Manchester during a "Britain First" march, leading to police intervention and separation of the groups.
  • Protests also occurred in London outside a hotel housing asylum seekers, resulting in nine arrests for breaching public order conditions.
  • Protesters voiced concerns over immigration and homelessness, while counter-protesters condemned hate and discrimination.

AI generated

MANCHESTER, United Kingdom - Further scuffles broke out at anti-immigration protests in the UK on Aug 2, with the police making several arrests.

Demonstrators calling for mass “re-migration” gathered in central Manchester, in north-west England, for a march organised by the far-right “Britain First” group, which was confronted by anti-racism groups.

Meanwhile, in central London, rival demonstrators converged outside a hotel housing asylum seekers, following similar recent events that have occasionally turned violent.

In Manchester, the two groups clashed briefly at the start of the protest before police split them up, according to an AFP journalist at the scene.

“Send them back, don’t let them in – just stop them coming in, we’ve got hotels full of immigrants, and we’ve got our own homeless people in the streets begging for food but nowhere to live,” said protester Brendan O’Reilly, 66.

Counter-protester Judy, a 60-year-old retired nurse, told AFP that she was there “because I don’t want to see people full of hate on the streets of Manchester”.

“Do they want them all to go back or is it just people with brown skin? I suspect it’s just people with brown skin that they want to re-migrate,” she added.

In London, similar clashes erupted outside a hotel in the Barbican neighbourhood before police intervened.

Metropolitan Police wrote on social media platform X that officers had cleared a junction where counter-protesters had assembled in breach of the conditions in place.

“There have been nine arrests so far, with seven for breaching Public Order Act conditions,” added the force.

There have been several flashpoints around the UK in recent weeks, most notably in

the north-east London neighbourhood of Epping.

AFP

Counter-protesters being held back by police officers at a “March for Re-migration”, organised by far-right group Britain First, in Manchester, on Aug 2.

PHOTO: EPA

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