Huge attendance at marsh will add to pressure on Rishi Sunak and Keir Starmer to back calls for ceasefire in Middle East conflict

Hundreds of thousands of people marched peacefully through central London yesterday to protest against Israel’s continued bombardment of Gaza, following a week of intense political debate over the policing of sensitive demonstrations.

The Metropolitan Police said around 300,000 people had converged on the capital from all parts of the country, while organisers of the pro-Palestinian event put the number closer to 800,000 and claimed it was one of the biggest marches in British history.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

People are wary of pandemic art – but it will help us process the trauma of the time | Rhiannon Lucy Cosslett

Spanish flu was largely absent in mainstream culture. But like Aids, the…

Twitter layoffs begin as Elon Musk admits ‘massive drop’ in revenue

Billionaire blames financial woes on activist groups ‘trying to destroy free speech…

International Labour Organisation rejects government claim it supports anti-strikes bill – UK politics live

International Labour Organisation makes clear it does not back the bill despite…

‘Covid corruption commissioner’ would seek to recoup lost billions, says Labour

Exclusive: Rachel Reeves announces plans for powerful watchdog to recover taxpayer cash…

Huge attendance at marsh will add to pressure on Rishi Sunak and Keir Starmer to back calls for ceasefire in Middle East conflict

Hundreds of thousands of people marched peacefully through central London yesterday to protest against Israel’s continued bombardment of Gaza, following a week of intense political debate over the policing of sensitive demonstrations.

The Metropolitan Police said around 300,000 people had converged on the capital from all parts of the country, while organisers of the pro-Palestinian event put the number closer to 800,000 and claimed it was one of the biggest marches in British history.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

James Bond film No Time to Die delayed again over Covid

Daniel Craig’s final outing as 007 hit by coronavirus disruption, along with…

Edwin Poots resigns as DUP leader after 21 days

Leadership drama in Northern Ireland’s biggest party could sink the power-sharing assembly…

Government pulls plug on its remaining UK electric car subsidies

DfT says it wants to focus funding on expanding the public electric…