Tommy Robinson, march and London
Digest more
Around 4,000 police will take a 'zero-tolerance approach' during anti-Islam activist Tommy Robinson's hate-filled march, but the rally has already raised over £100,000 for refugees
THOUSANDS of cops have been deployed to the capital as 80,000 people descend on London ahead of two planned protest marches. The Unite the Kingdom march, organised by Tommy Robinson, and a
London witnessed one of its largest security operations in recent years as tens of thousands gathered for far-right activist Tommy Robinson’s “Unite the Kingdom” march alongside a massive pro-Palestine Nakba Day rally.
A GB News star has confirmed his attendance at Tommy Robinson’s far-right Unite the Kingdom march in London today. Tens of thousands of people are expected to descend on the cap
A high-profile businessman who claims he was due to speak at Tommy Robinson’s far-right rally in London has said he has been barred from entering the UK. Andy Malone, an influencer from Newry, took to social media to moan about being banned from entering the country ahead of the Unite the Kingdom rally.
British activist Tommy Robinson raised concerns over the persecution of Christians in Nigeria during the “Unite the Kingdom” march in central London on Saturday, alongside a Nigerian bishop who accused Western institutions of failing to speak out against attacks on Christian communities.
The public believes many more people support the far-right activist’s mass protests but are afraid to admit it, according to The POLITICO Poll.
Meanwhile, two people allegedly affiliated with the Nakba Day pro-Palestine protest were also arrested on suspicion of committing hate crimes