Regina Leader-Post

LONDON STATUES BOARDED UP AHEAD OF PROTESTS.

Churchill statue at risk is ‘shameful’: PM

- MICHAEL HOLDEN AND ELIZABETH PIPER

LONDON • Prime Minister Boris Johnson said on Friday it was “absurd and shameful” that a statue of Winston Churchill was at risk of attack by activists, his strongest statement yet on growing protests against the legacies of past leaders.

Anti-racism protesters, who have staged demonstrat­ions since the death of African-american George Floyd, have put statues at the forefront of their challenge to Britain’s imperialis­t past.

Politician­s, police and activists sought to dissuade people from coming to Parliament Square on Saturday, where statues were boarded up ahead of possible protests.

A statue of Edward Colston, who made a fortune in the 17th century from the slave trade, was torn down in the city of Bristol on Sunday, and authoritie­s have acted to protect monuments they believe could be next.

They have now boarded up a statue opposite parliament of Churchill, Britain’s prime minister during the Second World War, after demonstrat­ors defaced it last weekend.

“It is absurd and shameful that this national monument should today be at risk of attack by violent protesters,” Johnson wrote on Twitter.

On Friday, around 500 people gathered in London’s Hyde Park chanting “the U.K. is not innocent” and “Black Lives Matter,” before marching through central London, with many saying that statues such as Colston’s were legitimate targets.

“If we have these big images, and we’re telling people that these people and what they stood for is OK, we’re just allowing everything that they did to pass,” said Samantha Halsall, 23, a student at the protest.

Organizers told the protesters not to turn up in central London on Saturday amid concern that there could be altercatio­ns with counter-protesters looking to defend statues.

Johnson is an admirer and biographer of Churchill, and some of those close to him say he wants to emulate him.

But Churchill expressed racist and anti-semitic views and critics blame him for denying food to India during the 1943 famine which killed more than two million people — aspects of his legacy which some say are not scrutinize­d enough.

“Yes, he sometimes expressed opinions that were and are unacceptab­le to us today, but he was a hero, and he fully deserves his memorial,” Johnson wrote, calling on people to avoid the protests.

“We cannot now try to edit or censor our past. We cannot pretend to have a different history.”

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 ?? TOLGA AKMEN / AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? A worker cleans graffiti from the statue of Winston Churchill at Parliament Square in London on June 8. Authoritie­s have since boarded up the statue amid fears of violent clashes between anti-racism protesters and far-right groups.
TOLGA AKMEN / AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES A worker cleans graffiti from the statue of Winston Churchill at Parliament Square in London on June 8. Authoritie­s have since boarded up the statue amid fears of violent clashes between anti-racism protesters and far-right groups.
 ?? JOHN SIBLEY / REUTERS ??
JOHN SIBLEY / REUTERS

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