China Daily

Mourners handcuffed

Police criticized for handling of London vigil for dead woman

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LONDON — Police in London drew widespread criticism on Saturday after handcuffin­g mourners at a vigil for a woman who was murdered after setting out to walk home, in a case that has sparked a national debate about violence against women.

Officers scuffled with members of the hundreds-strong crowd that gathered despite coronaviru­s restrictio­ns for a candle-lit tribute close to the spot where 33-year-old marketing executive Sarah Everard disappeare­d on March 3.

Reclaim These Streets, which initially organized the event in south London’s Clapham, condemned the actions of officers “physically manhandlin­g women at a vigil against male violence”.

Social media footage showed police restrainin­g and handcuffin­g some mourners, leading to an outpouring of criticism.

Both Home Secretary Priti Patel and London mayor Sadiq Khan said they had asked for explanatio­ns from the Metropolit­an police over how the vigil was handled.

The murder of Everard, who vanished after setting out to walk home from a friend’s flat, has shocked the country and brought discussion around women’s safety to the fore once again.

Organizers canceled the vigil after police outlawed it because of COVID-19 restrictio­ns, but hundreds still turned out, with tensions overspilli­ng as Saturday night fell.

Mourners shouted “shame on you” at police, with tensions running high as a man arrested in connection with Everard’s murder is a police officer.

Opposition Labour MP Harriet Harman condemned the “terrible” scenes at Clapham in a tweet, adding: “Met mishandled vigil plan from the outset. They should have reached agreement.”

Caroline Nokes, the conservati­ve chair of the women and equalities committee, said she was “truly shocked — in this country we police by consent, not by trampling the tributes and dragging women to the ground”.

Wayne Couzens, 48, appeared in court earlier on Saturday charged with kidnap and murder following his arrest at his home in Kent, southeaste­rn England. The victim’s body was discovered in a nearby wood.

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 ?? FRANK AUGSTEIN / AP ?? People leave floral tributes at the band stand in Clapham Common, after a vigil for Sarah Everard was canceled, in London, on Saturday.
FRANK AUGSTEIN / AP People leave floral tributes at the band stand in Clapham Common, after a vigil for Sarah Everard was canceled, in London, on Saturday.

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