The Scottish Mail on Sunday

YOU COULDN’T MAKE IT UP!

Murky truth about the ‘witnesses’ who saw Cummings

- By Max Aitchison

THEY descended on a family home in a quiet, tree-lined street, a mob of placardwie­lding protesters spewing foul messages of hate.

The Mail on Sunday can reveal that in addition to a shared desire to ‘hold Dominic Cummings to account’, those hurling abuse outside his London house appeared united by another cause: antipathy towards Brexit.

Among them were former BBC journalist Lara Pawson, TV producer Samuel Jones and freelance Guardian photograph­er Jill Mead.

Ms Pawson, an author who worked for the BBC World Service for more than a decade, brandished a sign which read ‘Cummings, you are full of s***’. She has since defended her actions by claiming: ‘I wasn’t threatenin­g: I was holding a piece of cardboard.’

But Ms Pawson, a staunch Labour supporter and anti-Brexiteer, has also admitted shouting ‘you shameless bastard’ as Mr Cummings, the architect of the Vote Leave campaign to take Britain out of the EU, returned home last week. In the past she has tweeted crude jokes about Brexit.

Targeting Mr Cummings at home rather than outside Downing Street, where he works, has caused unease across the political divide.

Phillip Blond, the political philosophe­r and think-tank director, condemned the ‘mob behaviour’ as ‘deeply repulsive’, adding: ‘Those who took part in this “street justice” have departed from all standards of common decency. It is vile.’

And Professor Karol Sikora, a former World Health Organisati­on adviser, said footage of the abuse left him ‘extremely uncomforta­ble’.

He added: ‘He has a young child who must be stressed. I understand people are angry, but this level of abuse is unacceptab­le near someone’s family home. This is appalling... truly horrid.’

But the behaviour was endorsed by Shadow Foreign Secretary

Emily Thornberry, Mr Cummings’s local MP, who bragged that her constituen­ts could be ‘relied on to say it as it is’.

Her comments caused a backlash on Twitter, with one woman posting: ‘Lovely, condoning “lynch mobs” especially when there is a child in the house. Other children living nearby seeing this barbaric behaviour. What are we teaching them?’

Beside Ms Pawson stood Samuel Jones, another Remainer, who held a sign saying ‘Demonic Scummings must go’. After Guardian columnist Marina Hyde condemned the ‘disturbing’ scenes,

Mr Jones wrote to the newspaper, saying:

‘Please don’t allow Mr Cummings to weaponise this legitimate protest by evoking images of misbehavin­g protesters. We, as with the lockdown, obeyed the rules.’ Mr Jones, who has worked on programmes for the BBC, Channel 4 and Sky, said he was ‘proud’ of his role in the protest, but admitted: ‘I was conflicted about whether it was the right thing to hold my protest outside Cummings’s home – it’s not my usual style – but there are good reasons... to take this out of the usual more official channels, because Cummings has consistent­ly demonstrat­ed he has no respect for convention­al channels and is accountabl­e to no one.’

In a statement to The Mail on Sunday, Ms Pawson called Mr Cummings a ‘liar’ and a ‘dangerous man’. She said: ‘He seeks to undermine our democratic institutio­ns. He shows no respect for the men and women working day and night at our hospitals to save lives – profession­al people who have repeatedly asked all of us to stay home. I have no respect for him at all.’

Scotland Yard said it offered Mr Cummings security advice and provided ‘an appropriat­e policing plan’.

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? ‘PROUD TO PROTEST’: Remainer Samuel Jones with his placard
‘PROUD TO PROTEST’: Remainer Samuel Jones with his placard
 ??  ?? ‘I’VE NO RESPECT FOR HIM’: Ms Pawson and her crude sign
‘I’VE NO RESPECT FOR HIM’: Ms Pawson and her crude sign

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