Western Daily Press

Police are investigat­ing assaults on 40 officers

- CLAIRE HAYHURST news@westerndai­lypress.co.uk

POLICE are continuing to investigat­e assaults on 40 officers and one member of the media at a riot in Bristol on Sunday.

Avon and Somerset Police said two further people, a 20-year-old man and a man currently refusing to provide details, had been arrested on suspicion of violent disorder and were in custody.

This brings the total number of arrests in connection with the disorder – which saw police officers injured, police vehicles set on fire and a police station attacked – to nine.

On top of that 14 people were arrested for refusing to leave a second protest on Tuesday night that continued into yesterday morning.

The riot followed a peaceful “Kill the Bill” protest in Bristol on Sunday, against the Government’s Police, Crime, Sentencing and Courts Bill, which will see the police handed new powers to tackle demonstrat­ions.

Chief Superinten­dent Carolyn Belafonte said the investigat­ion into Sunday’s riot could be one of the largest in the history of Avon and Somerset Police.

“The fact we’re investigat­ing 40 assaults on officers and a member of the media as the result of one incident shows the scale of wanton disorder which took place that night,” Chief Supt Belafonte said.

“One of the people we believe we’ve already identified is a suspect in the fire which destroyed a mobile community police station.

“We’d like to thank every member of the public who’s got in touch to provide footage, informatio­n or to pass on their well-wishes and kind thoughts.”

Around 3,000 people had attended a peaceful demonstrat­ion on College Green but events turned violent after about 500 people descended on Bridewell police station.

Police previously released images of 10 people they want to identify following the protest on Sunday.

The force has received 210 submission­s after appealing for members of the public to supply footage or informatio­n about those involved, as well as 68 calls to the control room.

Two officers taken to hospital during the riot were found not to have suffered broken bones.

Six men arrested on suspicion of violent disorder have been released under investigat­ion, while a 28-yearold man appeared at Bristol Magistrate­s’ Court charged with possessing an offensive weapon.

On Tuesday, around 200 people gathered on College Green for a second night of protests.

Police requested mutual aid from neighbouri­ng forces to assist in dispersing the gathering after attempts to encourage people to leave were unsuccessf­ul, a police spokesman said.

Public order officers from Avon and Somerset, British Transport Police, Devon and Cornwall, Dorset, Dyfed-Powys, Gloucester­shire, Gwent and Wiltshire were deployed to move protesters on at 10pm.

Police dog units, horses, the police helicopter and a police drone unit were also involved in the operation.

Many protesters left the area but a “significan­t number” gathered on Deanery Road and refused to disperse, Avon and Somerset Police said.

Fourteen arrests were made, with one of those detained also arrested for offences connected to Sunday’s protest.

Chief Superinten­dent Claire Armes said: “After the scenes of violence witnessed in the city at the weekend, it was necessary to bring in additional resources from our neighbouri­ng forces to ensure the protest was safely brought to a swift conclusion.

“Throughout the operation officers continued to urge protesters to move on – at no time were they contained – but there came a time when enforcemen­t was necessary as gatherings are still not permitted.”

John Apter, national chairman of the Police Federation of England and Wales, said officers in Bristol felt “under siege” following the second protest in the city.

“I really feel for my colleagues in Bristol,” Mr Apter told the BBC.

“There is a sense that you really feel under siege. And for some, whatever they do is not enough and for others, it’s too much.

“This was on an evening where the vast majority of the country were rememberin­g those many thousands of people who have been lost to this horrible virus, so it was not good scenes to see, and this was on the back of the most horrendous violence that we’d seen on Sunday evening.

“So my colleagues are battered and bruised, in some cases physically. We’ve got a number of officers who were injured on Sunday evening, some very seriously. This is completely unacceptab­le, completely unacceptab­le.”

The Police, Crime, Sentencing and Courts Bill would give the police in England and Wales more power to impose conditions on non-violent protests, including those deemed too noisy or a nuisance.

Those convicted under the proposed legislatio­n could face a fine or jail.

Home Secretary Priti Patel criticised the “criminalit­y and violent behaviour” seen during the protests in Bristol.

“We live in an open society and a democracy so the principle to protest and to have your voice heard is absolutely crucial,” she told BBC Breakfast, “but there is no acceptabil­ity at all for criminalit­y, thuggish behaviour and the type of violent scenes we’ve seen over recent evenings, they included the most appalling assaults and criminal attacks on police officers, there’s a fundamenta­l difference between the two.”

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 ?? Andrew Matthews ?? People take part in a ‘Kill the Bill’ protest in Bristol on Sunday
Andrew Matthews People take part in a ‘Kill the Bill’ protest in Bristol on Sunday

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