Western Mail

Police call for protests ban amid virus threat

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THE organisati­on that represents rank-and-file police officers in England and Wales has called on Home Secretary Priti Patel to ban all protests while the threat of Covid-19 remains.

Police Federation chairman John Apter said Priti Patel must be “unequivoca­l” in stating that large gatherings are not allowed.

It comes after a second weekend of violent clashes in the capital as farright protesters took over areas near the Houses of Parliament and Trafalgar Square on Saturday in response to anti-racism demonstrat­ions sparked by the death of George Floyd.

Mr Apter said: “In normal times the principle of having the right to peaceful protests is an important one.

“However, we are not in normal times, we are tackling a deadly virus which is indiscrimi­nate in who it can affect.

“Police officers have provided outstandin­g profession­alism in their dealings with large gatherings during Covid-19 – some of which turned violent at the weekend.

“But we can’t ignore the avoidable risk our members and those attending the protests are being exposed to.

“I urge the Home Secretary to be unequivoca­l in her terms that whilst we are under the threat of this virus, any large gathering or protest must be banned.

“We cannot allow our police officers and members of the public to be put at risk of contractin­g the virus, especially at such a critical time in our response to the pandemic.”

But Downing Street said any ban was an “operationa­l matter” for senior officers to apply to the Home Secretary for.

The Prime Minister’s official spokesman said: “We continue to urge people not to attend further protests because gatherings of over six people remain illegal.

“Ministers have no powers to initiate a ban on marches themselves, it’s an operationa­l matter for police.”

At the request of their local police force, councils – or in London the head of the Metropolit­an Police or

City of London Police – can apply to Home Secretary Priti Patel for consent to make a banning order, but the Downing Street spokesman said no such applicatio­ns had been received.

Protesters could already face sanctions under coronaviru­s laws, which currently ban groups of more than six people, with exceptions, from gathering.

A total of 23 officers were injured in London as police were pelted with missiles, smoke grenades, glass bottles and flares on Saturday.

The protest was condemned by

Prime Minister Boris Johnson as “racist thuggery” and described as “mindless hooliganis­m” by police. Some 113 people were arrested. The counter-protest came after thousands of anti-racist demonstrat­ors marched in events triggered by the death of Mr Floyd after a white police officer held him down by pressing his knee into his neck for almost nine minutes in Minneapoli­s on May 25.

The previous weekend saw antiracist protesters clash with police in London, while the statue of Sir Winston

Churchill and the cenotaph were boarded up ahead of the latest demonstrat­ions after becoming targets of vandalism.

In Bristol, a statue of slave trader Edward Colston was pulled down and dumped in the harbour, sparking a wider debate over monuments linked to Britain’s role in the slave trade and colonialis­m.

Bristol music venue Colston Hall has removed the name of the 17thcentur­y merchant from its signage and said: “We cannot continue to be a monument to his memory.”

 ??  ?? > Patrick Hutchinson carries an injured man away during Saturday’s protests
> Patrick Hutchinson carries an injured man away during Saturday’s protests

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