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The London Forum emerged in 2011 [1] as a split from the New Right (UK), a series of far-right meetings in London that took place in the first decade of the 2000s. It describes itself as "the home of the UK alt-right". [2] Searchlight, a magazine that focuses on the British far-right, says the group bridges "the fascist and Tory right". [3]
Despite the demonstrations being organised in response to rumoured anti-immigration protests in Scotland, there was no sign of far-right protests. [213] In England, anti-racist protesters outnumbered far-right protesters, with 5,000 assembling outside the Reform UK headquarters in London, and 1,000 people protesting in Liverpool and Newcastle ...
B ritain was braced for a long night of violent rioting on Wednesday, after a tense week of anti-migrant uprisings swept across the nation.. Around 6,000 specialist officers were deployed by U.K ...
LONDON (Reuters) -British police braced for further anti-Muslim and anti-migrant riots on Wednesday as far-right groups planned to target asylum centres and immigration law firms across the ...
Protesting against George W. Bush in 2008. This is a list of protests and protest movements in the United Kingdom.Protest in the UK has concerned issues such as suffrage in the 19th and early 20th centuries, parliamentary reform from the Chartists to the present day, poverty, wages and working conditions, fuel prices, war, human rights, immigration (both for and against), fathers' rights ...
The protests were policed by officers from 14 forces. [50] 5 March 2011 Rochdale: 500 Around 500 EDL protesters congregated at Rochdale town centre's war memorial. A counter-protest was held by around 150 people from Unite Against Fascism, with the two groups being kept 100 feet apart by police. 31 people were arrested. [51] 12 March 2011 ...
The group researches fascist and ethnonationalist hate groups, documents their activities, infiltrates their events and provides training to anti-fascist researchers. [ 1 ] Activities
Unite Against Fascism (UAF) was formed in Great Britain in late 2003 in response to electoral successes by the BNP. [9] Its main elements were the Anti-Nazi League and the National Assembly Against Racism, with the support of the Trades Union Congress (TUC) and leading British unions such as the Transport and General Workers' Union (T&G) (now Unite) and UNISON. [10]