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During the COVID-19 pandemic in the United Kingdom, numerous protests took place over the government's response.. Anti-lockdown protests took place in opposition to restrictions, starting in April 2020 against the first national lockdown, and continuing during subsequent lockdowns and other regional restriction systems.
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]
Protests over restrictions overlapped with anti-vaccine protests following the start of the UK's COVID-19 vaccination programme in December 2020. [ 175 ] [ 176 ] On the weekend of 24–25 July 2021, protests broke out again in several major cities in the United Kingdom including London , [ 177 ] Leeds , [ 178 ] Manchester [ 179 ] and Birmingham ...
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 ...
People take part in a "Resist and Act for Freedom" protest against a mandatory coronavirus vaccine, wearing masks, social distancing and a second lockdown, in Trafalgar Square, London, Saturday.
In 2020, the group highlighted how former Liberal Democrat candidate Nick Hill became radicalised into a far-right organiser. [2] [1] In 2022, the group exposed the anti-semitism and racism of journalist and YouTuber James Owens.
The anti-fascists celebrated the community's united response, in which large numbers of East-Enders of all backgrounds; Protestants, Catholics and Jews successfully resisted Mosley and his followers. There were few Muslims in London at the time, so organisers were also delighted when Muslim Somali seamen joined the anti-fascist crowds. [29]