Police forces urge Covid caution ahead of sunny
Sunday
Crowd cheers as speaker claims that coronavirus is
‘made up’ as cases rise
Lizzie
Dearden
Home
Affairs Correspondent
@lizziedearden
2 hours ago
Hundreds of
conspiracy theorists have gathered in central London to protest against
coronavirus restrictions in the UK as infections worsen.
Scuffles
broke out as police moved in on demonstrators in Trafalgar Square, who formed
human blockades in an attempt to prevent arrests and initially forced officers
to move back.
Demonstrators
advanced on police while shouting “choose your side” and some were seen
throwing objects at officers during a largely peaceful demonstration on
Saturday afternoon.
At around
3pm, the Metropolitan Police announced that it would be dispersing protesters
and making arrests after trying to “explain, engage and encourage them to leave
throughout” the day.
Footage
showed several lines of officers in riot gear near the National Gallery, with
mounted police on standby, as police repeatedly told people to leave the rally.
“Protesters
have remained, putting themselves and others at risk,” a spokesperson for the
Metropolitan Police said.
“This,
coupled with pockets of hostility and outbreaks of violence towards officers,
means we will now be taking enforcement action to disperse those who remain in
the area. Those who remain may get arrested.”
The Resist
And Act For Freedom rally was the latest in a series of protests by a
wide-ranging coalition of groups who oppose lockdown restrictions.
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Supporters
of the QAnon theory, which centres on claims that Satan-worshiping paedophiles
are running a global child sex-trafficking ring, could be seen in the crowd.
Several
people held up signs opposing vaccinations and 5G technology, while others
waved St George flags.
The crowd
cheered as a speaker told them that coronavirus was a “novel coronavirus, like
a novel, like a story – it’s all made up”. Another woman claimed that 5G “grows
cancer”.
One
protester held a banner calling for the government’s Sage scientific advisers
to be sacked, while another’s declared Covid-19 a “hoax”.
The protest
had been advertised by organisers as an “medic-focused event with expert
speakers, NHS and police whistleblowers. Protecting our families, our elderly
and our children”.
The
speakers included high-profile conspiracy theorists who have been speaking at a
number of similar rallies in recent months.
A lead
organiser is a nurse whose registration was suspended by the Nursing and
Midwifery Council in July for spreading false information about coronavirus and
vaccines.
Other
speakers included the chair of the right-wing Irish Freedom Party, a Republican
politician from Minnesota and prolific anti-5G campaigner Mark Steele, who was
jailed for shooting a teenage girl in the head in the 1990s.
It comes
amid concern that the spread of disinformation on coronavirus and potential
vaccines will worsen the pandemic.
Police had
appealed for the public to adhere to restrictions and social distancing over
the weekend, as some forces mounted extra patrols to enforce the law.
A further
16 people who tested positive for coronavirus have died in hospital in England,
bringing the total number of confirmed reported deaths in hospitals to 29,735,
NHS England said on Saturday.
Professor
Neil Ferguson, whose modelling led the government to order the lockdown in
March, urged ministers to act “sooner rather than later” as cases rise.
Boris
Johnson is to consider new restrictions across England after the latest figures
showed new infections doubling every week, with the R rate between 1.1 and 1.4.
“We are now
seeing a second wave coming in. We are seeing it in France, in Spain, across
Europe – it has been absolutely, I’m afraid, inevitable we were going to see it
in this country,” he said on Friday.
The “rule
of six” came into force on Monday to restrict private social gatherings, but
protests are exempt if they are organised in accordance with guidelines.
Ministers
are thought to be looking at a temporary two-week “circuit break” in an attempt
to break the chain of virus transmission.
The move
could see pubs and restaurants ordered to close or face a 10pm curfew, while
socialising between households could be banned.
Tougher new
restrictions have already been imposed in large parts of England’s north west,
West Yorkshire and the Midlands.

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