Far
right’s show of force leaves Met desperately kettling counter-protesters
Police
almost overwhelmed by brawlers whipped up by Tommy Robinson and his guest
demagogues
Robyn
Vinter
Robyn
Vinter on Whitehall
Sat 13
Sep 2025 23.21 BST
The
anti-fascist counter-protesters who had turned out to oppose Saturday’s
far-right march in central London had not anticipated being unable to leave.
But more
than six hours after they first gathered, they were trapped, surrounded on all
sides by their opponents, who were kept at bay by lines of riot police.
Seeking
violence, many of the protesters who attended the “unite the kingdom” march
splintered off from the main 110,000-strong group after the initial march,
catching the police off-guard by filing down side streets off Whitehall.
When they
came up behind the counter-protesters to take over Trafalgar Square, they cut
off the only exit.
One
officer said the police were “being attacked on all fronts” as they were almost
overwhelmed by the masses of aggressive supporters of the far-right agitator
Stephen Yaxley-Lennon, who calls himself Tommy Robinson.
The
officer said colleagues had needed to urgently scramble to bring their helmets
and shields to the frontline after they suddenly realised they were facing off
with aggressive men clad in the flag of St George, who, it seemed, had not come
for a peaceful march.
Riot
police were rapidly erecting barricades to try to contain hostile and
missile-throwing protesters as they focused on the gathered counter-protesters,
who ended up kettled in one section of the street.
“Is there
a way we can get through?” an anxious woman asked a police sergeant after a few
hours. “We’ve got a train booked back to Newcastle.”
“I’m
afraid not,” he said. “Nobody’s getting through at all at the moment. It’s not
safe to let anyone out.”
Why the
Met had not expected marchers to take over Trafalgar Square was a question on
the lips of many of the counter-protesters who were drawn from trade unions and
anti-racist groups, and were outnumbered by about 20 to one by those attending
the far-right rally.
That some
of the crowd so quickly turned to violence was unsurprising, as the nationalist
flag-waving group were worked up to a lather by racist and Islamophobic
speeches.
Yaxley-Lennon
himself introduced a survivor of the Rotherham grooming scandal on stage by
asking: “How hasn’t there been a revolution already about this rape jihad
against our daughters?”
Any
semblance of “unity” that Yaxley-Lennon claimed to be calling for was shown to
be a ludicrous facade when the speakers got talking to the crowd.
Éric
Zemmour, a French far-right politician, said the “freedom of our peoples is in
danger” from a “great replacement of our European people by peoples coming from
the south and of Muslim culture. You and we are being colonised by our former
colonies.”
Elon
Musk, appearing via video link, told the crowd: “Whether you choose violence or
not, violence is coming to you. You either fight back or you die, that’s the
truth, I think.”
When
violence inevitably erupted, one of Yaxley-Lennon’s supporters could be seen
standing on a barricade, using a megaphone in a futile attempt to call for calm
after being brought in by police.
Fireworks
and bottles were lobbed at mounted police and, at one point, an injured
Yaxley-Lennon supporter with blood pouring from a head wound was carried
through a barrier by police medics and pulled through the crowd of
anti-fascists who jeered and shouted: “Nazi scum.”
Though
holding a bandage to his head, he still managed to spit at those shouting at
him.
Within
the anti-fascist ranks, moments of joy and levity cut through the gloomy day.
Realising
they were likely to be trapped for some time, dozens of the counter-protesters
exhibited some creative dance moves to an eclectic selection of music belted
out from their sound system, which included Kneecap and Diana Ross.
One group
who had not anticipated being trapped were the Graell family, on holiday from
Barcelona. They had been to the National Gallery that morning and chose to go
to the Silver Cross pub on Whitehall for lunch, unaware of the events about to
unfold.
“Then
when we wanted to go out, we couldn’t leave,” said Elisenda, adding that it was
the first time in London for her parents, Joan Maria and Empar. “It has been
interesting.”
Over
time, the police slowly gained control as a couple of heavy bouts of rain
thinned the far-right crowd, who were pushed back enough to make a path for the
counter-protesters to escape.
By 6.45pm
a cleanup operation of the broken glass and empty beer cans had already begun
in the area reclaimed by police from the marchers, though a couple of hundred
still languished in Trafalgar Square draped in their cold, soggy flags.
An Asian
employee of a magic-themed souvenir shop, which had locked down during attacks
on the police outside, appeared stoic as he washed away vomit from outside the
front door with a large bottle of water.
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