Far-right thugs caught on camera doing disturbing ‘Nazi salutes’ in front of Cenotaph war memorial

black lives matter, England, LGBTQ, London, neo-nazi, News, racist, UK

Startling video showed a gang of far-right white-supremacists flashing Nazi salutes during a riot to defend a statue of Winston Churchill, who famously defeated the Nazis. (Screen capture via Twitter)

Waving Union Jack flags, occasionally wearing face masks, almost always sipping beer and flashing Nazi salutes, an angry far-right mob made its way through London, England, as police officers, vastly outnumbered, appeared too paralysed to intervene.

The blob was a melting pot of, according to journalists on the ground, various right-wing groups and non-affiliates and it spilt onto the streets Saturday afternoon (June 13) to protect historic monuments that had been the target of Black Lives Matter protests in recent days.

Chiefly, a statue commemorating Winston Churchill alongside the Cenotaph war memorial. Britain’s World War II leader, that many consider racist, has become a flashpoint in a debate over Britain’s colonial, anti-Black history.

Police bracketed the now boarded-up landmark, protecting it from a Black Lives Matter demonstration that organisers called off, but instead now clashed with the counterprotesters, who had shown up to counter the cancelled protest by defending the statue of Churchill, who fought against the Nazis, by doing Nazi salutes and brutally beating the police, who were on-site to protect the statue and the Cenotaph.

And that sentence is, by far, the most 2020 thing ever written.

It appeared Saturday’s counterprotest was the high-water point in the statue of slave trader Edward Colston being torn down and thrown into the harbour of Bristol port last weekend.

Vile videos show far-right gangs flashing Nazi salutes and chanting ‘England, England’.

The stone streets of the capital were turned into pinched, tear-gas shrouded battlegrounds as in and around Parliament Square, thousands of people wearing football shirts jeered “England, England” and gargled the national anthem.

A argues squares off with a police officer on Parliament Street on June 13, 2020 in London. (Kate Green/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images)
A argues squares off with a police officer on Parliament Street on June 13, 2020 in London. (Kate Green/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images)

Various groups, such as Britain First, English Defence League and the Football Lads Alliance, openly defied lockdown measures to travel from other parts of the country to pack the counterprotest.

The crowd was led by several hundred neo-Nazis who were then joined by thousands of ordinary citizens, donning polo shirts and baggy chino shorts in various dull tones and while others threw off their attire to show off sagging tattoos or openly urinated in the streets, footage and photographs showed.

They gathered alongside military veterans to guard the Cenotaph war memorial. Songs in support of right-wing activist Stephen Yaxley-Lennon, who goes by the name of Tommy Robinson, echoed around the yellowing buildings.

Police, according to video footage, vastly stood their ground as bottles of unknown liquids were lobbed at them by the angry, vastly bald-headed mob.

The counterprotesters pulsed and seethed, kicking and jostling and twirling their fists like Popeye while some pummeled police officers, the foam from crushed beer fans spraying on the pavement.

More footage showed the gangs encountering ripped-up Black Lives Matter signs made of cardboard. “F***ing all lives matter,” one of the bald men, wearing a Union Jack face mask and clenching a can of Stella Artois, growled.

“Burn-a-boy,” another taunted, the footage showed. “Throw some petrol on the Black c**t.”

Police were tipped ahead about the possibility of a counterprotest and enforced a 5pm curfew.

Moreover, the Metropolitan Police divided specific areas of the city for any right-wing and Black Lives Matter protests respectively.

A group gathers around the Winston Churchill statue on Parliament Square on June 13, 2020. (Dan Kitwood/Getty Images)
A group gathers around the Winston Churchill statue on Parliament Square on June 13, 2020. (Dan Kitwood/Getty Images)

The agency also put a Section 60 order in place until Sunday, giving officers enhanced powers to stop and search individuals.

Products You May Like

Articles You May Like

New YA Books Out This Week, November 20, 2024
Non-Book Gifts for Your Book Club
Conan O’Brien Set To Host 97th Oscars
‘Soundtrack To A Coup D’Etat’ Director Johan Grimonprez Interview
Sam Fender Works With the War on Drugs’ Adam Granduciel on Song From New Album People Watching: Listen