Senin, 08 Juni 2020

HENRY DEEDES sees the Home Secretary lash out at the BLM protest rioters - Daily Mail

Priti Patel was ragin', her chompers flashing... this violence was bang out of order: HENRY DEEDES sees the Home Secretary lash out at the BLM protest rioters

Priti Patel was not happy. No, she was not. Ragin’... Fumin’... in fact. She had come to the chamber to issue a statement on Public Order – and the word ‘order’ fell from her mouth with an aggressive grrrrrrr.

It was not long ago that many were confidently predicting the Home Secretary’s demise. Her drippy permanent secretary Sir Philip Rutnam had resigned in a huff, accusing her of being a horrid bully.

Few expected her to see out the spring.

Priti Patel was ragin' and fumin' as she delivered a statement on public order in the commons

Patel's former permanent secretary Sir Philip Rutnam had previously accused her of bullying

Patel's former permanent secretary Sir Philip Rutnam had previously accused her of bullying

Well, on Monday's showing it would take a brave man to try and hoik her out of the Home Office.

Miss Patel is one of those ‘lock ’em up and throw away the key’ firebrand Conservatives – more usually ageing men in creaking pinstripes.

She’s part Minnie the Minx and part Norman Tebbit. No wonder Sir Philip was petrified of her!

While she understood those who wished to march in protest against the killing of George Floyd by police in America, the violence which had taken place during the Black Lives Matter protests over the weekend was disgraceful. Bang out of order.

Some 35 policemen had been injured. As for tearing down the statue of Edward Colston in Bristol – ‘This hooliganism is unacceptable,’ thundered Miss Patel. For those responsible she had a stern message: ‘Your behaviour is shameful. And you will face justice.’

Patel condemned the 'hooliganism' after Edward Colston's statue was torn down in Bristol

Patel condemned the 'hooliganism' after Edward Colston's statue was torn down in Bristol

There was great relish with which she issued the word ‘justice’ and her eyes narrowed menacingly as she said it, accompanied by a gritty flash of the chompers.

How the oldies gathered on the Government benches loved it. Hearty ‘here heres’ echoed around the chamber.

There was a heavy coating of treacle for the plods, those ‘who run towards danger’ as she described them.

‘When I became Home Secretary I vowed to back the police,’ she said. ‘Black lives matter but police brutality in the United States is no excuse for the violence against our brave police officers at home.’

Black Lives Matter protesters gather outside Downing Street in front of police officers

Black Lives Matter protesters gather outside Downing Street in front of police officers

Labour’s Nick Thomas-Symonds joined the Home Secretary in condemning the acts of thuggery. Like Miss Patel, he sympathised with the protesters’ cause – but added that ‘what is never the solution is violence and vandalism’.

Surprised ‘ahhhhs’ arose from the Government benches. You never heard sensible talk like this from Labour under Jeremy Corbyn. Miss Patel welcomed the support. She thanked the Shadow Home Secretary for his ‘thoughtful comments and measured response’.

Patel was challenged by several MPs during her speech to the House Of Commons on Monday

Patel was challenged by several MPs during her speech to the House Of Commons on Monday

But not everyone on the Labour benches was feeling quite so diplomatic.

Florence Eshalomi (Lab, Vauxhall) accused Miss Patel of not understanding the anger of the protesters.

Miss Patel fixed her with an icy glare. A fuse lit. A gauntlet thrown down. Even sat some distance away, I felt like backing off sharpish.

‘I’m really saddened that the Honourable Lady has effectively said the Government doesn’t understand racial equality,’ she said, softly.

‘It must have been a different Home Secretary who as a child was called a “Paki” in the playground. A very different Home Secretary who was racially abused in the streets, or even advised to drop her surname and use her husband’s to advance her career.’

Labour MP for Vauxhall, Florence Eshalomi, challenged the Home Secretary in Parliament

Labour MP for Vauxhall, Florence Eshalomi, challenged the Home Secretary in Parliament

Then she brought up a recent cartoon which had appeared in The Guardian depicting her as ‘a fat cow with a ring through her nose’. This, she pointed out, was offensive both culturally and religiously.

‘So when it comes to racism, sexism, tolerance and fairness,’ she added, ‘I will not take lectures from the other side of the House.’

Deeply personal stuff. Another wave of support greeted her riposte. ‘Well said,’ yelled one. ‘Own Goal.’

Publicity-prone Zarah Sultana (Lab, Coventry South) had another crack. She asked if it was right that Black Britons should have to ‘walk in the shadows’ of statues of people who had ‘murdered and enslaved their ancestors’.

The Home Secretary pointed an accusatory finger across the dispatch box.

She suggested young Miss Sultana try lobbying Labour councils around the country – many of whom have been in charge for years – in getting rid of some of these statues. It’s their responsibility, after all.

Miss Sultana then gave a sulky shake of her head. Smacked down. Oh, no, Priti’s not going anywhere.

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2020-06-08 21:59:57Z
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Wembley: Murder investigation as sisters found dead in park after birthday party - Sky News

A murder investigation is under way after two sisters were found dead in a park after celebrating one of their birthdays.

Police are treating the deaths of Nicole Smallman, 27, from Harrow, and Bibaa Henry, 46, from Brent, as "suspicious" after they were found in Fryent Country Park in Wembley, northwest London, on Sunday afternoon.

Detectives believe they were part of a group of about 10 people who were in the park, popular for its views over London, from 7pm on Friday to celebrate Ms Henry's birthday.

It is thought their friends left throughout the evening, leaving them together, and were reported missing to police on Saturday when they did not return home.

Police were called shortly after 1pm on Sunday to find the sisters unresponsive and they were pronounced dead at the scene.

Their families have been informed.

Two women were found dead in Fryent Country Park
Image: The two women were found dead in Fryent Country Park

Detective Chief Inspector Simon Harding said: "Their families have been devastated by their loss and they need answers.

More from London

"They have asked that their privacy is respected at this time as they come to terms with this horrific incident."

He added that police are in the early stages of the investigation and need to hear from any of the group who were in Fryent Country Park on the evening of 5 June, or early into the next day.

They had gathered about a five-minute walk from the Valley Drive entrance of the park, leading to a hill - a well-known spot to sit and look over London.

DCI Harding said anybody in that area of the park from Friday evening to Sunday lunchtime who noticed the group or saw anything suspicious should contact police immediately.

"You may have stumbled upon items of property, but not realised the significance of them," he said.

"If you did, you may well have information that could assist us hugely. No matter how insignificant it may seem, please contact us."

An extensive crime scene remains in the park but there have been no arrests.

Anybody with information should call police on 101, tweet @MetCC quoting CAD 3160/7 Jun or call Crimestoppers anonymously on 0800 555 111.

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2020-06-08 21:16:06Z
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Boris Johnson says “black lives matter” but attacks minority who “flout the rules”- BBC News - BBC News

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  1. Boris Johnson says “black lives matter” but attacks minority who “flout the rules”- BBC News  BBC News
  2. George Floyd: Boris Johnson urges peaceful struggle against racism  BBC News
  3. Boris Johnson statement on Black Lives Matter protests: 'I will not support those who break the law'  Evening Standard
  4. The Guardian view on easing lockdown: PM is seeing polls, not science  The Guardian
  5. Black lives only seem to matter to Boris Johnson when they’re censored  The Independent
  6. View Full coverage on Google News

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2020-06-08 21:46:23Z
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Lewis Hamilton: 'Remove all racist symbols' - BBC Sport

By Andrew BensonChief F1 writer

Lewis Hamilton has urged countries around the world to remove "racist symbols" after the toppling of the statue of a slave trader in Bristol.

The world champion saluted anti-racism protesters for tearing down a monument to the 17th-century slave trader Edward Colston at a demonstration on Sunday.

Hamilton said governments around the world should "implement the peaceful removal of these racist symbols".

He has made a series of statements amid global anti-racism protests.

These have occurred in a number of countries following the death of George Floyd in the US last month.

Floyd, a 46-year-old African-American man, died in police custody in Minneapolis after an officer knelt on his neck for nine minutes.

Hamilton said last week that he was "completely overcome with rage" at events following Floyd's death.

And on Monday he said the Colston statue should not be recovered after demonstrators threw it into a river.

"If those people hadn't taken down that statue, honouring a racist slave trader, it would never have been removed," he said on Instagram.

"There's talks of it going into a museum. That man's statue should stay in the river just like the 20,000 African souls who died on the journey here and thrown into the sea, with no burial or memorial. He stole them from their families, country and he must not be celebrated!"

In a post on Twitter shortly afterwards, Hamilton made a pointed reference to US President Donald Trump's response to the protests that have swept America.

The 35-year-old posted a picture of the slogan "Black Lives Matter" painted on the road leading to the White House and wrote: "And don't you forget it."

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2020-06-08 20:34:00Z
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Boris Johnson statement on Black Lives Matter protests: 'I will not support those who break the law' - Evening Standard

[unable to retrieve full-text content]

  1. Boris Johnson statement on Black Lives Matter protests: 'I will not support those who break the law'  Evening Standard
  2. Boris Johnson: Anti-racism protests 'subverted by thuggery'  BBC News
  3. George Floyd: Boris Johnson urges peaceful struggle against racism  BBC News
  4. The Guardian view on easing lockdown: PM is seeing polls, not science  The Guardian
  5. Black lives only seem to matter to Boris Johnson when they’re censored  The Independent
  6. View Full coverage on Google News

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2020-06-08 20:57:51Z
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George Floyd: Boris Johnson urges peaceful struggle against racism - BBC News

Boris Johnson has urged the country to "work peacefully, lawfully" to defeat racism and discrimination.

Writing in The Voice, the PM said the government could not ignore the anger and "undeniable feeling of injustice" sparked by George Floyd's killing.

But he said the cause was at risk of being "undermined" by a minority of those attacking police and property.

The UK, he said, had made "huge strides" in tackling racism in recent decades but more had to be done.

The death of George Floyd, 46, in Minneapolis, in the United States, after a white police officer was filmed kneeling on his neck, triggered an international outcry and sparked days of mass protests in cities across the UK.

While the demonstrations have been largely peaceful, they turned violent in London on Saturday when police officers were confronted with flares, and a statue of wartime leader Winston Churchill was vandalised.

In Bristol, demonstrators pulled down a statue of the slave trader Edward Colston and threw it into the River Avon.

Home Secretary Priti Patel condemned a "lawless minority of protesters" who "regrettably turned to violence", adding: "This hooliganism is utterly indefensible."

In an article for the Voice, the prime minister said Mr Floyd's death had "awakened an anger and a widespread and incontrovertible, undeniable feeling of injustice, a feeling that people from black and minority ethnic groups do face discrimination: in education, in employment, in the application of the criminal law".

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"We simply cannot ignore the depth of emotion that has been triggered by that spectacle, of a black man losing his life at the hands of the police," he wrote.

"We who lead and who govern simply can't ignore those feelings because in too many cases, I am afraid, they will be founded on a cold reality."

'More to do'

While he believed the UK was a much less racist society than it was 40 years ago, the PM said he "heard" the Black Lives Matter protesters and accepted much more needed to be done to ensure everyone was treated equally.

"We must also frankly acknowledge that there is so much more to do - in eradicating prejudice, and creating opportunity, and the government I lead is committed to that effort."

Thanking those who abided by social distancing while taking to the streets, the PM warned that further mass demonstrations endangered the UK's efforts to bring the coronavirus epidemic under control.

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And he said he could not condone those who "hijacked" peaceful protests by breaking the law or desecrating public monuments, saying they damaged the legitimate cause that people were fighting for.

"We have a democracy in this country. If you want to change the urban landscape, you can stand for election, or vote for someone who will.

"And so I must say clearly that those who attack public property or the police - who injure the police officers who are trying to keep us all safe - those people will face the full force of the law.

"So let's work peacefully, lawfully, to defeat racism and discrimination wherever we find it, and let us continue to work together across all the communities of this country, as we put Britain back on its feet."

'Structural inequality'

In a statement to Parliament earlier, the home secretary said 137,500 people had attended more than 200 protests across the UK over the weekend.

She said 135 people had been arrested in total, while 35 police officers had been injured since protests began.

She was challenged by a Labour MP Florence Eshalomi, who asked her whether she recognised the "structural inequality, discrimination and racism" in the UK and called on her to act.

But Ms Patel said she would "not take lectures" from others about racism, and gave examples of the racist abuse she had personally received, including facing racial slurs in the playground and on the streets, and being advised to use her husband's surname in order to advance her career.

Avon and Somerset Police told the BBC 17 people have been identified in connection with the toppling of Colston's statue. No arrests have yet been made.

Chief Constable Andy Marsh defended the decision taken by commanders on the ground not to intervene when the statue was torn down and dumped in the harbour.

He said arresting suspects could have had "very serious ramifications" for the city of Bristol, including injuries to protesters, police and bystanders.

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2020-06-08 19:25:04Z
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George Floyd protests: Priti Patel recalls childhood racial slurs as she condemns 'hooliganism' towards police - Sky News

Home Secretary Priti Patel has rejected claims the government doesn't understand racial inequality as she recounted being called a "P**i" as a child in the playground.

Following a weekend of protests across the UK as part of the Black Lives Matter campaign, Ms Patel condemned a "lawless minority" who "regrettably turned to violence" during the demonstrations.

She denounced the "hooliganism" towards "courageous" police officers in central London.

Police and protesters clashed after a day of mostly peaceful anti-racism protests.
Police run from crowds in London protest

In a statement to the House of Commons, the home secretary revealed 200 protests took place across the country, with more than 137,500 people in attendance and 135 arrests as of Monday morning.

She urged the public not to attend future protests amid the continuing coronavirus pandemic and claimed it was "not for mobs" to tear down statues, following the toppling of a monument to a slave trader in Bristol.

Ms Patel also told the Commons of her personal experiences of racism in the UK, warning that she would "not take lectures" from opposition MPs over the issue.

The home secretary made the remarks in response to Labour's Florence Eshalomi, who asked Ms Patel whether she does "actually understand the anger and frustration felt by so many people" in the UK.

More from Black Lives Matter

"Does the home secretary recognise that there is structural inequality, discrimination and racism in our country?," Ms Eshalomi said.

She added: "Black lives matter and we need to see this government doing something about that."

The statue comes down in Bristol. Pic: Artemis D Bear
Cheers as protesters pull down slave trader statue

Ms Patel said the Labour MP had "effectively said that this government doesn't understand racial inequality".

She added: "Well, on that basis, it must have been a very different home secretary who as a child was frequently called a P**i in the playground.

"A very different home secretary who was racially abused in the streets or even advised to drop her surname and use her husband's in order to advance her career.

"A different home secretary recently characterised in The Guardian newspaper as a fat cow with a ring through its nose - something that was not only racist but offensive, both culturally and religiously."

Ms Patel continued: "This is hardly an example of respect, equality, tolerance or fairness.

"So, when it comes to racism, sexism, tolerance for social justice, I will not take lectures from the other side of the House.

"I have already said repeatedly there is no place for racism in our country or in society.

"And, sadly, too many people are too willing, too casual, to dismiss the contributions of those who don't necessarily conform to preconceived views or ideologies about how ethnic minorities should behave or think.

"This, in my view, is racist in itself."

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Chancellor Rishi Sunak joined Ms Patel in condemning the violence seen at demonstrations, prompted by the killing of George Floyd in America, over the weekend.

"As a British Asian of course I know that racism exists in this country," he said in a statement.

Mr Sunak added: "To the small minority who committed acts of violence and vandalism last weekend, not only were your actions criminal, but they also perpetuate a dangerous lie: that the temporary excitement of destruction is the same thing as change.

"You are, and always will be, wrong.

"But to the last majority who seek only peaceful protest within the law and a better future for themselves and their children: whilst our progress feels slow, I promise you it is permanent."

Police clashed with protesters at King Charles Street archway in central London
Image: Police clashed with protesters at King Charles Street archway in central London

Labour's shadow home secretary Nick Thomas-Symonds said some of the actions of a minority of protesters were "unacceptable".

But he added: "We cannot allow this moment of global demand for justice to pass without action and we on these benches will be at the forefront of calls for change."

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2020-06-08 18:46:13Z
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