London police out in force
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Tommy Robinsons Unite Kingdom rally – London
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By Yann Tessier and Marissa Davison LONDON, May 16 (Reuters) - Tens of thousands of people marched through central London on Saturday in two separate protests - one against high levels of immigration and another in support of Palestinians.
The police are deploying thousands of officers, partly to keep far-right and pro-Palestinian marchers separated. The opposing events are expected to draw tens of thousands of people to London.
Two major protests are taking place on Saturday in London, with the Metropolitan police warning it may be one of its busiest days in recent years.
Along with the hire bikes, the cable car was an outlier for TfL as it was sponsored, first by Emirates and then by IFS AB. It now no longer has a lead advertiser, instead it wants
Innovation and Emerging Talent The 2026 edition introduces a dedicated Film Screening room for artist-led films and continues to platform unrepresented talent through the Positions section and the Photo London x Nikon Emerging Photographer of the Year Award.
Police monitoring both Tommy Robinson’s ‘Unite the Kingdom’ march and also the annual ‘Nakba day’ pro-Palestine march
Celebrating 10 years in office, London Mayor Sadiq Khan talks to NPR about Prime Minister Starmer's future, far-right disinformation about his city, and how he's survived President Trump's insults.
London is bracing for more strikes on the tube. Starting this Tuesday (May 19), London Underground drivers who are in the RMT union will walk out in two 24-hour strikes spread acr