
Flares thrown during protest outside Canary Wharf hotel housing asylum seekers
A mixture of men wearing face masks and families with children waved flags and listened to speeches outside the Britannia International Hotel in Canary Wharf on Sunday.
Protesters jeered at people going in and out of the hotel, and officers were forced to step in after flares were let off in the crowd, the Metropolitan Police said.
A man was arrested on suspicion of assaulting an emergency worker after an officer was pushed.
Onlookers chanted 'shame' towards the police as he was carried away.
Tourists, shoppers and guests at a nearby hotel stopped to take pictures of the demonstration.
A spokesperson for the Met said: 'At one point, officers intervened after flares were let off in the crowd. Several people were searched. No further flares were found.
'One man was arrested on suspicion of assaulting an emergency worker after an officer was pushed. He was taken into custody.
'Officers remain in the area to provide reassurance to local residents and businesses, to ensure that any further protest takes place peacefully, and to respond to any incidents.'
It is the latest in a series of demonstrations over the use of hotels to house asylum seekers.
On Saturday, the force made nine arrests after rival groups gathered outside the Thistle City Barbican Hotel in Islington, north London.
A protest and counter-protest also took place outside the New Bridge Hotel in Newcastle and four people were arrested on suspicion of public order offences, Northumbria Police said.
Scotland Yard said plans were in place to 'respond to any protest activity in the vicinity of other hotels in London being used to accommodate asylum seekers'.
Elsewhere, Essex Police placed a number of restrictions on a planned protest in Epping on Sunday evening.
The force ordered that the demonstration should finish by 8.30pm and must take place in designated areas outside the Bell Hotel, which has been the focus of a series of protests over the last few weeks.
Police have also placed requirements on the removal of face coverings until 3am on Monday and have the power to direct anyone committing or suspected of committing anti-social behaviour to leave the area until 8am on Monday.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Telegraph
26 minutes ago
- Telegraph
British spy planes are helping Israel find hostages in Gaza
British military aircraft are flying over Gaza to help Israel find missing hostages, even as the UK condemns Israel's actions in the war-torn enclave. Intelligence gathered by RAF planes flying over Gaza is 'routinely' shared with the Israelis, who use the information to track captured hostages, the Ministry of Defence told The Telegraph. Hundreds of missions have been flown by Shadow R1 surveillance aircraft over Gaza since the war broke out in October 2023, including last month. It comes as Benjamin Netanyahu considers plans to fully occupy the Palestinian territory. 'The die has been cast. We're going for the full conquest of the Gaza Strip – and defeating Hamas,' a senior Israeli official was quoted by the Hebrew media as saying. Around 20 of the remaining 50 hostages in Gaza are thought to still be alive. The families of the hostages fear plans to take over the Strip could endanger their loved ones. Israel's allies are also thought to be opposed to Mr Netanyahu's plans, and pressure is growing on the Jewish state to wind down its military campaign and alleviate the ongoing humanitarian crisis. The continuation of British military support above Gaza comes as Israel-UK relations plummet to an all-time low. The Government has sanctioned a number of hard-Right Israeli ministers and threatened to recognise a Palestinian state at the UN in September unless conditions in the enclave improve. David Lammy, the Foreign Secretary, said he was 'sickened' by reports of Israeli troops firing at Palestinians at aid distribution centres. Britain has supported Israel's military operations in Gaza by flying above the enclave to help find hostages since October 2023, when Hamas killed 1,200 Israelis in a terror attack. RAF aircraft have flown nearly daily missions, gathering intelligence the MoD says is used solely to locate hostages. The RAF's Shadow R1 plane is equipped with electronic sensors that are able to gather data on the ground in Gaza. It is used to identify vehicle convoys, residential buildings and zoom in on individual movement in the Gaza Strip. An RAF source told The Times that the Shadow R1 aircraft had returned to Britain. It is unclear which planes have taken over intelligence gathering. A spokesman for the Ministry of Defence said: 'Since early December 2023, the RAF has routinely conducted unarmed surveillance flights over Gaza for the sole purpose of locating hostages. 'The UK controls what information is passed to Israeli authorities and only information relating to hostage rescue will be passed to the relevant authority. 'We do not comment on operational detail for security reasons.'


Telegraph
26 minutes ago
- Telegraph
Police face weeks-long delay before they can reveal suspects' nationalities
Police face a weeks-long delay before they are allowed to reveal suspects' nationalities because Downing Street is waiting for new independent guidance before changing the rules. Yvette Cooper, the Home Secretary, is urging forces to give more information about suspects' nationalities and migration status after Reform accused Warwickshire Police of a 'cover-up' over the rape of a 12-year-old girl in Nuneaton. However, an official rule change on when foreigners can be publicly identified as suspects has been delayed because of a review that is not expected to be published until the autumn. It came amid criticism of the Government's broader strategy on illegal migration, after Ms Cooper was unable to say whether a new deal with the French would allow small boat migrants to be deported this month. Chris Philp, the shadow home secretary, warned that the deal was 'wide open to abuse' because France does not have to share any data on who is coming to Britain – meaning new arrivals could include criminals and terrorists. Ministers have asked the Law Commission, an independent advisory body, to update guidance on contempt of court rules, which currently prevent police or officials from giving details about suspects. The review, commissioned in February, is not expected to report until the autumn, and a change in guidance for police forces could be implemented weeks after that. Without an urgent change, ministers fear a repeat of the riots that followed the Southport stabbings last summer, while Downing Street has said police should be more 'transparent' about their suspects. There is concern among law enforcement officials and in Whitehall that public debate about crime by migrants and the threat of violent protests at asylum hotels will culminate into a summer of 'disorder' on the streets. Ms Cooper told the BBC on Tuesday: 'We do want to see more transparency in cases, we think local people do need to have more information.' One police leader told The Telegraph that while the previous system of 'saying as little as possible in order to preserve a fair trial' had worked well in the past, the rise of social media had 'driven a coach and horses' through that approach. He said the absence of information all too often created a vacuum, which was filled by mis- or disinformation, and said the risk to public order meant police must provide more information. The review of police protocol follows inaccurate speculation on social media of the Southport attacker's identity last year, with users alleging that Axel Rudakubana was an illegal immigrant. George Finch, the 19-year-old Reform leader of Warwickshire county council, on Monday accused the Government of covering up alleged crime by migrants in Nuneaton, claiming that the two men charged with the rape of a 12-year-old girl were Afghan. That claim has not been confirmed by police. There is not currently any guidance issued to forces about disclosing the ethnicity or immigration status of an individual on charge. The rules state only that a suspect should be named unless there is an exceptional and legitimate policing purpose for not doing so, or if reporting restrictions apply. Philip Seccombe, the Warwickshire Police and Crime Commissioner, has said that any release of information by police should 'follow national guidance and legal requirements'. The review of the guidelines on contempt of court was commissioned by Ms Cooper, Shabana Mahmood, the Justice Secretary, and Lord Hermer, the Attorney General, earlier this year. The Law Commission's review is expected to find that police officials and ministers should be allowed to reveal more information about suspects in cases where there is a 'threat of serious public disorder'. However, despite a request from ministers to publish new guidelines 'as soon as feasible', the body is not expected to report for some weeks. The delay has effectively left police forces defenceless against accusations of a cover-up, while Downing Street is urging them to make more information available. Another senior officer told The Telegraph any change to the rules would create new issues for the police because they do not routinely collect nationality and ethnicity data unless it is relevant to an investigation. 'The police's job is about gathering evidence and I can see some real practical difficulties in requiring forces to provide extra information,' the officer said. A Home Office source said: 'Not only are we deporting foreign criminals at a rate that Chris Philp and Robert Jenrick never managed when they were in charge at the Home Office, but we are also publishing far more information about that group of offenders than the Tories ever did.' Sir Keir is separately facing criticism over the one in, one out migrant deal agreed with Emmanuel Macron, the president of France, under which migrants who come to the UK illegally are meant to be swapped for people in France who have a legitimate asylum claim in Britain. The Prime Minister announced on Monday that the process of deporting the first Channel migrants under the deal will begin within days. But Mr Philp said the details of the agreement, published on Tuesday, show it will be a 'lawyer's paradise' that will make it too easy for migrants to stay. The agreement states that people who have made 'clearly unfounded' claims under the Human Rights Act will not automatically be deported, meaning lawyers will be able to create lengthy delays. The agreement states that anyone claiming to be under the age of 18 will be able to stay in the UK. Mr Philp said that because Britain does not carry out robust age checks, it means that people in their 20s who could they are under 18 could be allowed to stay. In addition, under the deal France will not have to hand over any data on the people they are sending to the UK, meaning they could be criminals or terrorists. 'This deal is unworkable and wide open to abuse,' he said. 'It's exactly what we've been warning about – a bureaucrat's dream and a lawyer's paradise set to prevent people ever being returned to France. 'There are no numbers specified, presumably because they are so small they would embarrass the Home Secretary. France won't even tell us any information about who we have to accept back, so they could be criminals or terrorists, and we wouldn't know. 'This is a pathetic deal, which simply won't work. No wonder this Government has presided over the worst channel crossing figures in history.'


Daily Mail
26 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Father tells of his anguish as son's killer will be freed due to a brain tumour
A killer who is seeking early release on compassionate grounds should be left to die in prison, his victim's family have said. Alan Dewar, 35, has been diagnosed with brain and spinal cancer and is said to have 12 months left to live. Dewar was jailed in 2008 for stabbing 17-year-old Joshua Mitchell in a random, drug-fuelled attack. The violent thug had pounced on the teen as he walked home listening to his iPod. He killed him by stabbing him once through the heart - then stood smoking nearby as his victim lay bleeding in the street. At the time Dewar said he killed the teenager because 'he was in a bad mood that day' and has never publicly expressed remorse for the attack. Joshua's father, Andy Mitchell, 58, still lives in the family home in Inverness, just yards from where his son was stabbed. Speaking after news of Dewar's cancer battle emerged, he told the Daily Mail that his son's killer should never be released. 'He's never showed an ounce of compassion or regret for killing our Joshua, so there's no way he should be given any now,' he said. 'The spot where it happened is just yards from our house and I pass it every time I walk up the road, and if I thought Dewar was out of jail - even for the short time he says he has left, smirking as he has been all along, it would eat me up. 'There would be no justice if the parole board are so weak they let him out early. 'What I think would be justice is that this illness will see him away early, and that should happen inside the four walls of his cell. 'The parole board should take one look at his violent record and will surely see that he's not fit to be out. If he'd shown remorse or behaved in jail, found God or something I could maybe understand him getting out early. But he's a violent menace and should never be released in a million years.' However, Mr Mitchell, now a self-employed HGV driver, says he has little faith in the parole board making the 'right' decision. He also pointed to the case of Lockerbie bomber Abdelbaset Al Megrahi, who was found guilty of mass murder and imprisoned for life in Scotland. The Scottish Government released terminally-ill Megrahi on compassionate grounds in 2009, three years before he died of cancer. Mr Mitchell said: 'You've only got to look at how they released Megrahi when it was said he had cancer and had months to live. 'He lived for another three years. That's the Scottish justice system for you though, if he can get out then I bet Dewar can by spinning the same tale.' The impact of Joshua's death had a long-lasting impact on his family, with Mr Mitchell saying his late wife Marilyn, who died in 2015, never got over the loss. He said: 'She died of a broken heart. There was so much anger inside us both, we were having our trauma for breakfast dinner and tea. 'I eventually learned how to deal with it, but Marilyn never did. She even tried to commit suicide once.' Another tragic aspect is that Joshua's girlfriend was pregnant with their son at the time of his death, meaning he never got to meet the boy, who was born the day after his killer was sentenced. Mr Mitchell said the prison service wrote to him earlier this year to advise him Dewar's parole hearing was due on September 25, a standard process advising victims of possible release thereafter. He learned later that the killer had cancer. Dewar's medical issues emerged at Perth Sheriff Court, where he was due to stand trial for stalking two women and making threats against them while serving time at the city's jail. He denied stalking but admitted making a call to the pair. Dewar's lawyer told the court he had been given just 12 months to live, after he was diagnosed with a rare form of brain and spinal cancer, called ependymoma, in January. Originally charged with stalking the two women, he pled guilty to a reduced charge of threatening or abusive behaviour on a single day. The court heard Dewar, now at HMP Low Moss, will ask to be released 'on compassionate grounds' at a parole hearing on September 25. Sheriff Mark O'Hanlon told Dewar in view of his condition he would be admonished. Dewar has now served more than the 13-year punishment element of his sentence for Joshua's murder, having now been behind bars for nearly 18 years due to committing more violent crimes while inside. He had 32 months added to his sentence in 2010 for attacking a fellow Polmont inmate with a pool cue. In 2022, he had his sentence extended by another eight months following a brawl in HMP Perth's C Hall.