United Kingdom bans Al Quds Day march in London

Change
United Kingdom imposed a one-month ban starting at 16:00 on Wednesday on the Al Quds Day march in London and on any associated counter-protest marches.
United Kingdom bans Al Quds Day march in London
Why it matters
Organisers are barred from holding a moving procession and must instead limit activity to a stationary demonstration, which cannot be prohibited but will be subject to enforceable police conditions. Participants who breach those conditions or engage in hate-related offences face arrest and prosecution under public order and hate-crime laws.
Implications
  • Islamic Human Rights Commission organisers must cancel planned march routes, notify the Metropolitan Police of any proposed static demonstration and comply with police-imposed conditions — failure to do so will expose organisers to enforcement action and potential prosecution.
  • Groups planning counter-protests in London must not organise separate marches and must coordinate permitted static locations with the Metropolitan Police or face dispersal and arrest.

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Source

BBC

Topics

Governance Security & Defense Human Rights

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