Starmer: UK won’t tolerate racial intimidation after far-right rally

Starmer: UK won’t tolerate racial intimidation after far-right rally
Protesters attend an anti-immigration rally organised by British anti-immigration activist Stephen Yaxley-Lennon, also known as Tommy Robinson, in London on Saturday. (Reuters)
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Starmer: UK won’t tolerate racial intimidation after far-right rally

Starmer: UK won’t tolerate racial intimidation after far-right rally
  • Police were attacked during a far-right rally in London attended by up to 150,000 people
  • British PM says people have right to peaceful protest but won't stand for intimidating people because of skin color

LONDON: Prime Minister Keir Starmer said Sunday Britain would not tolerate people feeling intimidated “because of their background or the color of their skin” after a large far-right protest was marked by battles with police.
In his first comments on Saturday’s rally organized by far-right activist Tommy Robinson and attended by up to 150,000 people, according to police, Starmer also condemned attacks on police on officers.
The clashes left 26 officers injured, four seriously, and led to 24 arrests. London police have pledged to make more arrests in coming days.
“People have a right to peaceful protest. It is core to our country’s values,” Starmer said on X, the day after the protesters massed near his Downing Street office amid a sea of English and British flags.
“But we will not stand for assaults on police officers doing their job or for people feeling intimidated on our streets because of their background or the color of their skin.”
The leader of the center-left Labour government, who was the target of persistent criticism at the rally, added “Britain is a nation proudly built on tolerance, diversity and respect.”
“Our flag represents our diverse country and we will never surrender it to those that use it as a symbol of violence, fear and division,” Starmer said.
London’s Metropolitan Police said it had so far arrested 24 people after officers faced “unacceptable violence” trying to control up to 150,000 people at the event.
That was two fewer arrests than the force last reported, after discovering what it called “two duplicate records.”
Twenty-six police were injured, four seriously, in clashes on the fringes of Robinson’s “Unite the Kingdom” rally.
Of those arrested, three were women and 21 were men, with the oldest person arrested aged 58 and the youngest 19 years-old, according to police.
It said alleged offenses included common assault, criminal damage, assault on an emergency worker, and possession of an offensive weapon, noting a number of people were arrested on suspicion of more than one offense.
“A post-event investigation is under way, with officers working to identify other people involved in disorder with a view to making further arrests in the coming days and weeks,” the force added.
The attacks on police occurred after some activists tried to enter sealed off areas near counter-protesters at a Stand Up to Racism march which had ended close by, according to the Met.
Officers were “assaulted with kicks and punches” while “bottles, flares and other projectiles were thrown,” it said.
Protesters at Robinson’s event had marched over Westminster Bridge before rallying near Downing Street for speeches by figures associated with the far right from across Europe and North America, including billionaire tycoon Elon Musk.
In an address by video, the X owner called for the dissolution of Britain’s parliament and the replacement of the center-left Labour government while claiming “violence is coming to you.”
“You either fight back or you die,” he told the crowds.
Assessing the speeches and attendees, anti-racism charity Hope Not Hate called the event Britain’s largest ever far-right protest.
“Seeing such a big crowd cheering speeches that called for banning all public expression of non-Christian religions, demanded the ‘remigration’ of legal migrants... and claimed Britain is being ‘invaded’ and its population ‘replaced’ is unprecedented,” it said.
“For anyone worried about the rise of far-right activism and the normalization of viciously anti-migrant, anti-Muslim sentiment, it could be a sign of dark times to come.”


Dozens of injured Palestinian children set to arrive in UK for treatment

Dozens of injured Palestinian children set to arrive in UK for treatment
Updated 5 sec ago

Dozens of injured Palestinian children set to arrive in UK for treatment

Dozens of injured Palestinian children set to arrive in UK for treatment
  • Dozens of injured Palestinian children set to arrive in UK for treatment
  • Red tape blamed for children’s late arrival 

LONDON: Dozens of sick and injured children from Gaza are expected to arrive for treatment in the UK in the coming days.

They will be the first beneficiaries of a government scheme to provide healthcare via the National Health Service.

UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer said in July that the children would be evacuated “urgently,” with reports blaming red tape for the delay in their arrival.

More than 50,000 children have been killed or injured in Gaza since Israel’s military operation began in October 2023, according to UNICEF.

UK Foreign Secretary Yvette Cooper told the Daily Mirror newspaper that the first group of children had left Gaza and were “traveling now to the UK.”

“It’s a lot of diplomatic work in order to help them actually leave Gaza and then also travel through other countries in order to be able to get to the UK. But that work is underway and I’m determined to make sure that we can do our bit to help those injured families,” she said.

The BBC reported that the group numbers between 30 and 50 Palestinian children. Each would be accompanied by family members if necessary, the reports said.

The children have been receiving care in another country in the Middle East before traveling to Britain.

While this is the first time the government has arranged for children to be treated in the UK, a small number have been transferred privately as part of an initiative by Project Pure Hope.

Starmer said in July that the UK was “urgently accelerating efforts to evacuate children from Gaza” who needed critical medical assistance.

The transfer appears to have been delayed by the government insisting that the children’s relatives must travel with visas containing biometric data, The i Paper reported last week.

Hospitals across the UK are ready to admit the children but some in the most serious condition have had to be sent to other countries.

Nearly 100 UK lawmakers last month called on the government to speed up the evacuation. Labour member of parliament Dr. Simon Opher told The i Paper that the delay was “unacceptable” and that the need for biometric visas should be “scrapped without delay.”

Omar Din, co-founder of PPH, which has been advising the government on the transfer, said that while he welcomed the evacuation, the UK should be doing more.

“We appeal to the UK government to look to its European neighbors and to take in more children comparable to our counterparts,” he said.

By comparison, Italy has carried out 14 missions to evacuate more than 180 Palestinian children from Gaza for treatment.

Israel’s near two-year onslaught on the territory has destroyed the healthcare system and had a devastating impact on children there.

More than half of the territory’s hospitals are no longer operating and those that are are close to collapse, aid agencies have warned.


Spain PM ‘proud’ of pro-Palestinian protests at Vuelta

Spain PM ‘proud’ of pro-Palestinian protests at Vuelta
Updated 14 September 2025

Spain PM ‘proud’ of pro-Palestinian protests at Vuelta

Spain PM ‘proud’ of pro-Palestinian protests at Vuelta
  • Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez on Sunday said pro-Palestinian protests that have rocked the Vuelta a Espana filled him with “pride” as large demonstrations await the race’s final stage in Madrid

MADRID: Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez on Sunday said pro-Palestinian protests that have rocked the Vuelta a Espana filled him with “pride” as large demonstrations await the race’s final stage in Madrid.
The protests, which have targeted the Israel-Premier Tech team over the devastating war in Gaza, have disrupted several stages of one of cycling’s three grand tours and cast doubt on whether the 21-day race could be completed.
The activism has forced some stages to be shortened and occasionally caused crashes as demonstrators burst onto the course, prompting criticism for threatening rider safety and harming Spain’s image.
In his first public comments on the debate, Sanchez expressed his “recognition and full respect for the athletes, but also our admiration for a people like Spain’s which mobilizes for just causes, like Palestine.”
“Spain today shines as an example and as a source of pride, an example to an international community where it sees Spain taking a step forward in the defense of human rights,” he told a Socialist party gathering in Malaga.
Several members of the leftist government have publicly supported the movement in a country where support for the Palestinian cause is strong.
The authorities have ramped up security for Sunday’s final stage in Madrid, which was slightly shortened and will see 1,100 police officers deploy in the Spanish capital.
Protesters briefly breached reinforced security and attempted to block the road during the penultimate stage in the Guadarrama mountains outside Madrid on Saturday, forcing cyclists to swerve around them.
The leader of the conservative opposition Popular Party, Alberto Nunez Feijoo, lashed out on X at the protest, which he said “gave such a shameful image.”
“Instead of ministers encouraging it, the government should condemn, denounce and prevent it,” he added.


An explosion in Madrid from a suspected gas leak killed 1 person and injured 25

An explosion in Madrid from a suspected gas leak killed 1 person and injured 25
Updated 14 September 2025

An explosion in Madrid from a suspected gas leak killed 1 person and injured 25

An explosion in Madrid from a suspected gas leak killed 1 person and injured 25

MADRID: A suspected gas leak explosion in a building in Madrid killed one person and injured 25, emergency services for the Spanish capital said on Sunday.
Rescue workers found the body of a man in a rescue operation with search dogs following the explosion on Saturday, authorities said.
Spanish news agency EFE said that firefighters suspect that the explosion was caused by a gas leak, but police were still investigating its cause.
Firefighter chief Javier Romero said that firefighters pulled four people from the rubble after the explosion occurred at around 3 p.m. Saturday on the ground floor of a three-story building. He said that the blast damaged a cafe, a store and other properties.


New Nepal PM vows to follow protesters’ demands to ‘end corruption’

New Nepal PM vows to follow protesters’ demands to ‘end corruption’
Updated 14 September 2025

New Nepal PM vows to follow protesters’ demands to ‘end corruption’

New Nepal PM vows to follow protesters’ demands to ‘end corruption’
  • Karki added that she and her interim government would not “will not stay here one day more than six months”

Katmandu: Nepal’s new leader vowed Sunday to follow protesters’ demands to “end corruption” as she began work as interim prime minister, after “Gen Z” youth demonstrations ousted her predecessor.
“We have to work according to the thinking of the Gen Z generation. ... What this group is demanding is end of corruption, good governance and economic equality,” said Sushila Karki, the 73-year-old former chief justice, in her first public comments since taking office on Friday. “You and I have to be determined to fulfil that.”
Karki added that she and her interim government would not “will not stay here one day more than six months,” with elections set for March 5, 2026.


Supporters of slain US activist Charlie Kirk shut down critics

Supporters of slain US activist Charlie Kirk shut down critics
Updated 14 September 2025

Supporters of slain US activist Charlie Kirk shut down critics

Supporters of slain US activist Charlie Kirk shut down critics
  • Online vitriol and grassroots persecution have exploded in the wake of the assassination of the 31-year-old who had been an electrifying presence on the US right

WASHINGTON: For some Americans on the far right, Charlie Kirk died a “martyr” and any criticism of the hugely popular conservative activist must be punished.
Online vitriol and grassroots persecution have exploded in the wake of the assassination of the 31-year-old who had been an electrifying presence on the US right, with the killing further deepening fraught political divisions in the country.
Laura Sosh-Lightsy, assistant dean of students at a university in the southern state of Tennessee, found herself in hot water after posting on social media about Kirk’s death.
“Hate begets hate. ZERO sympathy,” she said on Facebook after the killing, which happened Wednesday in front of a large crowd at a university in Utah.
Republican US Senator Marsha Blackburn quickly called out the comment — and Sosh-Lightsy.
“This person should be ashamed of her post. She should be removed from her position,” the Tennessee lawmaker said.
Middle Tennessee State University’s president announced that same night an employee’s firing for a “callous” comment about Kirk.
Kirk, who rallied his millions of followers to help President Donald Trump win a second White House term, was both revered and reviled for his pro-gun, anti-abortion and anti-immigrant rhetoric.
Shooting suspect Tyler Robinson, who was arrested Thursday, is said to have engraved anti-fascist messages on his bullet casings. This has led to a large part of the American right labeling him a “far-left” killer.
Some Kirk supporters have turned into online sleuths, searching out accounts that praised or celebrated Kirk’s murder.
“If they have their picture on their profile, even without a name, download the picture and reverse image search it,” conservative influencer Joey Mannarino said.
“Cross-reference it with their LinkedIn profile and find their place of employment. Call the place of employment, leave Google reviews.”
These efforts have targeted teachers, firefighters and even military personnel, some of whom have lost their jobs.
Kirk’s murder has been condemned by both sides of the political aisle. But Trump quickly blamed the country’s “radical left,” even as authorities were only just launching a manhunt for the killer.
Online trackers have targeted an Oklahoma teacher, who posted on social media: “Charlie Kirk died the same way he lived: bringing out the worst in people.”
That teacher has since been investigated by the state’s Department of Education, which described his comments as “abhorrent.”

Stadium memorial service 

Trump, who praised Kirk as a “giant of his generation,” has led the US government in memorializing the activist, with high-ranking US officials working to weed out critics of Kirk and his legacy.
Trump ordered flags lowered to half-staff in honor of his ally, and Kirk’s body was flown from Utah to his home in Phoenix, Arizona aboard Air Force Two, escorted by Vice President JD Vance.
Meanwhile, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth ordered members of the military to identify colleagues who mocked or celebrated Kirk’s death.
US Under Secretary of State Christopher Landau declared that “foreigners who glorify violence and hatred are not welcome visitors to our country.”
“I have been disgusted to see some on social media praising, rationalizing, or making light of the event, and have directed our consular officials to undertake appropriate action,” he said in a post on X.
“Please feel free to bring such comments by foreigners to my attention so the @statedept can protect the American people.”
Laura Loomer, a far-right conspiracy theorist who has Trump’s ear, has been one of the most high-profile attackers of Kirk’s critics.
She denounced an employee of the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), who had expressed disgust on Instagram that flags would be lowered for “the literal racist homophobe misogynist.”
Loomer shared the staffer’s LinkedIn profile and said: “These people hate us. They don’t belong near the levers of our National Power.”
Following Loomer’s post, FEMA said the employee was placed on leave for making “revolting and unconscionable” comments.
On Saturday, Kirk’s organization Turning Point USA announced a memorial service for its founder will be held on September 21 in a suburb of Phoenix.
The chosen venue hints at the expected turnout: a stadium normally home to a professional football team, with a seating capacity of more than 63,000.