London Gaza rally: Rishi Sunak vows to hold Met chief 'accountable' over march

11 months ago 14

A large crowd gathers in Trafalgar Square holding Palestinian flags and placardsImage source, Getty Images

By Jacqueline Howard

BBC News

Rishi Sunak has said he will hold the Met Police chief "accountable" over a pro-Palestinian march set to take place on Armistice Day.

The prime minister has criticised the timing of the demonstration in London as "provocative and disrespectful".

But Sir Mark Rowley rejected calls by campaigners to ban the protest, saying such a move would be a "last resort".

Protests have been held in London, and other cities globally, each Saturday since the Israel-Gaza war began.

Mr Sunak met Sir Mark on Tuesday afternoon, and sought "reassurances" from the Met police chief that remembrance services would be safeguarded, the prime minister said in a statement.

He said police had confirmed the demonstration would be far from the Cenotaph - the focal point of remembrance services - but that Sir Mark had "committed to keep the Met Police's posture under constant review based on the latest intelligence about the nature of the protests".

Mr Sunak added that people were free to peacefully protest in the UK, and that the test of this freedom was "whether it can survive the discomfort and frustration of those who seek to use it, even if we disagree with them".

Dr Tom Thorpe, of the Western Front Association which organises the annual commemorations at the Cenotaph, said: "We don't want to stop other people enjoying their democratic rights - and we don't want them to interfere with our assembly and our ceremony that we've been doing for the last 30 years."

The organisers of the protest have resisted police pressure to postpone the demonstrations, and accuse the government of trying to undermine their cause.

Earlier on Tuesday, Sir Mark said they had shown "complete willingness to stay away from the Cenotaph and Whitehall and have no intention of disrupting the nation's remembrance events".

The demonstration on 11 November is due to begin at 12:45, more than an hour after the traditional two-minute silence.

Image source, .

Image caption,

The police have confirmed that the pro-Palestinian protest will take place far from the Cenotaph on Armistice Day

Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer has accused the prime minister of "picking a fight" with the police over the planned pro-Palestinian demonstration.

In a post on X, Sir Keir said: "Remembrance events must be respected. Full stop. But the person the PM needs to hold accountable is his Home Secretary."

Labour's London Mayor Sadiq Khan said the government should be supporting the Met, not making officers' jobs more difficult.

Sir Mark was due to appear at an event at the Institute for Government today, but it was postponed less than two hours before it was scheduled to begin.

Power to ban protest 'incredibly rare'

The Met publicly urged organisers of the march to postpone the event on Monday, saying it would not be "appropriate".

Mr Sunak and Home Secretary Suella Braverman also criticised the timing of the event, which tens of thousands of people are expected to attend, while Conservative MP Tobias Ellwood, the former defence minister, appealed to organisers to "think again" and hold the rally on another day.

On Tuesday, Sir Mark resisted calls, including from pressure group Campaign Against Antisemitism, to request powers from the home secretary to ban the march.

The group claimed previous marches met the threshold test for public disorder that would justify the ban.

"As we approach remembrance weekend, where we remember the heroes who defended our freedoms and fought against antisemitic hatred, we must honour their memory by banning demonstrations that abuse those freedoms to call for violence against Jews," the group said.

Sir Mark said that while police can request such powers if a threat of serious disorder emerges, the "very high" threshold for doing so had not yet been reached.

He added that the use of the power was "incredibly rare" and there must be no other way for police to manage the event.

Sir Mark said he was concerned about the escalating risk of disorder caused by splinter groups breaking off from the main demonstration on Saturday, saying the threat posed by them would be monitored this week.

Image source, Getty Images

Earlier, Veterans Minister Johnny Mercer said he fully recognised "the tensions at play" but urged people to come to London for remembrance events.

"I know that elderly veterans will be coming to London and measures will all be in place to make sure that people can go about remembrance in the way they want to unmolested by any of the other events taking place this weekend," Mr Mercer said.

Protest organiser Chris Nineham, from the Stop the War Coalition, said: "We do everything we can as stewards to make sure there is nothing antisemitic or calling for violence in our demonstrations. For us, this isn't about religion, it isn't about race."

Ben Jamal, of the Palestinian Solidarity Campaign which is also behind the march, said he believed the government was manufacturing a row and using the Armistice Day angle to try to "delegitimise" them.

"There's something particularly askew with an argument that says a protest calling for a ceasefire is somehow inappropriate on Armistice Day," he told the BBC.

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