Tens of thousands march in London in separate immigration, pro‑Palestinian protests

Reuters

Tens of thousands march in London in separate immigration, pro‑Palestinian protests

By Yann Tessier and Marissa Davison
4 min read

People hold Palestinian flags next to a statue, depicting a figure carrying a flag covering their face and stepping off a plinth, by British street artist Banksy during a march, held by Palestine Solidarity Campaign, to mark the 78th anniversary of the Nakba and against the “Unite the Kingdom” rally taking place in London organised by British anti-immigration activist Stephen Yaxley-Lennon, also known as Tommy Robinson, in London, Britain, May 16, 2026. REUTERS/Chris J Ratcliffe

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 a perceived Islamic threat to British identity, and another in support of Palestinians.

Police deployed 4,000 ‌officers, including reinforcements from outside the capital, and pledged “the most assertive possible use of our powers” in what they called their biggest public order operation ‌in years.

Advertisement

By 1830 GMT, after both marches had ended, police said they had made 43 arrests for a range of offences and described both protests as “largely without significant incident”. They had earlier forecast turnout ​of at least 80,000.

Prime Minister Keir Starmer on Friday accused organisers of the Unite the Kingdom march of “peddling hate and division, plain and simple”.

The march was organised by anti-Islam activist Stephen Yaxley-Lennon, known as Tommy Robinson. The government barred 11 people it described as “foreign far-right agitators” from entering Britain to address the protest.

A previous protest led by Robinson in September drew around 150,000 people, police said, and featured a video address by U.S. tech billionaire Elon Musk. Scuffles left 26 officers injured, including four seriously. On Saturday, four ‌officers were injured, none seriously.

Advertisement

MARCHERS WAVE BRITISH AND ENGLISH ⁠FLAGS

On Saturday, Robinson supporters gathered in central London, waving mainly British and English flags.

“I think that too much migration – not migration, but too much migration – is causing a lot of problems, upsetting a delicate balance here,” said Allison Parr, who also criticised net-zero environmental ⁠policies.