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Tens of thousands join rival marches in London

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Tens of thousands of protesters joined two rival marches in London on Saturday – the Unite the Kingdom rally organised by far-right figure Tommy Robinson, and a pro-Palestinian demonstration.

More than 4,000 police officers were deployed to the capital to manage a so-called "sterile zone" between the two marches. Officers also used drones, police horses and dogs, and had armoured vehicles on standby.

The Metropolitan Police called it one of the most significant policing operations in years, with tens of thousands of football fans also at Wembley Stadium for the FA Cup Final on Saturday afternoon.

The force said there were 43 arrests at the two protests, and an additional 22 at the FA Cup Final, as of 19:30 BST.

Protesters attending the Unite the Kingdom march gathered in Kingsway, before heading to Whitehall and a rally in Parliament Square.

Many could be seen waving Union flags, with some wearing "Make England Great Again (Mega)" red hats. Chants of "we want Starmer out" could also be heard.

Those gathered told the BBC they had a wide range of views – including some who wanted to see the end of the current government, and others who felt white people, in particular white working class people, were being discriminated against in the UK.

Police had put up barriers to block routes between the two protests.

Alongside Robinson, whose real name is Stephen Yaxley-Lennon, speakers at the rally included former LBC presenter Katie Hopkins, actor-turned-politician Laurence Fox, and TV personality Ant Middleton.

Robinson called for crowds to get involved in politics, including by registering to vote and joining a political party.

"Are you ready for the battle of Britain? 2029 we have an election. We're not asking anyone to go out and fight, but this is the most important moment in our generation," he said.

He also led protesters in a chant of support for technology billionaire Elon Musk, the world's richest person.

Musk gave a video address at a previous Unite the Kingdom rally and reposted messages in support of Saturday's rally on his social media platform X.

Siobhan Whyte, whose daughter Rhiannon was murdered by a Sudanese asylum seeker, told the protest that Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer had "failed my daughter".

The separate pro-Palestinian march, marking Nakba Day, started in Kensington before heading to Waterloo Place via Piccadilly.

Nakba Day refers to the displacement of Palestinians who fled or were driven from their homes during the war surrounding Israel's creation in 1948-49.

Demonstrators expressed a wide range of views to the BBC, with many describing themselves as both anti-genocide and anti-fascist.

A number of protesters said they were conscious that some Jewish people reported feeling intimidated by such marches, but said they abhorred antisemitism and there was no place for it at the march.

Flags and signs reading slogans including "smash the far right" and "Free Palestinian Hostages" could be seen amongst those gathered, many of whom were wearing keffiyehs, seen as a symbol of solidarity with Palestinians.

Speakers at the rally included Your Party co-founders Jeremy Corbyn and Zarah Sultana, independent MP Diane Abbott and Labour MP Apsana Begum.

Abbott told demonstrators that they faced a "common enemy" in the "far right".

She added: "They are viciously right-wing, viciously racist, they are anti-black, anti-Muslim, and viciously antisemitic.

"We have to come together… to fight the racists, to fight the fascists, to fight the antisemites."

There were strict controls on where the marches could go and and what time they finished.

The Nakba protest finished at about 17:30 as stipulated by the Met, while the Unite the Kingdom protest was scheduled to finish at 18:00 – after which the force said both Parliament Square and Whitehall were "largely clear" of protesters.

It said both protests had "proceeded largely without significant incident".

It did not specify the offences nor the event to which all the arrests were connected.

It earlier said two men were arrested near Euston station – one of whom was wanted on suspicion of grievous bodily harm following an incident in Birmingham, and was spotted arriving in London to attend the Unite the Kingdom rally.

The second man was wanted for a separate offence which involved encouraging people to attack a police officer, the force added – having earlier said both men were connected to the incident in Birmingham.

The Met said four officers were assaulted, "fortunately none seriously", during its public order operation on Saturday, without specifying at which events.

It said another six officers were "subjected to hate crime offences".

Ahead of the demonstrations, Met Police Deputy Assistant Commissioner James Harman said the policing operation would cost the force £4.5m.

The Met said the risks meant it had to impose the "highest degree of control", including the first use of live facial recognition cameras as part of a protest policing operation.

Live facial recognition was used at Euston and King's Cross St Pancras railway stations, where people attending the Unite the Kingdom march were likely to have arrived.

Drones were used to monitor both protest routes, while officers in Wembley monitored CCTV feeds from the FA Cup final to identify supporters travelling towards demonstrations.

Eleven foreign "far-right agitators" were blocked from entering the country to attend the Unite the Kingdom event, the government said on Friday.

Among the 11 blocked from entering the UK was the US-based, anti-Islam influencer Valentina Gomez, who attended the first Unite the Kingdom march last September.

In a statement on Friday, Sir Keir Starmer said: "We're in a fight for the soul of this country, and the Unite the Kingdom march this weekend is a stark reminder of exactly what we are up against.

"Its organisers are peddling hatred and division, plain and simple. We will block those coming into the UK who seek to incite hatred and violence.

"For anyone who sets out to wreak havoc on our streets, to intimidate or threaten anyone, you can expect to face the full force of the law."

John Rees from Stop the War, one of the organisers of the pro-Palestinian march, said the event happened on the same day every year and questioned why the Unite the Kingdom march was allowed to also take place on 16 May.

The police response should have been that it was "unacceptable", he told BBC Radio 4's Today programme.

The Met had previously said it was already in discussion with Unite the Kingdom when the application for the Nakba Day march was made.

Meanwhile, new guidance issued by the Crown Prosecution Service pushed prosecutors to consider whether protest placards, banners and chants viewed on social media may amount to offences of stirring up hatred.

Specialist officers were primed to take swift decisions to arrest and charge hate speech crimes, including for chants referring to "intifada" at the pro-Palestinian march.

Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood said the right to protest was "a cornerstone of our democracy".

She added: "But anyone spreading hate or committing acts of violence will face the full force of the law."

📰 மூல செய்தி (Source): https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c3d2ryyz0jzo?at_medium=RSS&at_campaign=rss

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Taiwan insists it is independent after Trump warning

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Taiwan has insisted it is a sovereign, independent nation, after US President Donald Trump cautioned it against formally declaring independence from China.

Trump's remarks came after a two-day summit in Beijing, after which he said he had "made no commitment either way" about the self-governing island – which China claims as part of its territory and has not ruled out taking by force.

After talks with Chinese President Xi Jinping, Trump also said he would soon decide whether to approve an $11bn ($8bn) package of weapons to be sold to Taiwan.

The US administration is bound by law to provide Taiwan with a means of self-defence, but has frequently had to square this alliance with maintaining a diplomatic relationship with China.

Taiwanese President Lai Ching-te has previously stated that Taiwan does not need to declare formal independence because it already sees itself as a sovereign nation.

On Saturday, presidential spokesperson Karen Kuo said it was "self-evident" that Taiwan was "a sovereign, independent democratic country".

She added, however, that Taiwan was committed to maintaining the status quo with China – in which Taiwan neither declares independence from China nor unites with it.

Many Taiwanese consider themselves to be part of a separate nation, though most are in favour of maintaining their current status.

Washington's established position is that it does not support Taiwanese independence, with continued ties with Beijing being contingent on its acceptance that there is only one Chinese government.

In an interview with Fox News after meetings with President Xi, Trump reiterated that US policy on Taiwan had not changed, while making it clear he did not seek conflict with Beijing.

"I'm not looking to have somebody go independent," he said.

"You know, we're supposed to travel 9,500 miles (15,289km) to fight a war. I'm not looking for that. I want them to cool down. I want China to cool down."

On the flight back to Washington, the US president had told reporters that he and Xi had spoken "a lot" about the island, but said he had declined to discuss whether the US would defend it.

Xi "feels very strongly" about the island and "doesn't want to see a movement for independence", Trump said.

Beijing has been vocal in its dislike of Taiwan's president, who it has previously described as a "troublemaker" and a "destroyer of cross-strait peace".

China has ramped up military drills around the island in recent years, raising tensions in the region and testing the balance that Washington has struck.

Trump said the impending arms package would be discussed with Taiwan's leadership.

He added: "I'm going to say I have to speak to the person that right now is, you know, you know who he is, that's running Taiwan."

The US does not have formal relations with Taiwan, though it maintains substantial unofficial relations. US presidents do not traditionally speak directly to Taiwan's leader, and to do so would be likely to cause significant tensions with Beijing.

"Our nation is grateful to President Trump for his continued support for security in the Taiwan Strait since his first term in office," Taiwan's presidential spokesman said.

"Taiwan will continue to deepen co-operation with the US to achieve peace through strength, ensuring that peace and stability across the Taiwan Strait are not threatened or undermined, which serves the common interests of Taiwan, the US, and the global democratic community."

📰 மூல செய்தி (Source): https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cx2132w81jqo?at_medium=RSS&at_campaign=rss

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Whale found dead near Danish island after German rescue operation

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A humpback whale rescued after beaching itself in Germany has been found dead near a Danish island.

The whale was first spotted stuck on a sandbank on 23 March, off the island of Poel on Germany's Baltic coast.

It swam free in early May after a water-filled barge carried it into the North Sea.

The operation was privately funded by two German entrepreneurs and spurred intense public debate, with critics suggesting it would only cause the animal distress.

A whale carcass was reportedly spotted on Thursday off the Danish island of Anholt, located between Denmark and Sweden.

Authorities were not immediately able to confirm it was the same whale. In a statement the Danish Environmental Protection Agency said conditions on Saturday made it possible for the whale's identity to be verified, and its tracking device retrieved.

The agency told AFP "there are no concrete plans to remove the whale from the area or to perform a necropsy, and it is not currently considered to pose a problem in the area".

But it stressed that people should not approach the whale because it might carry diseases that can be transmitted to humans.

There may also be a risk of explosion, it added, because of large volumes of internal gas caused by decomposition.

The whale, nicknamed "Timmy" or "Hope" by rescuers and German media, became stranded on Timmendorfer Beach in Lübeck Bay on 23 March.

At first it freed itself but became stuck again several times.

German authorities attempted a number of rescues before announcing they were giving up.

Entrepreneurs Karin Walter-Mommert and Walter Gunz later funded a private rescue, fitting the whale with a tracking device and coaxing it onto a water-filled transport ship called Fortuna B.

Till Backhaus, the environment minister in the northern state of Mecklenburg-Vorpommern, hailed the operation as a success and an "example for Germany of what can be done".

But wildlife groups have been sceptical about the whale's future after its release into the North Sea.

The German Oceanographic Museum warned that the whale was at risk of drowning because it was so weak.

Whale and Dolphin Conservation was especially downbeat, warning that the whale had no long-term chance of survival and had suffered skin damage because of the lack of salinity in the waters along Germany's Baltic Sea coast.

📰 மூல செய்தி (Source): https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c1l28lql137o?at_medium=RSS&at_campaign=rss

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Streeting says he would join leadership race as Burnham vows to 'save' Labour

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Wes Streeting has confirmed he would enter any potential Labour leadership contest, days after resigning as health secretary and telling the prime minister he had "lost confidence" in him.

Streeting said on Saturday: "We need a proper contest with the best candidates on the field, and I will be standing."

Meanwhile, Greater Manchester Mayor Andy Burnham told the BBC he was seeking to stand in the Makerfield by-election to "save" the Labour Party.

Burnham – who is widely expected to try to replace Sir Keir Starmer as leader should he be selected as the party's candidate in the by-election and win – said the vote must be a moment to "reclaim the Labour party, to save it from where it's been".

The prime minister is resisting calls to stand down and set a timetable for his departure following Labour's election losses in early May – and is expected to fight any challenge from likely contenders, including Burnham and Streeting.

Streeting resigned on Thursday but stopped short of formally launching a challenge to Sir Keir's leadership.

Asked on Saturday whether he had the backing of the 81 Labour MPs needed to trigger such a contest, Streeting said: "I do have support in the parliamentary party, but this week I also had a choice."

Speaking to reporters at a conference hosted by Labour-aligned political organisation Progress, he went on to say the party could have "rushed" into a contest.

But doing so without giving Burnham the chance to stand would mean a new leader would lack "legitimacy", he said – which would end up "extending the instability and uncertainty" in the party.

He said he would not speculate on Sir Keir's future, and that despite any "disagreements" between them the prime minister had "many remarkable qualities" and was "someone of enormous decency".

Asked what he would say to voters thinking about backing Burnham, Streeting said: "Vote for him, in Makerfield especially."

Burnham was cleared on Friday to stand in the by-election by Labour's ruling National Executive Committee, after the constituency's current MP said he would vacate it to make way for the Manchester mayor.

This would pave the way for him to return to Westminster as an MP – which he must do to join a leadership contest under Labour Party rules.

He told the BBC on Saturday that Labour "needs to be better".

"We've got to see this as a moment to reclaim the Labour party, to save it from where it's been – we can't just carry on as we are".

He said that he wanted Labour to "be part of working class people".

"I think Britain has been on the wrong path for 40 years, it started de-industrialisation, de-regulation of the buses, privatisation of life's essentials."

Asked whether the election was a vanity project and voters would be frustrated by another election, he said: "I think this is a very necessary election, it's about fixing politics because it's not been working for people."

Burnham said he would "put everything into it", adding: "We're going to change the conversation in this campaign. We're going to get Labour closer to these communities again."

The BBC understands the by-election is likely to take place on 18 June.

Sir Keir has faced mounting pressure from MPs to resign following elections on 7 May which saw Labour lose almost 1,500 councillors in England and suffer heavy losses in Wales and Scotland's national elections.

The BBC is aware of nearly 90 Labour MPs who have since called on Sir Keir to leave his post, or set out a timetable for his resignation.

However, more than 150 MPs have indicated support for the prime minister, or said it was not the right time for a leadership contest.

Sir Keir has told his cabinet that he will "get on with governing" and warned that a leadership contest could result in "chaos".

📰 மூல செய்தி (Source): https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c17297n77z1o?at_medium=RSS&at_campaign=rss

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