Inside the Met’s huge Armistice Day operation: Force doubles officers and sets up exclusion zone around the Cenotaph as pro-Palestine activists across the UK organise buses to head to London for ‘Million March’ – and far-right groups vow ‘we’ll be waiting’
The Met Police has doubled the number of officers on the streets and set up an exclusion zone around the Cenotaph – as the force braces itself for pro-Palestine activists to descend on London for a ‘Million March’ on Armistice Day.
Throughout the weekend, almost 2,000 officers from the Met and other UK forces will be on duty across central London for what is the biggest Remembrance security operation ever to take place.
Scotland Yard has been forced to place the Cenotaph, Britain’s most hallowed war memorial, under 24-hour police guard for the first time ever, with officers, barriers and police vehicles set to surround the perimeter until Sunday.
Various protest organisers from across the UK have planned buses to take activists to London for what they are calling the ‘Million March For Palestine’.
Far-Right groups who have vowed to protect the Cenotaph have sent a chilling message to protesters, warning on vile WhatsApp groups with more than 1,000 members: ‘We’ll be waiting.’
The Hope Not Hate (HNH) campaign group yesterday exposed dozens of racist WhatsApp messages which included plans to ambush activists and links to buying crossbows.
Police officers were standing guard at the Cenotaph yesterday as the Met braces itself for a day of action on Remembrance Day
Protest organisers from London have planned to take activists to the capital on buses for the ‘Million March’
Far-Right groups have vowed ‘We’ll be waiting’ as pro-Palestine activists descend on London today
Activists from right-wing Turning Point UK hold a counter-protest to the National March for Palestine alongside the Cenotaph on October 28. Far-Right groups have vowed to protect the Cenotaph today
Pro-Palestinian protesters hold smoke flares as they cling to a traffic light outside Downing Street at a rally last month. The Cenotaph can be seen in the background
On Friday night, officers continued to stand guard at Britain’s most hallowed war memorial
HNH, who reported the messages to the police, also found posts calling Muslims ‘vermin’. Others wrote vile threats of violence and warned: ‘It’s war. For our children and country.’
It comes after Tommy Robinson, the founder of the now-defunct English Defence League, called for ‘young English men’ to stage counter protests in the capital this weekend.
On Friday night, the Met Police warned that Armistice Day could get ‘messy’ as officers begun an unprecedented round-the-clock guard of the Cenotaph.
Prime Minister Rishi Sunak has made an 11th hour plea for ‘unity’ amid fears of violence and disorder.
Met Police deputy assistant commissioner Laurence Taylor, who is in charge of the ‘large and robust policing plan’, told reporters at a briefing on the eve of Armistice Day: ‘There will be times this weekend where you see pockets of confrontation…’
He added: ‘You will see police intervention, and I hope we don’t but I think it’s likely you will see police having to use force to manage some of the situations that we have to deal with, and at times that might look messy.
‘That doesn’t equate to serious disorder or to us losing control, but it does mean that we are taking robust, rapid and agile action to deal with what we are dealing with.’
Metropolitan Police officers standing guard around the Cenotaph in Whitehall on Friday afternoon
Prime Minister Rishi Sunak (pictured at the Remembrance Crosses in the Field of Remembrance at Westminster Abbey) has made an 11th hour plea for ‘unity’ amid fears of violence and disorder
Organisers of the pro-Palestine rally have estimated that half a million activists will descend on the capital
In a last-gasp plea for a ‘moment of unity’, Mr Sunak warned commemorations are ‘sacred’ and such rallies can take place only because of those who fought ‘for the freedom we cherish’.
Mr Sunak said: ‘This weekend people across the United Kingdom will stand together in quiet reflection to remember those who made the ultimate sacrifice for our country. Veterans, loved ones of those who gave their lives for their country and many more of us will want to honour this moment.
‘This act of remembrance is fundamental to who we are as a country and I want to reassure those wishing to pay their respects, attend services and travel that they can and should do so.’
He added: ‘It is because of those who fought for this country and for the freedom we cherish that those who wish to protest can do so, but they must do so respectfully and peacefully.
‘This weekend should be about the selfless bravery of our Armed Forces. We shall remember them.’
The Met has mobilised 1,850 officers from London and other UK forces as it prepares to control hundreds of thousands of protesters pouring into London as pro-Palestine activists call for a ceasefire in the Israel-Hamas war.
Asked why the force has doubled the number of officers on the ground compared to the first weekend of protests, DAC Laurence Taylor said: ‘This is a really difficult weekend for policing.
‘We have got a significant march taking place. We are aware there will be counter-protests, as well as a lot of people who would ordinarily come to London to mark their respect on Armistice Day and Remembrance Sunday. That means we need a large and robust policing plan in place.’
In every effort to protect Armistice Day events, a ‘ring of steel’ has been erected around Whitehall, Horse Guards Parade and the Westminster Abbey Field of Remembrance. This will be protected by metal fences, with any marchers trying to get inside facing arrest.
In contrast, those the Met consider ‘counter protesters’, who may include veterans, Right-wing extremists and football hooligans, will be allowed into those areas, principally to separate them from the pro-Palestinian march which has been redirected away from Whitehall towards Vauxhall.
The unprecedented security around Britain’s most hallowed war memorial was put in place yesterday and will remain until the end of remembrance commemorations on Sunday
A dispersal zone will be in place covering key central London locations including Trafalgar Square and Piccadilly Circus. Anyone refusing to disperse can be arrested, the Met said
Exclusion zones have been put in place around the Israeli Embassy in Kensington and the US Embassy in Vauxhall
Prime Minister Rishi Sunak and his wife Akshata Murty look at Remembrance Crosses in the Field of Remembrance at Westminster Abbey in London ahead of Armistice Day
Speaker of the House of Commons, Sir Lindsay Hoyle, joins poppy sellers on behalf of the Royal British Legion as the nation rallies around volunteers
DAC Taylor said the Met had information that ‘large numbers of counter protesters will be coming to London with a view to confronting those taking place in the main march’.
Asked why counter protesters would be allowed around the monument, Mr Taylor said the force ‘don’t anticipate any disorder will come from that group’ individually.
In the largest policing operation ever mounted for the commemorations, the capital will be flooded with almost 3,000 officers from across England and Wales. Chief constables have cancelled leave, extended overtime and drafted in 1,000 officers from outside London over the weekend to bolster Scotland Yard’s numbers across today and tomorrow.
Demonstrators will be banned from gathering outside the Israeli Embassy, while a dispersal order in place across a vast swathe of central London will allow police to arrest violent protesters breaking off from the main march.
Officers will also be granted more powers to carry out stop and searchers and order people to remove masks.
Meanwhile, the Met is deploying specialist traffic officers to police convoys of cars bringing protesters into the capital. Previous events have been marred by demonstrators driving through Jewish areas while waving flags and shouting anti-Semitic abuse.
Britain’s biggest force has also vowed to work with the British Transport Police to protect poppy sellers in stations and other busy areas after several incidents of volunteers being abused.
In a statement released on Friday, the Met rallied around volunteers, saying: ‘We have been clear no intimidation of those who so generously give up their time for this treasured national cause will be tolerated. Officers know the risk felt by sellers and should be sought out by anyone concerned throughout the weekend.’
The Met also declared that it was doing ‘everything’ in its power to ensure Jewish Londoners feel safe during the pro-Palestine protest.
DAC Taylor warned anyone calling for ‘jihad’ faced being arrested and said the force’s stance towards protesters had hardened following similar mass marches over the past month, when it was criticised for failing to stop anti-Semitism in the wake of the October 7 Hamas terror attack that took 1,400 Israeli lives.
The Palestine Solidarity Campaign has estimated half a million activists will take part in the march from Hyde Park at 1pm, a few hours after a two-minute silence will be held at the Cenotaph in Westminster for fallen soldiers.
Protective barriers around the ‘Remembrance Sunday footprint’ in Whitehall have been extended far wider than normal.
The Stop the War coalition said coach companies across the country are reporting that all their vehicles are fully booked, with waiting lists in some areas.
John Rees, from the group, said the protest in London will be ‘truly historic’, exceeding the half a million he believes joined a previous protest in the capital.
‘We are convinced it will be the biggest demonstration so far over Palestine,’ he said. Our local groups up and down the country have reported they’ve sold out of seats on hundreds of coaches.’
Lindsey German, the group’s convenor, said: ‘Our local groups in towns and cities across the UK, along with coach companies, are telling us that every one of their coaches have been booked to bring people to London. This is comparable only to two million strong protest against the Iraq War in 2003.’
Organisers have predicted that half a million pro-Palestine protestors will march in London on Armistice Day. Pictured is a march last Saturday
Sir Mark said officers would ‘protect locations and events of national importance at all costs’. Pictured: Police officers guard ‘The Cenotaph’ on October 28
Met Police chief Sir Mark Rowley has refused to ban the controversial rally, saying he legally had ‘no power’ to stop it.
While march organisers have vowed not to go near the monument, there are fears splinter groups could clash with football hooligans who have vowed to ‘defend’ it.
Sir Mark said his officers would ‘protect locations and events of national importance at all costs’. He said he could not ban Saturday’s demonstration simply because people felt it should not take place.
‘The laws created by Parliament are clear. There is no absolute power to ban protest, therefore there will be a protest this weekend,’ he insisted.
‘The law provides no mechanism to ban a static gathering of people. It contains legislation which allows us to impose conditions to reduce disruption and the risk of violence, and in the most extreme cases when no other tactics can work, for marches or moving protests to be banned.’
Sir Mark said organisers of Saturday’s march had shown ‘complete willingness to stay away from the Cenotaph and Whitehall and have no intention of disrupting the nation’s remembrance events’.
‘Should this change, we’ve been clear we will use powers and conditions available to us to protect locations and events of national importance at all costs,’ he said.
The decision to allow the protest to take place prompted accusations of bias from Home Secretary Suella Braverman. But on Friday, she gave the police her ‘full backing’ at a meeting with the commissioner.
DAC Taylor said this was the first time there had been a 24-hour guard around the Cenotaph for ‘this length of time’. This was in response to the attack on the Cenotaph in Rochdale just days before Armistice Day which sparked outrage.
When quizzed on whether comments from politicians had raised the risk of disorder, he added: ‘This weekend is going to be tense. Narratives play into that. We won’t comment on individual narratives.’
Demonstrators waving Palestine flags in Trafalgar Square during last Saturday’s protest
Police officers detain a protestor during a ‘March For Palestine’, in London on November 4
Police guarding the Cenotaph this morning. The Met has vowed to ‘protect locations and events of national importance at all costs’
Sir Mark Rowley said use of the power to block moving protests is ‘incredibly rare’ and must be reserved for cases where there is intelligence to suggest a ‘real threat’ of serious disorder. Pictured: Poppy vendor counter is disturbed by pro-Palestinian demonstrators
Gangs of football hooligans have said they are planning to ‘team up’ and ‘protect’ the Cenotaph from pro-Palestine protesters this weekend.
One group, named ‘Football Lads Against Extremism’, claims veterans have reached out and asked for their support ‘due to the threat from the far-Left and pro-Palestine supporters to disrupt the Remembrance Day parade’.
They are calling on ‘all football lads up and down the country to join us in standing shoulder to shoulder with our veterans that fought for our freedom’.
Ms Braverman had controversially accused the police of ‘playing favourites’ with protesters by clamping down hard on Right-wing demonstrations while taking a softly-softly approach to those organised by groups on the Left.
In an article in The Times, she repeated her description of pro-Palestinian demonstrations as ‘hate marches’ – a phrase no other minister had publicly endorsed, but which supporters say is backed up by examples of ugly anti-Semitism on previous protests.
Earlier in the week Rishi Sunak took a more measured tone insisting that he would hold Sir Mark ‘accountable’ for what happened at the protest.
A policeman holding a surveillance camera while shouting at a protestor during a pro-Palestine march on November 4
Pro-Palestine protesters this morning outside a BAE Systems plant in Chatham, Rochester
In contrast to her article, Ms Braverman on Friday gave police her ‘full backing’ after her widely-criticised allegations of police bias were disowned by Downing Street.
The Home Secretary expressed her support for the Metropolitan Police at a meeting with Sir Mark Rowley yesterday, a source close to her said.
Mr Sunak continued to express his confidence in her, but No 10 declined to say whether they had spoken since her inflammatory unauthorised article in The Times.
No 10 said they were working ‘very closely’ ahead of Saturday’s heavily-policed march, but chose not to repeat her widely-criticised language in a piece for The Times.
Yesterday, the source close to Ms Braverman said: ‘The Home Secretary and the Commissioner of the Metropolitan Police met this afternoon to discuss the policing of demonstrations to be held tomorrow, on Armistice Day.
‘The Commissioner outlined plans to continue working to maintain public order, ensure compliance with the law and maintain the safety of participants, police officers and the general public.
‘The Home Secretary emphasised her full backing for the police in what will be a complex and challenging situation and expressed confidence that any criminality will be dealt with robustly.’
Ms Braverman (pictured leaving home yesterday morning) yesterday gave police her ‘full backing’ after her widely-criticised allegations of police bias were disowned by Downing Street
Prime Minister Rishi Sunak and his wife Akshata Murty observe the Remembrance Crosses during a visit to the Field of Remembrance
Rishi Sunak talks with a supporter of the Royal British Legion in the QEII centre ahead of Armistice Day
Steve Hartshorn, national chairman of the Police Federation of England and Wales, which represents rank and file officers, said it was unacceptable for Ms Braverman ‘to publicly attempt to tamper with the operational independence of policing’.
‘It is entirely reasonable that the Home Secretary might raise concerns with senior police leaders in private, it is unacceptable to publicly attempt to tamper with the operational independence of policing,’ he said.
‘Policing must be free of politics. Operational independence is a key pillar of UK policing and must be respected. Policing does not comment on political manoeuvrings, and we expect to be able to carry out our duties without political interference.’
A former Home Office permanent secretary said he did not understand how Mr Sunak could continue to have confidence in Ms Braverman.
Metropolitan Police officers guard the Cenotaph in Whitehall ahead of Armistice Day tomorrow
Metropolitan Police officers guard the Cenotaph in Whitehall amid fears of vandalism
Sir David Normington told BBC Radio 4’s PM programme: ‘There are 2,000 ordinary police officers who will be on the streets doing a very difficult job this weekend.
‘They have the right to expect the Home Secretary to be supporting them. Instead, she seems to be undermining them and actually making things worse. And that’s just not the job of the Home Secretary.
‘I hear the Prime Minister has confidence in her. I don’t know how he can.’ The ex-mandarin said he ‘despaired’ about her piece for The Times.
He said: ‘She’s tried to interfere with the operational independence of the police. She’s accused them of partiality in the way they police demonstrations. She’s used inflammatory language. She’s even made some absolutely crass comments and comparisons about Northern Ireland.
‘That’s at least four reasons why she’s unsuitable to be Home Secretary.’
In a lengthy briefing Friday, the Met Police also vowed to protect defiant poppy sellers who are refusing to abandon their stalls ahead of planned pro-Palestine protests on Armistice Day.
Officers said they will be on hand to monitor the intimidation of ‘generous’ poppy sellers after concerns were raised over their safety in the last week.
Stalls were missing at Kings Cross, Euston, Victoria, London Bridge and other railway hubs this week despite it being days before Armistice Day.
The Royal British Legion has said that they are ‘keen to get on with collecting’ and their merry band of volunteers feel the same, insisting that all stations will now be manned until November 11.
Tracy Cooper (right), 65, who has sold poppies in Paddington Station for 22 years, urged other poppy sellers to ‘go out and sell your poppy with pride’. She was helped by Nicky Veschiera, 60, (left) and her friend Audrey, also 60 (centre)
Jane Low, 80, and Maggie Davies, 80, (left to right) man the stall at High Street Kensington. They raked in £700 in two hours yesterday
Poppy sellers have told MailOnline that they will be not be cowed by the threat of protests, although three out of four at St Pancras last night were wearing bodycams in case there is trouble.
Many thanked people for their support as MPs urged Britons – and police officers – to wear poppies ‘with pride’ and in ‘solidarity’.
The RBL has said it is working closely with Network Rail, Transport for London, major supermarkets and the police to keep volunteers safe. They also spoke of safety measures but did not expand on those.
A spokesman said: ‘We have thousands of brilliant individuals who volunteer to collect donations for the Poppy Appeal each year, across cities, towns, villages and communities. We are reliant on the generous time these volunteers offer and we arrange Poppy Appeal collections as widely as possible but cannot provide volunteer cover at all locations throughout the whole appeal.
‘The safety of all Poppy Appeal volunteers is our number one priority. We have permission to collect at every location where Poppy Appeal volunteers are collecting, and assess those locations have measures in place to ensure the safety of our volunteers.’