About a thousand far-right protesters
shouting "Muslim killers, off our streets" marched through central London on
Monday against a backdrop of swelling anti-Muslim feeling following the killing
of a British soldier last week. Lee Rigby, a 25-year-old soldier, was hacked to
death in broad daylight in a south London street by two men who said they killed
him in the name of Islam. The attack has shocked Britain and stirred an
anti-Muslim backlash, including attacks on mosques. In a tense but largely
peaceful demonstration, supporters of the far-right English Defence League (EDL)
rallied in London outside Prime Minister David Cameron's residence waving
placards and shouting anti-Islamic obscenities. "Islamic extremism is probably
the number one threat to Britain," said one protester, Ben Gates. Other
demonstrators chanted "Muslim bombers off our streets". Another protester,
Samuel Hames, said, of Rigby: "He survived his tour of foreign lands and comes
home to his family and what happened to him is disgusting." Nearly 2,000 people
marched at a similar demonstration in the northern city of Newcastle on
Saturday. Two men were arrested overnight for throwing firebombs at an Islamic
cultural center in Grimsby, in the northeast of England. Similar attacks were
recorded last week. As anti-racist groups warned there could be more reprisals,
Cameron came under intense pressure on Monday for going on holiday, with
pictures of him relaxing in Ibiza prompting newspapers to question his
leadership at a time of unease. "Is Ibiza chillaxed (relaxed) enough for you,
Prime Minister?" asked the right-wing Daily Mail newspaper. Faith Matters, a
charity working to defuse religious tensions, said it had registered a spike in
reports of Islamophobic attacks in calls to its hotline, describing incidents as
"very focused, very aggressive attacks". Two war memorials in London were
vandalized with red graffiti overnight, including the word 'Islam' spray-painted
onto one monument. Suspects Michael Adebolajo, 28, and Michael Adebowale, 22,
allegedly ran over Rigby with a car near his army barracks and butchered him
with knives. Police shot the two, and they remain under armed guard in separate
London hospitals. In a dramatic video clip shot by an onlooker and shown on
British television, one of the two men, his hands bloodied, says he killed the
soldier in retaliation for the deaths of Muslims killed by British troops in
faraway lands. Police have arrested 10 people in connection with the murder.
Three people have been released on bail. The attack prompted an emotional
outpouring of sympathy in Britain, with well-wishers laying hundreds of flowers
in the street where Rigby was killed. But some were openly angry. "We've had
enough of our soldiers being abused... We'd had enough of the plots and the
violence," EDL wrote on its website.In an attempt to counter the right-wing
rally, anti-fascist group Unite Against Racism held its own demonstration nearby
but was heavily outnumbered by EDL protesters. A handful of far-right
demonstrators threw bottles and coins at the anti-fascist rally. Police vans and
officers blocked the two groups from approaching each other. "They are a
minority and a very scary growing minority," an anti-EDL protester who gave her
name as Clara said. "I feel ashamed to be a Londoner today. This is disgusting."
Source:Reuters
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