logo
New clashes outside London hotel housing migrants

New clashes outside London hotel housing migrants

RNZ News21-07-2025
Protesters march with a flare and placards away from The Bell Hotel, believed to be housing asylum seekers, in Epping, northeast of London.
Photo:
JUSTIN TALLIS
Anti-migrant protests degenerated again late Sunday outside a London hotel housing asylum seekers, as rioters threw bottles and smoke bombs at the police.
Police said they had arrested five people for "violent disorder" at the rally outside the Bell Hotel in the north-east London district of Epping.
"Disappointingly we have seen yet another protest, which had begun peacefully, escalate into mindless thuggery with individuals again hurting one of our officers and damaging a police vehicle," Chief Superintendent Simon Anslow said in a statement.
Police officers form a line in the town centre of Epping after protesters march from a demonstration outside The Bell Hotel.
Photo:
JUSTIN TALLIS
Police vans guarded the entrance to the hotel as several hundred people rallied outside, according to the British news agency PA.
The protestors shouted "save our children" and "send them home", while banners called for the expulsion of "foreign criminals".
Tensions have been simmering for days after a 38-year-old asylum seeker was charged with sexual assault. He allegedly tried to kiss a 14-year-old girl, which he denied when brought to court on Thursday.
On Thursday evening, eight police officers were wounded in clashes.
Riot police follow a march into the town centre of Epping.
Photo:
JUSTIN TALLIS
Anti-immigration riots shook the UK last summer after three girls were stabbed to death by a teenager in the north-western town of Southport, even though the suspect turned out to be British-born.
Rioters had attacked hotels housing asylum seekers in several towns, including an attempt to set fire to an establishment in Rotherham, in north-east England.
-
AFP
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Climate protestor claims Stockton Mine employee fired gun to scare him
Climate protestor claims Stockton Mine employee fired gun to scare him

RNZ News

time5 minutes ago

  • RNZ News

Climate protestor claims Stockton Mine employee fired gun to scare him

Two Climate Liberation Aotearoa protesters used the aerial rope way down to Ngakawau to access a coal bucket for a sit-in protest. Photo: Supplied A climate activist camped in a coal bucket suspended high above the ground near a West Coast mine claims one of the site's workers fired a shotgun to scare him off - but the mining company denies the accusation. For nine days, two activists from the group Climate Liberation Aotearoa had been camped in coal buckets at Stockton Mine , north of Westport. The protest was against plans for the Bathurst Resources mine to expand under the government's fast track approvals legislation. One of the pair, Tamati Taptiklis, told RNZ that at 2:30pm Tuesday three shotgun shots were fired into the air nearby. Taptiklis said he could see a person 250 metres away in a Bathurst Resources uniform. They were walking away and lowering a long, thin object. The activist believed that the person was from the company and intended to fire warning shots to scare the pair and encourage them leave the mine. RNZ put these claims to Bathurst Resources chief executive Richard Tacon, who rejected them. "No firearms were let off at any time." Tacon said the company had strict rules and that he did not believe they employed "anyone stupid enough" to commit such an act. Bathurst Resources chief executive Richard Tacon. Photo: Supplied Taptiklis said that his group had also received an online threat from one of the mine's employees that read: "Angry, upset locals have been busy collecting information on you, your organisation and on those within our community that may have assisted you in your recent industrial sabotage. "I would strongly suggest that it would not be very wise for any of you to be seen within our district over the next few months, years, or if at all ever." Tacon said he was not aware of such a threat and would not condone the behaviour if a worker did write the statement. "We certainly don't use threats and innuendo to try to get where we want to be, so you know I do not condone it. "I can understand that there's a lot of angst because of the really existential threat to their livelihoods." Tacon said that he would talk to the police about the claimed threat and the ongoing protest action. Police told RNZ it was aware of broad threats made against the activists at Stockton Mine, but no reports had been made to the agency. The mine had to transport coal by truck because of the protest - which had so far cost the company $270,000. "We have had to put a trucking road bridge in, we have got about ten trucks hauling coal, additional cost is about $30,000 a day," Tacon said. Productivity levels were quite low at the mine, he said. "Everyone is very worried about what is going on. The main topic of conversation is, are they still there? What are we going to do? How are we going to get them out of there?" He said he would not be putting his staff at risk to rescue the protestors. "They are roped on, they obviously have some experience in that, but one slip and there's no coming back, and we can't help them." Tamati Taptiklis said that the point of safety was "interesting" given the environmental and climate damage expansion of the Stockton Mine would have caused. "The impact of opening this new mine will be a huge number of deaths here in Aotearoa and around the world, there's absolutely nothing safe about that." Tacon said he understood that the protestors wanted the company to withdraw from the fast-track legislation. He acknowledged that Bathurst's mining caused damage to ecosystems, but said the company had solid rehabilitation and offsetting programmes. Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero , a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

UK to start returning some migrants to France within days under new deal
UK to start returning some migrants to France within days under new deal

RNZ News

time8 hours ago

  • RNZ News

UK to start returning some migrants to France within days under new deal

By Alistair Smout , Reuters UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer meeting with French President Emmanuel Macron. Photo: AFP / POOL / Ludovic Marin Britain said it will begin implementing a deal to return some migrants who arrive on small boats to France within days, a key part of its plans to cut illegal migration, after a treaty on the arrangement is ratified on Tuesday. Under the new deal, France has agreed to accept the return of undocumented people arriving in Britain by small boats, in exchange for Britain agreeing to accept an equal number of legitimate asylum seekers with British family connections. UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer and French President Emmanuel Macron announced the "one in, one out" pilot scheme on migrant returns last month. More than 25,000 people have come to Britain on small boats so far in 2025, and Starmer has pledged to "smash the gangs" of smugglers to try to reduce the number of arrivals. Starmer, whose popularity has fallen since winning an election landslide last year, is facing pressure to stop small boats from Nigel Farage's Reform UK party, which leads national opinion polls. In recent weeks in England, there have been a number of protests around hotels housing the asylum seekers who have arrived on small boats, attended by both anti-immigration and pro-immigration groups. French Interior Minister Bruno Retailleau said on X that the new agreement between the countries has a "clear objective" to break up the people-smuggling networks, although British interior minister Yvette Cooper would not say how many people would be returned under the scheme. "The numbers will start lower and then build up," she told Sky News, adding that the people returned would be those who had immediately arrived on small boats, rather than people already in Britain. Government sources previously said the agreement would involve about 50 returns a week, or 2600 a year, a fraction of the more than 35,000 arrivals reported last year. Critics of the scheme have said that the scale will not be sufficient to act as a deterrent, but Cooper said that the agreement with France was just one part of the government's wider plan. The government has also targeted people smugglers with sanctions, clamped down on social media adverts and is working with delivery firms to tackle the illegal work that is often promised to migrants. A treaty on the scheme was signed last week but not previously announced ahead of Tuesday's ratification. Britain said the European Commission and European Union member states had given the green light to the plan. - Reuters

What does a drug shipment 'catcher' earn for picking up the haul?
What does a drug shipment 'catcher' earn for picking up the haul?

1News

time10 hours ago

  • 1News

What does a drug shipment 'catcher' earn for picking up the haul?

After a West Auckland builder was yesterday sentenced to five years in prison for collecting what he thought was a shipment of 200kg of meth, Yvonne Tahana looks at the economics behind drug operations. The value of a large consignment of drugs quickly spirals when you start doing the maths, as Detective Superintendent Greg Williams, head of Police's National Organised Crime Group, explains. Asked about the 200kg of meth that Joshua Auina-Anae thought he was picking up from a commercial unit in Hobsonville in November 2023, Williams said you're looking at 'about $130,000 a kilo... that's a wholesale price'. Inside police's fake meth bust that fooled a Kiwi builder - watch on TVNZ+ A quick calculation therefore gives the total price for the shipment, which unbeknown to Auina-Anae had already been intercepted in China, at $26 million. ADVERTISEMENT But Williams isn't finished. "Then it's cut down into ounce prices, which sell for around $5000 an ounce. And then by the time it hits the street, it's at gram prices which are sitting around $480 to $380 sort of price. Now you're in the range of $76 million to $96 million." Methamphetamine was swapped out with a dummy substance. (Source: NZ Police) So what did Auina-Anae stand to gain for going to collect the haul? He'd never been in trouble before and worked in construction – in fact, he ran his own business. But he found himself caught up in an international law enforcement effort involving a tip-off from China's Anti-Smuggling Bureau. 'Cleanskin', 'catcher' or 'door' This led to the meth he was expecting to collect being switched out for a dummy substance. And police and Customs were waiting for him when he went to pick it up in his role as, to use the various terms used, a "cleanskin", "catcher" or "door". ADVERTISEMENT The terms all point in roughly the same direction. Williams said: "The reality is that transnational crime sitting outside the country, and the organised crime groups sitting inside the country, often refer to 'doors' – doors into the country. Detective Superintendent Greg Williams says the incentive comes down to greed. (Source: 1News) "So often, a door is, 'I've corrupted someone within the system at the border or someone prepared to take this risk, someone without any criminal history who's prepared to be the front person or the 'catcher', and then they organise the shipment into the country." In the Auckland District Court yesterday, Judge Evangelos Thomas heard that Auina-Anae was at the bottom of the chain. A police DVD recording of the offender's statement "advised that he received orders to do the job from an unknown person". Auina-Anae's lawyer Jasper Rhodes said his client was expecting payment. "And he's been candid about that,' he said. ADVERTISEMENT The granite slabs the "methamphetamine" was imported in. (Source: NZ Police) However, he said the amount would be 'absolutely disproportionate to the profits that the leading offenders were expecting to earn". He wouldn't be expecting figures in the millions. Williams said he knew of a "catcher" in Christchurch pulling cocaine out of a container who received about $40,000 to take the risk. "And it comes down to that greed aspect to this, right? And that's the chilling bit here. These groups cannot operate unless they corrupt people in and around the border or people like this prepared to do it." Auina-Anae walked through a different door yesterday and as he begins his time behind bars, he can reflect on whether the amount on offer was worth the risk. Watch more on this story on TVNZ+

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store