logo
How violent protests in Epping are being fuelled by disinformation

How violent protests in Epping are being fuelled by disinformation

The Guardian24-07-2025
Enjoying beers in the afternoon sunshine on Epping High Street, the three local men were adamant about recent events in the town.
Not only had Essex police used their own vans to 'bus in' antiracism counter-demonstrators last week to Epping, insisted one of the men, but masked undercover police officers had been among the 'lefties'.
'They were masked up and looked like foot-soldiers. Anyone who works in security will also pick up on how they were standing. If you looked you could see they held their hands together to give a discreet thumbs-up sign,' said the man, reluctant like so many other local people to go on the record, but who gave his name as 'Steve Davis'.
The only problem with this analysis was: it appeared to be entirely wrong.
Essex police has 'categorically' denied that it bussed in antiracism protesters. The suggestion of state-sponsored 'false flag' provocateurs – a frequent trope advanced on niche corners of social media at times of tensions on the streets – was also dismissed.
The denials have often come too late to stop the conspiracies taking hold. They have been eagerly spread by the Reform UK leader, Nigel Farage, and also carried on the front page of the Daily Telegraph.
Disinformation has been one of the most alarming characteristics of the violent protests in Epping, whose focus has been the use of the Bell hotel to house asylum seekers.
Local people have continued to turn out for the protests, which were sparked after an asylum seeker was charged with sexual assault – but far-right activists have played a key role in promoting them online. Activists from groups including Homeland, Patriotic Alternative and the neo-Nazi White Vanguard movement have been present.
Online misinformation and disinformation originating on niche corners of X has been amplified – seemingly without attempt to corroborate whether it are true – by politicians such as Farage and commenters from the GB News channel.
Video clips of Stand Up to Racism protesters being taken out of Epping last Thursday in police vans, after they were surrounded by groups of men who threw projectiles at them and the police, were quickly repurposed on social media – and presented as if they were images of protesters being transported from Epping station.
In fact, as Essex police has confirmed, the Stand Up to Racism protesters had made their way on foot from the station earlier in the day, while police escorted them on foot to enable them to exercise a right to protest.
By Friday, however, rightwing commenters such as the ex-GB News presenter Dan Wootton were also misrepresenting the footage. 'They actually escorted people in police vans,' Wootton told the viewers of the online show he set up after leaving GB News.
On Wednesday, Farage posted the same footage on X, saying: 'This video proves [police] transported leftwing protesters to the Bell hotel in Epping' and calling for the resignation of the Essex police chief constable, Ben-Julian Harrington.
The force issued a statement saying this was categorically untrue, while Harrington made pointed comments in a press conference where he urged commenters to be responsible for what they said online, adding that it had 'real-world consequences'.
Farage modulated his language after he was contacted by the Guardian on Wednesday, saying the police were 'escorting and bussing masked thugs to and from the protest', but his original tweet remains on X.
Later on Thursday, and in a tweet shortly after 10pm on Wednesday, Farage went on GB News to say he had received a call from a police officer who was in charge of the operation to say he was wrong. 'If I was slightly out on accuracy I apologise but I think the gist of what I was saying was right,' he said.
By then, however, the misinformation had spread like wildfire and done 'real damage', according to Lewis Nielsen of Stand Up to Racism.
'It is a complete lie to say, as Farage has claimed, that Stand Up to Racism protesters were 'bussed in'. We are mobilising antiracists, trade unionists, campaigners and faith groups against the far right in Epping,' he said.
Yet more conspiracies – some outlandish, others more minor but corrosive – continue to circulate. They include unsubstantiated accusations that asylum seekers staying at the hotel are routinely shoplifting in Epping.
Other claims – accompanied by pictures of the Stand Up to Racism protest – include one that Epping police has been paying protesters £40 'for three hours' work. It was among conspiracy theories being disseminated in online spaces including the Epping Says No! Facebook group, which has more than 1,600 members. Its administrators include activists from the far-right Homeland party, Adam Clegg and Callum Barker.
The claims of undercover police officers being among the antiracism protesters have been accompanied by clips and pictures zeroing in on pictures of some of those protesters.
The claims were also denied by Essex police, which has been trying to combat what it calls 'myths' in videos fronted by an assistant chief constable. The force specifically picked out the claim that there were 'police decoys in the crowd encouraging violence', rebutting it on its YouTube channel.
Nielsen also denied the claim: 'It is categorically false that the police are involved in Stand Up to Racism protests, or play any role in organising them. If anything our protests – like others – have faced police repression in recent years.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Embarrassment for Keir Starmer's top aide who told PM he had to smash smuggling gangs - as it is revealed his father's firm was handed £6m to house asylum seekers
Embarrassment for Keir Starmer's top aide who told PM he had to smash smuggling gangs - as it is revealed his father's firm was handed £6m to house asylum seekers

Daily Mail​

time2 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

Embarrassment for Keir Starmer's top aide who told PM he had to smash smuggling gangs - as it is revealed his father's firm was handed £6m to house asylum seekers

Nobody understands the electoral cost of failing to tackle the migrant crisis more than Sir Keir Starmer 's powerful right-hand man Morgan McSweeney. Hailed as a genius strategist, he was bending his boss's ear about it more than a year ago. We need to be tough from the start, the Irishman told the future Prime Minister in a memo. Regain control of borders, he said, smash the gangs, tackle small boats – noble exhortations Sir Keir would later parrot. Failure to address these issues, McSweeney warned, risked handing future victory to Nigel Farage 's Reform UK. Softly spoken and little known outside Westminster, McSweeney, 48, masterminded Labour's election victory, though with Labour lurching from crisis to crisis his stock has shrunk of late. His immigration warnings seem hollow now. Legal and illegal migration is spiralling out of control. Failure to stop the small boats is one thing but much public anger is reserved for the scandalous gravy train of outsourcing companies and middlemen making a small fortune from a broken system. Among them a former caravan park owner from Essex who became a billionaire after housing asylum seekers for the government. For Sir Keir and McSweeney, the headlines were embarrassing. And The Mail on Sunday can reveal there is something closer to home that might cause McSweeney, if not outright embarrassment, then surely a twinge of unease. His father Tim McSweeney, a County Cork-based accountant, has his part to play in the asylum gravy train causing resentment in his homeland. Sharply rising immigration coupled with a housing crisis has fuelled protest across the Irish Sea. As in the UK, there is much criticism of those who have got rich quickly on the back of the influx of new arrivals. Mr McSweeney, 73, helped set up a company that received £6million from the Irish state to house asylum seekers. He incorporated Togail Veilbhit Glas Teoranta in February 2023. He and wife Carmel are the only listed directors and it is registered at the same address in Macroom as his accountancy firm. Macroom is where his son was raised before moving to England as a 17-year-old, initially working on building sites and later joining Labour after university. He now earns between £155,000 and £160,000 as Sir Keir's Chief of Staff. Public records show Togail received £6million for provision of 'international protection accommodation and/or related costs'. Typically, accountants advise on company structure and handle registration and incorporation obligations. But Mr McSweeney senior dismissed a suggestion he was benefiting directly from the contracts. He said: 'Do I look like a wealthy man? I don't think so. It is just a job I have. It is not unusual for accountants to fulfil roles like this.' It is not easy to fathom who gets the money. The company's owners are hidden behind a labyrinthine corporate structure. It leads – via two other Irish shell companies, both linked to Mr McSweeney – to a web of Cyprus-registered companies. Asked how he became involved, Mr McSweeney said it was 'nobody's business'. In addition to its ties to No 10, the McSweeney family is linked to the upper echelons of the Irish government. Morgan's cousin Clare Mungovan is a special advisor to the Deputy Prime Minister Simon Harris. In June, thousands took part in an anti-immigration protest in Dublin, some wearing hats with the slogan 'Make Ireland Great Again'. Others held banners declaring: 'Ireland is full'. Ireland's spend on accommod- ating migrants hit £900million last year – up 54 per cent on the £569.14million cost in 2023. The country's Justice Minister Jim O'Callaghan wants to see more of the 25,000 hotel beds occupied by Ukrainian refugees returned to the tourism sector, calling it 'hugely important' to the Irish economy. Back in the UK, Mr McSweeney's son looked on helplessly last week as Sir Keir's pledge to 'smash the gangs' blew up in his face after a new record was set for Channel crossings. More than 25,000 migrants have now arrived in the UK in small boats this year, the earliest that this milestone has been reached. It has been said of McSweeney that 'nobody without elected office wields as much power in British politics' – but he prefers life in the shadows. The highest form of praise at Labour HQ has been said to be: 'Morgan loves it.' But he is a bogeyman on the Left after leading the think-tank Labour Together to purge the party of Jeremy Corbyn's influence. He divides his time between Scotland and Westminster. His wife Imogen Walker is Labour MP for Hamilton and Clyde Valley and the couple have a son. Having been director of the centrist Labour Together, McSweeney ran Sir Keir's successful leadership campaign in 2020 before becoming director of campaigns as he plotted the party's rise to power last year. He was initially appointed head of political strategy in Downing Street in July but soon clashed with then Chief of Staff Sue Gray. There were briefings that he was at the head of a 'boys' club' inside No 10, along with Cabinet Office Minister Pat McFadden, with Ms Gray on the other side. Amid jostling for position between the sides, it was even reported that she had moved McSweeney's desk further away from the PM's office. One Cabinet minister was prompted to say: 'One or both of them will have to go. It's not going to be Morgan.'

Russia dismisses Trump's warning of sending nuclear subs closer to country as a ‘temper tantrum'
Russia dismisses Trump's warning of sending nuclear subs closer to country as a ‘temper tantrum'

Scottish Sun

time3 hours ago

  • Scottish Sun

Russia dismisses Trump's warning of sending nuclear subs closer to country as a ‘temper tantrum'

Former major general Leonid Ivlev said it did not pose a new threat as the location of US naval forces is known and the range of submarines can be found online SUBS SNUB Russia dismisses Trump's warning of sending nuclear subs closer to country as a 'temper tantrum' Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) RUSSIA has dismissed Donald Trump's warning he is sending nuclear submarines closer to Russia as a 'temper tantrum'. While the Kremlin has yet to respond, the US President has been mocked by local media. Sign up for Scottish Sun newsletter Sign up 2 The Kremlin has yet to respond to Trump's recent threats, pictured leader Putin Credit: Getty Former major general Leonid Ivlev said it did not pose a new threat as the location of US naval forces is known and the range of submarines can be found online. Another retired lieutenant general called it 'meaningless blather'. And a Russian security expert told one paper: 'I'm sure Trump didn't really give any orders'. Trump had said he was ordering submarines to 'appropriate regions' after ex-Russian President Dmitry Medvedev said they still had Soviet-era nuke capabilities. He said: 'Words are very important and can often lead to unintended consequences.' Trump has said that the US is "totally prepared" for a nuclear war following a slew of threats against America from a Kremlin comrade. He said: "If some words of the former Russian president [Medvedev] cause such a nervous reaction in the entire, formidable US president, then Russia is right in everything and will continue to go its own way. "Let him remember his favorite films about the "walking dead", as well as how dangerous a "dead hand" that does not exist in nature can be." Medvedev may have been referring to Moscow's "Dead Hand" nuclear weapons system, which is designed to launch a doomsday retaliation attack with full nuclear force - even if the Kremlin leadership is wiped out. He also warned that Russia "isn't Israel or even Iran." "Words are very important, and can often lead to unintended consequences. I hope this will not be one of those instances. Thank you for your attention to this matter!" Trump says US is 'fully prepared' for war after moving subs towards Russia

Arrests after migrant hotel protests in England
Arrests after migrant hotel protests in England

BBC News

time3 hours ago

  • BBC News

Arrests after migrant hotel protests in England

Fifteen people have been arrested after protests across England outside hotels used to house groups and counter demonstrators clashed in London and Newcastle, and before a march in Manchester city centre. Nine people were arrested in the capital, seven for breaching Public Order Act conditions, the Metropolitan Police said. In an interview with the Sunday Times, Home Secretary, Yvette Cooper, says she wants to "restore order and control" to the asylum system by fast-tracking the appeals process. She told the paper changes to the way appeals on asylum are handled will take place in the autumn, adding: "If we speed up the decision-making appeal system and also then keep increasing returns, we hope to be able to make quite a big reduction in the overall numbers".The Home Office has said the number of hotels being used for asylum seekers has decreased from more than 400 in summer 2023, to less than also announced plans to end the use of hotels to house migrants by 2029, which Chancellor Rachel Reeves says will save £1bn a year. A series of protests outside the migrant hotels have been taking place in recent weeks. The protest in London on Saturday was held outside of the Thistle City Barbican Hotel in Islington, with a counter-protest led by the group Stand Up To Met said the protest was organised by local residents under the banner "Thistle Barbican needs to go - locals say no".But police said it had been "endorsed by groups from outside the local community which is likely to increase the number of people attending".The MP for Islington North, former Labour Party leader Jeremy Corbyn had urged people to join the police had imposed special restrictions ahead of the London demonstration, including setting out specific areas where each group had to remain. In Newcastle, a protest and counter-protest took place outside The New Bridge Hotel. Four people were arrested and remain in custody, according to Northumbria Police."The right to lawful protest is a key part of any democracy, which the police uphold," a spokesperson for the force said. "However, we will not accept people using them as a means to commit crime or disorder."About 1,500 people waved England and Union flags in a march organised by the Britain First group from Manchester Piccadilly rail station to outside the Central Library, where they held a 250 people were also estimated to be at a counter-demonstration led by the Stand up to Racism organisation, with police keeping the groups apart in St Peter's Manchester Police said that a "number of demonstrations passed by peacefully" with "no incidents of note". But two arrests were made during a confrontation at the start of the march, the statement added. One person was arrested for theft and the other for obstructing an arrest.

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