Tens of thousands march in London in far-right and pro-Palestine protests
Tens of thousands of people participated in two separate protests in central London on Saturday. A pro-Palestine demonstration, held a day after Nakba Day, coincided with a far-right rally organized by Tommy Robinson.

Briefing Summary
AI-generatedTens of thousands of people participated in two separate protests in central London on Saturday. A pro-Palestine demonstration, held a day after Nakba Day, coincided with a far-right rally organized by Tommy Robinson. London police deployed 4,000 officers, along with significant resources like armored vehicles and drones, for what they described as their largest public order operation in years. Authorities imposed conditions on the marches to keep attendees apart and warned of a zero-tolerance approach to prevent hate crime, with prosecutors considering whether certain placards or chants could incite aggression. Eleven arrests were made early in the day for various offenses.
Article analysis
Model · rule-basedKey claims
5 extractedThe police operation is estimated to cost 4.5 million pounds ($6m).
Police deployed 4,000 officers, including reinforcements, for the protests, calling it their biggest public order operation in years.
Tens of thousands of people marched in London in two separate protests: a pro-Palestine demonstration and a far-right rally.
Organizers are being made legally responsible for ensuring invited speakers do not break hate speech laws.
Authorities forecast a turnout of at least 80,000, with 50,000 for Tommy Robinson's march and 30,000 for the Nakba Day rally.