Black Lives Matter UK protesters demand justice for George Floyd

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Nine-year-old young actor turned activist, Kamil Abiola at the Black Lives Matter UK protest
Photo credit: Ade Omoloja

By Olayiwola Balogun – The killing of George Floyd in Minneapolis, Minnesota, United States of America has sparked solidarity protests around the world. George Floyd, 46-year-old African American man died on 25th May, 2020 having been knelt on the neck by a police officer aided by three others for almost nine minutes.

In the United Kingdom this week, London, Bristol and Scotland had protesters defy the Coronavirus lockdown to demand an end to racism and police brutality towards Black people.

In Bristol protesters pulled down the statue of Edward Colston, a 17thcentury Bristol born slave trader and dumped it into the water by Bristol’s harbour. Edward Colstonwas heavily involved in the slave trade as a member of the Royal African Company. The company had a monopoly of the British trade in African slaves.

In central London thousands of peaceful protesters of all ages and colour walked through the city from the American embassy in Nine Elms to Westminster to demand justice for George Floyd. 

Nine-year-old young actor turned activist, Kamil Abiola who was on the main stage by the statue of Nelson Mandela alongside with the organisers addressed the crowd at about 3.00pm. He chanted “No Justice, No Peace”, “Black Lives Matter” and “Black People Matter” as thousands of jubilant crowd responded.

At a point young Kamil requested the crowd to say George Floyd’s name, “say his name” and the crowd responded with George Floyd. The young activist attracted huge attention and admiration when he requested the crowd to take a knee and ended the segment with the words “we are done kneeling, let us keep up the fight to end racism.”

Speaking to African Voice, the young activist expressed his desire to grow up in a country where there is justice and equality.

Nine year old actor turned activist Kamil Abiola at the forefront of Black Lives Matter protest

Unfortunately, there were reports of clashes between police and protesters later in the evening near Whitehall closer to Downing Street with 10 police officers injured.

Meanwhile, Prime Minister Boris Johnson issued a message on Black Lives Matter.

The PM said: The death of George Floyd took place thousands of miles away in another country, under another jurisdiction and yet we simply cannot ignore the depth of emotion that has been triggered by that spectacle, of a black man losing his life at the hands of the police.

In this country and around the world his dying words, I can’t breathe have awakened an anger and a widespread and incontrovertible, undeniable feeling of injustice, a feeling that people from black and minority ethnic groups do face discrimination: in education, in employment, in the application of the criminal law.

And we who lead and who govern simply can’t ignore those feelings because in too many cases, I am afraid, they will be founded on a cold reality.

Yes, I am proud to lead the most ethnically diverse government in the history of this country, with two of the four great offices of state held by a man and a woman of Indian origin; and yes, I am proud of the work I began to lead more than ten years ago to recruit and promote more young black people, in the police and other walks of life.

This country has made huge strides. I remember the 1970s, and the horror of the National Front. I truly believe that we are a much, much less racist society than we were, in many ways far happier and better.

But we must also frankly acknowledge that there is so much more to do in eradicating prejudice, and creating opportunity, and the government I lead is committed to that effort.

And so I say yes, you are right, we are all right, to say Black Lives Matter; and to all those who have chosen to protest peacefully and who have insisted on social distancing, I say, yes of course I hear you, and I understand.

But I must also say that we are in a time of national trial, when for months this whole country has come together to fight a deadly plague. After such sacrifice, we cannot now let it get out of control.

It is BAME communities who have been at the forefront of the struggle against coronavirus whether in health care or transport or social care or any of the other essential services that have kept our country going.

And it is BAME communities, tragically, that have paid a disproportionate price. So no, I will not support those who flout the rules on social distancing, for the obvious reason that we risk a new infection at a critical time and just as we have made huge progress.

And no, I will not support or indulge those who break the law, or attack the police, or desecrate public monuments.

We have a democracy in this country. If you want to change the urban landscape, you can stand for election, or vote for someone who will.

And so I must say clearly that those who attack public property or the police who injure the police officers who are trying to keep us all safe those people will face the full force of the law; not just because of the hurt and damage they are causing, but because of the damage they are doing to the cause they claim to represent.

They are hijacking a peaceful protest and undermining it in the eyes of many who might otherwise be sympathetic. And as a society, we can and must do better.

This month, on the 22nd of June, we celebrate the arrival of the Empire Windrush in 1948, and we remember the contribution of the Afro-Caribbean workers in the NHS and across all public services who helped to rebuild this country after the war.

And today, once again, we face a great task: to relaunch this country after Coronavirus. So let’s work peacefully, lawfully, to defeat racism and discrimination wherever we find it, and let us continue to work together across all the communities of this country, as we put Britain back on its feet.

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Photo credit: Ade Omoloja
Photo credit: Ade Omoloja
Photo credit: Ade Omoloja
Photo credit: Ade Omoloja