This article discusses the protest that took place in London regarding the transport of asylum seekers. A bus company contracted by the Border Force declined to transport asylum seekers from a London hotel to the Bibby Stockholm barge due to concerns about negative publicity. Protesters obstruct the route, surround the bus, and empty the air of the tire. Police were summoned, and arrests were made. Two protesters, Jony Cink, and Indea Barbe-Wilson, were arrested with a hinder of the highway.
Barbe-Wilson stated in court that she wanted to protect the asylum seekers from experiencing further torture at Bibby Stockholm, which has faced criticism over the conditions and treatment of migrants.
Barbe-Wilson told the court:
‘I wanted to stop them from experiencing any more trauma.'”Honestly, if I had known the coach wasn’t there and the arrests had been made, I wouldn’t have been sitting there in the first place.”The barge has been troubled by issues, including the discovery of dangerous bacteria, removal, and giving an account of poor living conditions.
The protest continued for hours, obstructing the road and disturbing the community. Superintendent Matt Cox described the scene as “chaotic” and “hard for police officers to deal with”.He said he had been told by the Border Force that they would no longer transfer asylum seekers and that they had negative views and assumptions against them. He said that the protesters surrounded the police vehicles for about 2 hours.
The well-being of the chaos and the public was a concern, with estimates of many 100 people seeing the protest. The incident explores the tensions surrounding the Bibby Stockholm barge and the treatment of asylum seekers, flashing debates about the government’s handling of resettling and the conditions faced by those seeking refuge in the UK.
By DailyMail news