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quarta-feira, 10 de agosto de 2011

We will use water cannons on them: At last Cameron orders police to come down hard on the looters (some aged as young as NINE) Read more: http://www.




We will use water cannons on them: At last Cameron orders police to come down hard on the looters (some aged as young as NINE)

Officers will have 24 hours' notice to roll out powerful water cannons on yobs
U-turn on 'softly softly' approach earlier this week as police finally vow to come down hard on offenders
Ed Miliband heckled and called 'Dave' on Manchester visit
Three men killed in Birmingham as hit-and-run prompts triple murder investigation
Serious disorder in Manchester, but also unrest in Wolverhampton, West Bromwich and Salford
Violence in Liverpool, Leicester and Nottingham where police station is fire-bombed by gang
Police investigating reports that shots were fired at police officer in Birmingham
800 police officers on patrol in Manchester city centre
109 arrests in West Midlands, 110 in Manchester and Salford, 50 across Merseyside and 19 in Bristol
805 people arrested in London since Saturday and 211 charged.
Liam Gallagher's Manchester boutique smashed and ransacked
eBay and Gumtree will help police to identify stolen goods being sold online

By Emily Allen

Last updated at 6:56 PM on 10th August 2011



David Cameron today gave the go-ahead for police to use water cannons on rioters after children as young as nine looted stores and made off with bottles of wine and vodka in fresh violence that flared around the UK yesterday.

The children wore tracksuits and unlike hardened older thugs they innocently disregarded covering their faces as they ran through the shattered glass of supermarkets to fill their pockets with looted goods.

But today, the police were given the green light to use water cannons with 24 hours' notice. The Prime Minister said that plans had been put in place to deal with the disorder using water cannons - making it the first time they would be used on the streets of mainland Britain.

The comments were seen as U-turn on what Home Secretary Theresa May said earlier this week when she ruled out the use of water cannons. The 'softly softly' approach has been shelved and police will finally be given the backing to come down hard on offenders.

'Police are already authorised to use baton rounds and we agreed at Cobra that, while they are not currently needed, we now have in place contingency plans for water cannons to be available at 24 hours' notice,' Cameron said in a speech outside Downing Street this morning.

SCROLL DOWN FOR VIDEO
Looters - including a young boy - rob drink from Sainsbury's Local store in Manchester
Two kids make a run for it from a riot store in Manchester

Too young to drink: A youngster barely over 10 years old clutches a bottle of wine looted from a Sainsbury's Local store in Manchester city centre, and right, one of his friends runs away from the same shop with three bottles of strong vodka
Primary school age: Two youngsters pull the hoods from their baggy sweaters over their heads as they stand outside the looted store. The child who stole a bottle of wine is seen behind them returning with a bottle of coke

Primary school age: Two youngsters pull the hoods from their baggy sweaters over their heads as they stand outside the looted store. The child who stole a bottle of wine is seen behind them returning with a bottle of Coke
Free for all: Youths spill out of the damaged store in Manchester after filling their pockets with cigarettes and bottles of alcohol

Free for all: Hooded youths spill out of the damaged store in Manchester after filling their pockets with cigarettes and bottles of alcohol

'Whatever resources the police need they will get. What ever tactics they feel they need they will have legal backing to do so.'

Mr Cameron said that the police would be checking offenders 'picture by picture' and they would not let 'phoney human rights' stand in the way of bringing rioters to justice.

He said that something was 'seriously wrong' with society 'when you see children as young as 12 or 13 looting and laughing'.

Mr Cameron insisted the 'fightback' by police was succeeding today after a fourth night of rioting across the country. He said a 'more robust approach' by Scotland Yard last night had prevented a repeat of the worst trouble.

The PM said it was 'simply not acceptable' that violence was taking place and had spread to Manchester, Birmingham and Nottingham overnight.

'We will not put up with this in our country. We will not allow a culture of fear to exist on our streets.

'There are pockets of our society that are not only broken, but frankly sick...It is a complete lack of responsibility in parts of our society, people allowed to feel that the world owes them something.'

Later, the Prime Minister also described the apparent hit-and-run killing of three men in Birmingham who were trying to protect shops from looters as a 'truly dreadful incident' and offered his condolences to their families.

Labour leader Ed Miliband was quickly mobbed by members of the public and a large group surrounded and followed him as he made his way slowly around Market Street in Manchester.

One man, mistaking the Labour leader for his older brother, shouted: 'All platitudes, Dave, as usual. You are all the same.'

Standing outside the burnt-out Miss Selfridge store, Mr Miliband told members of the public the first thing that had to be done was to 'restore public order'.
Meeting: The Prime Minister discusses tactics with senior officers from the police, fire and ambulance services at the Wolverhampton Civic Centre

Meeting: The Prime Minister discusses tactics with senior officers from the police, fire and ambulance services at the Wolverhampton Civic Centre
Prime Minister David Cameron outside Downing Street today makes a speech on the riots
Protesters clash with the Irish police in Dublin, Republic of Ireland in 2004

Riot crackdown: Prime Minister David Cameron outside Downing Street today makes a speech on the riots in which he revealed that police will be given the green light to use water cannons similar to those used when protesters clashed with the Irish police in Dublin, Republic of Ireland in 2004, pictured right


Walk about: Labour leader Ed Miliband is heckled and called 'Dave' as he stands outside a burned out Miss Selfridge shop on Market Street in Manchester after a rioting in the city last night

Walkabout: Labour leader Ed Miliband is heckled and called 'Dave' as he stands outside a burnt-out Miss Selfridge shop on Market Street in Manchester after rioting in the city last night
A map shows where the UK riots took place


He said: 'Then we have got to look into the causes, why people are going around doing this. And I think there are a complex number of causes.'

He said he thought it was 'partly about parental responsibility, partly about gangs and some of that culture'.

Amid chaotic scenes, Mr Miliband thanked a nine-year-old girl called Jess Reid, from Denton, who had volunteered to help clean up the city centre and the crowd responded by giving her a round of applause.
WATER CANNONS: A POWERFUL FORM OF RIOT CONTROL

Water cannons shoot a high-pressure stream of water and have been used against rioters in Northern Ireland but never on the British mainland.

They are also used in Europe today by countries such as France and Germany but have a history of being used repressively.

They were deployed during the US civil rights movement in the 1960s and protesters in the former Soviet bloc.

The devices were originally built to be used on boats to help put out fires and were first used for riot control in Germany at the start of the 1930s.

More modern devices can be controlled remotely by joystick, meaning the operator is not put at risk.

They can carry 2,000 gallons (8,000 litres) of water and have a delivery rate of 250 gallons per minute (15 litres per second).

But critics argue they are limited because they use up so much water they need constantly refilling and also have restricted mobility.

The huge amount of water involved, initials costs and maintenance also mean they are extremely costly.

There are other problems because they are so indiscriminate and can cause serious injury.

He then met a group of other volunteers who had rallied to the cause after Jeremy Myers, 34, started the Twitter group @cleanupmanc.

Mr Miliband said: 'Good to see you. Thank you for coming out. I really appreciate it. This is the real spirit of Manchester, isn't it, rather than the yobs and what they do.'

This evening in the city, 800 police officers are patrolling the city centre, with their numbers bolstered by officers from the Lancashire and Cumbrian forces.

Yesterday 16,000 police officers were deployed on London's streets in a bid to head off a fourth night of the violence which spiralled out of control across dozens of suburbs on Saturday night.

Disorder and looting rocked parts of Manchester particularly, but there was also trouble in Wolverhampton, West Bromwich, Nottingham, Leicester and Liverpool - although police appeared to containing the unrest.

But in what was by far the most serious incident of the night three men, two of them brothers aged 30 and 31, died in Birmingham after they were hit by a car.

Today, the shocked father of the 21-year-old who was also killed told how he tried to save his son’s life as he lay in the street after the hit and run.

Tariq Jahan wept as he described how his hands and face were ‘covered in blood’ from his son Haroon, who died along with brothers Abdul Nasir, 31, and Shazad Ali, 30.

Pleading for an end to the violence he told BBC Radio 5 Live: ‘I miss him dearly but two days from now the whole world will forget.’

West Midlands Police is also currently investigating reports that shots were fired at a police officer just outside Birmingham city centre, thought to be in the Aston area, according to Sky.

None of the violence has escalated in the same way as it did in London the previous night. The capital remained relatively calm last night.

So far, 109 people have been arrested in the West Midlands, 110 in Manchester and Salford, and 44 in and around Liverpool. In Bristol there were 19 arrests for offences, including having a balaclava in your possession.

There was also a large blaze at a derelict art college in Gloucester, with several smaller fires, while police also dealt with small groups who attacked them.

In Birmingham mobs rampaged through the city centre but unlike Saturday night, when shops were looted, the gangs mainly wreaked destruction, setting fire to cars and attempting to provoke police.

Rioters continually regrouped and dispersed, forcing police to chase them. Crowds of around 500 assembled in the city centre and the atmosphere quickly turned menacing.

During the disturbances the three men - the brothers and a friend - were involved in a hit-and-run incident in the Winson Green area as they were protecting their car wash business after the previous night's violence. They were taken to hospital but all subsequently died.

A spokesman for West Midlands Police said: 'The incident occurred just after 1am in Dudley Road. West Midlands Police have launched a murder inquiry, arrested one man in connection with the incident and recovered a vehicle from near the scene which will be examined by forensics experts.'

Police appealed for witnesses or anyone with information to come forward.

A relative of one of the dead men victims told Sky News this morning: 'They were not in the way or blocking the road. The car swerved towards them.'

He said that the three had been on the street protecting their business - a car wash - after violence the previous night, when two cars swerved on to the pavement and struck them.

The three were taken to Birmingham City Hospital, where a large crowd gathered this morning at around 5.45am and police in riot gear stood guard at the main entrance, according to the BBC.

Elsewhere in the city, youths stormed Tesco, the post office, Marks & Spencer and House of Fraser and smoke poured from a flaming car blocking views of the city’s iconic Selfridges building.

More...

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The sickening moment heavily bleeding teenager is robbed in broad daylight by thugs who pretend to help him
'We don't do water cannon, we rely on consent': May rules out tough action as vigilantes are forced to defend shops
Mark Duggan was carrying converted blank-firing handgun when he was shot dead by a single police bullet
MAX HASTINGS: Years of liberal dogma have spawned a generation of amoral, uneducated, welfare dependent, brutalised youngsters
Three men killed struck by car and killed in hit-and-run attack 'as they protected their neighbourhood from rioters'
Here's how to deal with a riot: Chilean police use water cannon and tear gas on rampaging mob

As tens of thousands of pounds of goods are predicted to have been stolen, internet retail giants eBay and Gumtree have both said they will help the police to identify and remove any stolen items linked to crime after a fourth night of looting.

Reinforcements: Police file down the escalator and stand guard at the Mailbox shopping and hotel complex in Birmingham City Centre yesterday

Reinforcements: Police file down the escalator and stand guard at the Mailbox shopping and hotel complex in Birmingham City Centre yesterday
A female robocop in Manchester
Miss Selfridge in Manchester

Manchester: A female 'robocop' stands watch in Manchester as more police, right, in full body armour walk through Market Street last night as looters set fashion retailer Miss Selfridge on fire

Triple murder inquiry: Three men are dead after being hit by a car during the riots overnight in Birmingham

Mob-rule: A vehicle burns as yobs move away on the streets of Birmingham
On guard: Riot police stand with shields in front of a street fire in the Toxteth area of Liverpool last night which was hit by riots

On guard: Riot police stand with shields in front of a street fire in the Toxteth area of Liverpool last night which was hit by riots
Under control: Heavily protected and looking menacing, police 'Jankel' riot wagons patrol Hackney centre to prevent further disturbances last night

Under control: Heavily protected and looking menacing, police 'Jankel' riot wagons patrol Hackney centre to prevent further disturbances last night
A Miss Selfridge shop on fire in Market Street
A passerby watches a shop burn on Market Street in Manchester

Manchester: Miss Selfridge was set alight in Market Street causing thousands of pounds of damage

Concerns are mounting that stolen goods may be sold on via online retailers after stores were raided in Manchester, Birmingham, Liverpool, Bristol and Nottingham as rioting spread from London.

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A spokeswoman for eBay, the UK's largest online auction site, said it had not seen any unusual listing activity since the looting began at the weekend, but said staff will be vigilant over the coming weeks.

She said: 'Our thoughts are with the businesses and communities affected by recent events in London and around the UK.

'We will cooperate fully with the investigating authorities to identify and remove any listings which are linked to criminal activity.'

And a spokeswoman for listings website, Gumtree, said: 'We work closely with the police and will do everything we can to help them bring any criminals using our site in this way to justice.'

She encouraged any users who are suspicious of an ad on the site to inform the form via the 'report' button, found on every page. She said Gumtree's safety team would then investigate the listing and take 'appropriate action'.

Meanwhile in London the situation was relatively calm.

However, there were small pockets of violence in Canning Town and Enfield, while there was a fire at a council recycling centre in Tottenham.

The borough of Eltham in south London also saw more than 200 people take to the streets.

In Washington, Northumbria, a police officer was injured and a patrol car destroyed by fire after a police station was attacked by thugs. The officer was hit by flying glass when a brick was hurled through a window in the early hours of the morning. Two youths, aged 17 and 19, were later arrested.

In Manchester, a marauding gang of up to 200 youths, most of them masked or wearing hoodies, fought a running battle with police, kicking in windows of supermarkets, jewellery stores and mobile phone shops.
Sale: A box of 40 Apple iPhones in somebody's bedroom that were listed for sale on Monday evening. They could have been legally obtained

Sale: A box of 40 Apple iPhones in somebody's bedroom that were listed for sale on Monday evening. They could have been legally obtained

The mob had almost total control of city centre streets for more than an hour and a half before deployments of plain-clothed police – some armed with telescopic truncheons – made raids on specific targets to apprehend looters.

In the heart of the city, Miss Selfridge was set alight and stores including Swarovski, T-Mobile, French Connection and Marks & Spencer all had their windows smashed. About 100 yobs looted shops including Foot Asylum in the Arndale Centre.

Liam Gallagher's recently opened fashion boutique Pretty Green in King Street had its windows smashed and was ransacked by looters.

In Swarovski, two looters were arrested by a team of five plain-clothed officers who had to call for backup as they were surrounded by a baying mob of around 50 masked men.

Officers on horseback and dog handlers walked through the streets, flushing out rioters.

But gangs moved off and smashed up a Sainsbury’s store before gathering on the main Deansgate thoroughfare.

In Salford, the Central Housing office was set alight while youths smashed shop windows, torched cars and looted businesses.

Assistant Chief Constable Garry Shewan of Greater Manchester Police said it was the worst violence the city had experienced in 30 years.

He said: 'Criminals have brought shame in particular on the streets of Salford and Manchester. Last night's shameful destruction saw some of the worst scenes I have ever witnessed as a police officer.'

He added: 'We want to make it absolutely clear - they have nothing to protest against. There is nothing in a sense of injustice and there has been no spark that has led to this. This has been senseless violence and senseless criminality of a scale I have never experienced in my career before.'
More rioting in the Toxteth area of Liverpool tonight. Police with riot shields try to bring hooded youths under control in the city

Liverpool: As riots broke out in the Toxteth area of Liverpool. police try to bring hooded youths under control in the city
A Post Office in the Bootle area was attacked with a stolen digger
A Post Office in the Bootle area was attacked with a stolen digger

Liverpool: A post office in the Bootle area of Merseyside was attacked with a stolen digger, pictured
Summer holiday over: A police officer helps council workers to move the burned out shell of a family caravan which was torched during rioting and looting in Toxteth Liverpool, last night

Summer holiday over: A police officer helps council workers to move the burned out shell of a family caravan which was torched during rioting and looting in Toxteth Liverpool, last night
Burning barricade: This man appears oblivious to the flames licking from this fence as he walks along a street in Liverpool city centre

Burning barricade: This man appears oblivious to the flames licking from a fence as he walks along a street in Liverpool city centre

Torched: A man approaches two burnt out cars following the disturbances in Salford

Torched: A man approaches two burnt out cars following the disturbances in Salford

In the West Bromwich area thugs broke into shops while hundreds of rioters rampaged through the town centre leaving a trail of smashed windows and shattered businesses.

Dozens of them were barely in their teens. One boy, aged around 12, hurled stones at a police van before shouting abuse at riot officers.

One couple ventured on to the streets to insult police while pushing their baby girl in a pushchair.

The father, called Neil, in his early 20s, said: ‘This is brilliant, we heard it was all kicking off on Twitter and came right here.
Unrest: Fire crews extinguish a blaze in a building in Gloucester, as rioting begins in the West Country last night

Unrest: Fire crews extinguish a blaze in a building in Gloucester, as rioting begins in the West Country last night

Remains: The smouldering remains of the disused art studio building in Gloucester which became the target of West Country rioters last night

Remains: The smouldering remains of the disused art studio building in Gloucester which became the target of West Country rioters last night
Birmingham: People wearing masks swig alcohol next to a burning car in Birmingham city centre this evening

Birmingham: People wearing masks swig alcohol next to a burning car in Birmingham city centre

Under arrest: Police detain a man near the site of looting in an electronics store near New Street Station in Birmingham

Under arrest: Police detain a man near the site of looting in an electronics store near New Street Station in Birmingham

‘I wanted my daughter to see what was going on because this is part of history, the people are fighting back.

'I’ll take her home if it gets too dangerous but she’s fine for now.’

A gang of 30 youngsters, all sporting white dust masks normally worn by workmen, were spotted kicking in shop windows and setting fire to wood and scrap paper in the street.

In Liverpool, rioters caused damage to shops and pubs in the Birkenhead area. Around midnight, in Toxteth, Smithdown Road was closed after about 200 rioters started hurling missiles at police.

Firefighters were also attacked in the area, with four engines being pelted with the missiles. A police car was also targeted. No emergency workers were injured.
Undercover police officers have arrest looters in the Swarovski Crystal shop in Manchester. One looter lies injured and blood can be seen on the wall

Undercover police officers arrested looters in the Swarovski Crystal shop in Manchester. One lies injured and blood can be seen on the wall
Unrest in Manchester
Liam Gallagher's boutique clothes shop PrettyGreen is attacked by rioters in Manchester

Manchester: Liam Gallagher's boutique clothes shop PrettyGreen is attacked by rioters in Manchester, right, and a shop-keeper announces he is closing early

In Nottingham, Canning Circus Police Station was firebombed by a group of between 30 and 40 men but no injuries were reported. At least eight people have been arrested.

The violence followed the arrest of 10 youths earlier in the evening after a small group of people got on to the roof of one of the buildings at Nottingham High School.

In another incident two men, aged 17 and 18, were arrested after rocks were thrown at Bulwell Police Station.

Gloucester saw its first night of violence when a fire was started at a derelict art college in the city, but firefighters were able to contain it to a small area of the building.

Across the city, police and fire crews also had to deal with other small fires in bins, while police came under attack from youths throwing bottles.

A police statement said that support from neighbouring forces included mounted officers, while the force helicopter was in use.

Gloucestershire Police said a total of nine men were arrested following the disorder.

Deputy Chief Constable Mick Matthews said: 'What we have seen taking place in Gloucester overnight have been copycat incidents which do not appear to have been co-ordinated in anyway.

'While we had hoped this type of criminality would not take place here, we were well-prepared, as were our colleagues in partner agencies.
Looters carry equipment out of a home cinema shop in central Birmingham
Looters carry boxes out of a home cinema shop in central Birmingham

Birmingham: Masked looters carry boxes of expensive electrical gadgets out of a home cinema shop in central Birmingham
Manchester: Hooded looters with arm fulls of clothes run from a Manchester shopping centre yesterday evening

Manchester: Hooded looters with arm fulls of clothes run from a Manchester shopping centre

'Local people have, we believe, been the perpetrators, committing offences within their own communities.

'While the disorder here has not been on the same scale as elsewhere in the country, involving perhaps 60 people at most, it has undoubtedly been very disturbing and is causing concern for local people.

'I would like to reassure people that we and our partners have been working together to deal with this, and we have control of the situation.

'This type of behaviour is completely unacceptable and we are now identifying those responsible, arresting them and will be putting them through the criminal justice system.'

Meanwhile, two 18-year-olds were arrested in Folkestone, Kent, and a 16-year-old was being questioned in Glasgow on suspicion of inciting violence through internet social networking sites.

In London police were on stand-by across the city with many officers in Hackney, where unrest flared up first on Saturday in Mare Street.

Many shops, businesses and schools closed early and shop-keepers and landlords barricaded their premises.
Looters are dragged out of a Tesco Express supermarket on Oxford Street in Manchester city centre
Police detail a suspected rioter in Enfield, north London

Manchester: A looter is dragged out of a Tesco Express store on Oxford Street in Manchester, left, while a suspected rioter is arrested in Enfield, north London
Birmingham: A policeman and his dog walk towards a burning car in central Birmingham

Birmingham: Gangs set cars alight in the city centre and wreaked havoc, trying to provoke police
Birmingham: Police disperse youths who gathered near Birmingham Coach Station last night as the violence spread across the UK

Birmingham: Police disperse youths who gathered near Birmingham Coach Station last night as the violence spread across the UK

In Canning Town, in east London, there was a tense stand-off between police and groups of youths, while in Enfield, groups of young people were reportedly patrolling the streets in a bid to deter violence, according to Sky News.

Similar scenes could be seen in Southall, west London, where Sikh worshipers were pictured protecting the Singh Sabha Sikh Temple in Havelock Road.

Several theatres cancelled performances including the Battersea Arts Centre, Greenwich Playhouse and the Arcola Theatre in Dalston.

In Tottenham police confirmed a fire had broken out on an industrial estate. A Scotland Yard spokesman said: 'Police were called to reports of a number of vehicles on fire on an industrial estate in Park View Road. The fire is being treated as unexplained. No arrests have yet been made.'

Police said they had arrested a man in connection with the fire at Reeves Furniture store in Reeves Corner, Croydon, which was razed to the ground on Saturday night.

A 21-year-old, arrested on suspicion of arson with intent to endanger life, is being held at a south London police station.
Tackling the blaze: Two firefighters deal with a fire that broke out at a recycling depot in Tottenham Hale late last night

Tackling the blaze: Two firefighters deal with a fire that broke out at a recycling depot in Tottenham Hale late last night

Southall: Sikh worshipers protect their temple Singh Sabha Sikh Temple in Havelock Road, Southall. They are pictured holding their swords known as Talwars

Southall: Sikh worshippers protect the Singh Sabha Sikh Temple in Havelock Road. They are pictured holding their swords known as Talwars

London: London seems relatively peaceful this evening after hundreds of police officers flood the streets. These officers are taking a break in Wandsworth

London: The capital was relatively peaceful after thousands of police officers flooded the streets. These officers were taking a break in Wandsworth

Hundreds of people flee in Market Street, Manchester this evening where Miss Selfridge has been set on fire

Manchester: Hundreds of people run from the scene in Market Street where Miss Selfridge was set on fire
A rioter is pictured trying to smash the Esprit shop window on Market Street in Manchester this evening

Manchester: A rioter is pictured trying to smash the Esprit shop window on Market Street in Manchester

Officers also revealed 685 people had been arrested in connection with disorder across London in the past few days with 111 people being charged.

Managers decided to shut the Southside shopping centre in Wandsworth, south London, to avoid the risk of looting and violence. Shops, businesses, pubs, schools and medical centres across the capital sent staff home early.

Looting even forced filming on BBC1 hit Sherlock to be cut short. A second series of the show - starring Benedict Cumberbatch and Martin Freeman - is being filmed in the capital this week.

Co-creator Mark Gatiss announced that work on the show had to be curtailed with a message on Twitter.

He wrote: 'This is a new one on me. Scene incomplete owing to approaching looters. Unbelievable times.'

Both Cumberbatch and Freeman were on set in north London when work was abandoned on the production yesterday afternoon.

Riot police in Salford face off with local youths

Salford: Dozens of riot police with helmets and shields face up to local youths as copy-cat riots spread to the north of England

The vast majority of shops in Peckham closed before 3pm as staff were sent home early.

Outside a Poundland store on Rye Lane, which was looted on Saturday, a large group of people gathered to look at a piece of artwork which was created by community members yesterday afternoon.

A large sign reading 'Why We Love Peckham' had been placed on the board holding a smashed window together.

Hundreds of people had filled out notes on Post-its about the area. One read: 'It is vibrant and fun,' while another simply said: 'Diversity.'

Meanwhile, staff at St George's Medical Centre in Tooting were sent home early.

Midwives working in and around Bromley were also given strict orders not to attend calls around the town centre yesterday afternoon in case they became entangled in violence.
Shutting up shop: A landlord boards up his pub in central London as thousands of policemen prepare to deploy on London's streets
Men board up a sushi restaurant on Hampstead High Street in north London

Shutting up shop: Men board up a sushi restaurant on Hampstead High Street in north London, right, and a landlord boards up his pub in central London







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