Banning a planned pro-Palestine protest on Armistice Day would risk wider public disorder, the UN’s expert on protest rights has warned, in the wake of accusations that the government is pressuring police to stop the march.
The government should allow the protest to take place on Saturday (11 November) as planned and avoid painting protests as “hate marches”, said Clément Voule, the UN’s special rapporteur for the rights to freedom of peaceful assembly and of association.
Rishi Sunak’s government is embroiled in controversy after home secretary Suella Braverman attacked the Met police for “playing favourites” over its decision – so far – not to ban the march.
“When I read the position of the government, my reaction is that you cannot presume that people going on the streets will be violent, or will be acting unlawfully,” Voule, appointed by the UN as an independent expert, told The Big Issue.
“Any government should not presume the unlawfulness of the protest. Protest is a fundamental freedom and should be exercised in any democratic society.”
Labour has accused Braverman of trying to command the police, after she said police should adopt an “assertive and proactive approach” to the march and that anybody vandalising the Cenotaph “must be put into a jail cell faster than their feet can touch the ground”.