'Grateful' PM says police make selections on 'what they assume is finest' after coronation arrests backlash

Rishi Sunak has stated the Metropolitan Police make selections on "what they think is best" as he was questioned about their therapy of protesters through the coronation.

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The pressure has confronted a backlash after a complete of 64 individuals had been arrested on Saturday - together with 13 individuals to "prevent a breach of the peace" and a person with an unused megaphone, who police stated might "scare the horses".

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Four individuals had been then charged.

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Reports additionally claimed volunteers who were handing out rape alarms to maintain girls secure within the early hours of Saturday morning had been taken into custody.

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Met Police commander Karen Findlay defended the pressure's actions, saying officers policed the coronation "proportionately" and inside the "context" of the large-scale occasion.

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But opposition politicians and protest teams have raised considerations officers had been heavy-handed and impinged on the appropriate to protest.

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Asked in regards to the criticism, the prime minister stated: "The police are operationally independent of government, they'll make these decisions based on what they think is best.

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"And really I'm grateful to the police and everybody who performed a component in making certain this weekend has gone so effectively, so efficiently and so safely.

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"That was an extraordinary effort by so many people and I am grateful to them for all their hard work."

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But the chair of the London Assembly's Police and Crime Committee, Caroline Russell, stated it felt like there had been "a chilling suppression" of protest over the weekend.

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Speaking to Sky News, she stated the policing appeared "heavy handed", including: "It feels as if it was designed to make people afraid to go and protest.

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"And I do not really feel snug with that because the environment round our rights and our freedoms to protest."

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Earlier, Ms Russell stated her committee questions London Mayor Sadiq Khan - who has sought "urgent clarity" around the arrests - and the pressure each fortnight, "so in fact we might be questioning this as a result of I'm certain members of all events will need to have their questions answered".

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The arrests got here after police got further powers to deal with disruptive protests via new authorities laws simply days earlier than the coronation befell.

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The change to the legislation means demonstrators resist a yr in jail for blocking roads, airports and railways, and lets officers cease and search anybody they believe is planning to trigger disruption.

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The head of the anti-monarchy marketing campaign group Republic, Graham Smith, stated he was arrested earlier than the coronation on Saturday and held in a police cell for 16 hours, regardless of engagement with the Met for 4 months over the group's protest plans.

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"The whole thing was a deliberate attempt to disrupt and diminish our protest in order to protect the coronation," he advised the BBC.

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"[The Met] has repeatedly said right up until Friday that they had no concerns about our protest plans, they were well aware of what we were going to do and they would engage with us and not disrupt us - so they have repeatedly lied about their intentions and I believe that they had every intention of arresting us prior to doing so."

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Asked if, inside the context of the coronation - the place many hundreds wished to attend the occasion and have fun - police had been proper to take motion, Mr Smith stated: "That is not an excuse to rob people of their rights, that is not an excuse to arrest people and detain them for 16 hours because some people want to enjoy a party, that is a disgraceful suggestion.

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"You have to have the ability to protest and if some individuals don't love the actual fact that there have been protesters there then, frankly, they should put up with it.

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"You cannot say that they have to enjoy a party and therefore other people have to be arrested."

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On Sunday, the deputy chief of the Liberal Democrats, Daisy Cooper, told Sky News she had "concerns" the pressure didn't get the steadiness proper when it got here to making sure the occasion went forward safely whereas permitting peaceable protest.

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"Whether you are royalist or whether you are republican, we should all be able to agree on free speech and the right to protest," she added.

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But Lucy Frazer, the tradition secretary, advised Sophy Ridge on Sunday the Met "managed to get that balance right", whereas deputy chairman of the Conservative get together, Lee Anderson, advised those that did not approve of the celebrations to "emigrate".

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