• Facebook
  • Twitter
x

London News Pictures

  • News Feed
  • In the papers
  • sell pictures
  • work with us
  • Privacy policy
Show Navigation
Cart Lightbox Client Area

Search Results

Refine Search
Match all words
Match any word
Prints
Personal Use
Royalty-Free
Rights-Managed
(leave unchecked to
search all images)
Next
{ 214 images found }
twitterlinkedinfacebook

Loading ()...

  • © Licensed to London News Pictures . FILE PICTURE DATED 21/03/2015 of a man being arrested for incitement to racial hatred during a " White Man March " demonstration organised by the Neo-Nazi group " National Action " as today (25th June 2015) National Action supporter Zack Davies has been convicted of the attempted murder of the attempted murder of Dr Sarandar Bhambra . Photo credit : Joel Goodman/LNP
    LNP_National_Action_JGO_12.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures . FILE PICTURE DATED 21/03/2015 of a man giving a Neo-Nazi salute during a " White Man March " demonstration organised by the Neo-Nazi group " National Action " as today (25th June 2015) National Action supporter Zack Davies has been convicted of the attempted murder of the attempted murder of Dr Sarandar Bhambra . Photo credit : Joel Goodman/LNP
    LNP_National_Action_JGO_06.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures . FILE PICTURE DATED 21/03/2015 of people giving Neo-Nazi salutes during a " White Man March " demonstration organised by the Neo-Nazi group " National Action " as today (25th June 2015) National Action supporter Zack Davies has been convicted of the attempted murder of the attempted murder of Dr Sarandar Bhambra . Photo credit : Joel Goodman/LNP
    LNP_National_Action_JGO_11.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures . FILE PICTURE DATED 21/03/2015 of people giving Neo-Nazi salutes during a " White Man March " demonstration organised by the Neo-Nazi group " National Action " as today (25th June 2015) National Action supporter Zack Davies has been convicted of the attempted murder of the attempted murder of Dr Sarandar Bhambra . Photo credit : Joel Goodman/LNP
    LNP_National_Action_JGO_10.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures . FILE PICTURE DATED 21/03/2015 of a " White Man March " demonstration organised by the Neo-Nazi group " National Action " as today (25th June 2015) National Action supporter Zack Davies has been convicted of the attempted murder of the attempted murder of Dr Sarandar Bhambra . Photo credit : Joel Goodman/LNP
    LNP_National_Action_JGO_09.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures . FILE PICTURE DATED 21/03/2015 of a " White Man March " demonstration organised by the Neo-Nazi group " National Action " as today (25th June 2015) National Action supporter Zack Davies has been convicted of the attempted murder of the attempted murder of Dr Sarandar Bhambra . Photo credit : Joel Goodman/LNP
    LNP_National_Action_JGO_08.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures . FILE PICTURE DATED 21/03/2015 of a " White Man March " demonstration organised by the Neo-Nazi group " National Action " as today (25th June 2015) National Action supporter Zack Davies has been convicted of the attempted murder of the attempted murder of Dr Sarandar Bhambra . Photo credit : Joel Goodman/LNP
    LNP_National_Action_JGO_07.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures . FILE PICTURE DATED 21/03/2015 of a " White Man March " demonstration organised by the Neo-Nazi group " National Action " as today (25th June 2015) National Action supporter Zack Davies has been convicted of the attempted murder of the attempted murder of Dr Sarandar Bhambra . Photo credit : Joel Goodman/LNP
    LNP_National_Action_JGO_05.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures . FILE PICTURE DATED 21/03/2015 of a " White Man March " demonstration organised by the Neo-Nazi group " National Action " as today (25th June 2015) National Action supporter Zack Davies has been convicted of the attempted murder of the attempted murder of Dr Sarandar Bhambra . Photo credit : Joel Goodman/LNP
    LNP_National_Action_JGO_04.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures . FILE PICTURE DATED 21/03/2015 of a " White Man March " demonstration organised by the Neo-Nazi group " National Action " as today (25th June 2015) National Action supporter Zack Davies has been convicted of the attempted murder of the attempted murder of Dr Sarandar Bhambra . Photo credit : Joel Goodman/LNP
    LNP_National_Action_JGO_03.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures . FILE PICTURE DATED 21/03/2015 of a " White Man March " demonstration organised by the Neo-Nazi group " National Action " as today (25th June 2015) National Action supporter Zack Davies has been convicted of the attempted murder of the attempted murder of Dr Sarandar Bhambra . Photo credit : Joel Goodman/LNP
    LNP_National_Action_JGO_02.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures . FILE PICTURE DATED 21/03/2015 of a " White Man March " demonstration organised by the Neo-Nazi group " National Action " as today (25th June 2015) National Action supporter Zack Davies has been convicted of the attempted murder of the attempted murder of Dr Sarandar Bhambra . Photo credit : Joel Goodman/LNP
    LNP_National_Action_JGO_01.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures . 21/03/2015 . Newcastle , UK . A Polish man at the demo is arrested for Incitement to Racial Hatred following the burning of an Israeli flag . Neo-Nazis and skinheads from across Europe organise a " White Man March " in Newcastle , under the banner of " National Action " . Photo credit : Joel Goodman/LNP
    LNP_White_Man_JGO_25.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures . 21/03/2015 . Newcastle , UK . A Polish man at the demo is arrested for Incitement to Racial Hatred following the burning of an Israeli flag . Neo-Nazis and skinheads from across Europe organise a " White Man March " in Newcastle , under the banner of " National Action " . Photo credit : Joel Goodman/LNP
    LNP_White_Man_JGO_24.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures . 21/03/2015 . Newcastle , UK . A man is arrested at the demo . Neo-Nazis and skinheads from across Europe organise a " White Man March " in Newcastle , under the banner of " National Action " . Photo credit : Joel Goodman/LNP
    LNP_White_Man_JGO_23.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures . 21/03/2015 . Newcastle , UK . A Polish man at the  is arrested for Incitement to Racial Hatred following the burning of an Israeli flag . Neo-Nazis and skinheads from across Europe organise a " White Man March " in Newcastle , under the banner of " National Action " . Photo credit : Joel Goodman/LNP
    LNP_White_Man_JGO_22.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures . 21/03/2015 . Newcastle , UK . A Polish man at the  is arrested for Incitement to Racial Hatred following the burning of an Israeli flag . Neo-Nazis and skinheads from across Europe organise a " White Man March " in Newcastle , under the banner of " National Action " . Photo credit : Joel Goodman/LNP
    LNP_White_Man_JGO_21.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures . 21/03/2015 . Newcastle , UK . A man is arrested for Incitement to Racial Hatred . Neo-Nazis and skinheads from across Europe organise a " White Man March " in Newcastle , under the banner of " National Action " , opposed by " North-East Anti-Fascists " . Photo credit : Joel Goodman/LNP
    LNP_White_Man_JGO_20.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures . 21/03/2015 . Newcastle , UK . A man performs a Nazi salute and cries " Sieg Heil " . Neo-Nazis and skinheads from across Europe organise a " White Man March " in Newcastle , under the banner of " National Action " . Photo credit : Joel Goodman/LNP
    LNP_White_Man_JGO_04.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures . 21/03/2015 . Newcastle , UK .Neo-Nazis and skinheads from across Europe organise a " White Man March " in Newcastle , under the banner of " National Action " . Photo credit : Joel Goodman/LNP
    LNP_White_Man_JGO_10.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures . 21/03/2015 . Newcastle , UK . The crowd perform Nazi salutes . Neo-Nazis and skinheads from across Europe organise a " White Man March " in Newcastle , under the banner of " National Action " . Photo credit : Joel Goodman/LNP
    LNP_White_Man_JGO_11.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures . 21/03/2015 . Newcastle , UK . A child in the crowd . Neo-Nazis and skinheads from across Europe organise a " White Man March " in Newcastle , under the banner of " National Action " . Photo credit : Joel Goodman/LNP
    LNP_White_Man_JGO_09.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures . 21/03/2015 . Newcastle , UK . The crowd perform Nazi salutes . Neo-Nazis and skinheads from across Europe organise a " White Man March " in Newcastle , under the banner of " National Action " . Photo credit : Joel Goodman/LNP
    LNP_White_Man_JGO_08.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures . 21/03/2015 . Newcastle , UK . The crowd perform Nazi salutes . Neo-Nazis and skinheads from across Europe organise a " White Man March " in Newcastle , under the banner of " National Action " . Photo credit : Joel Goodman/LNP
    LNP_White_Man_JGO_07.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures . 21/03/2015 . Newcastle , UK . Neo-Nazis and skinheads from across Europe organise a " White Man March " in Newcastle , under the banner of " National Action " . Photo credit : Joel Goodman/LNP
    LNP_White_Man_JGO_05.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures . 21/03/2015 . Newcastle , UK . Neo-Nazis and skinheads from across Europe organise a " White Man March " in Newcastle , under the banner of " National Action " . Photo credit : Joel Goodman/LNP
    LNP_White_Man_JGO_03.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures . 21/03/2015 . Newcastle , UK . Neo-Nazis and skinheads from across Europe organise a " White Man March " in Newcastle , under the banner of " National Action " . Photo credit : Joel Goodman/LNP
    LNP_White_Man_JGO_02.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures . 21/03/2015 . Newcastle , UK . Neo-Nazis and skinheads from across Europe organise a " White Man March " in Newcastle , under the banner of " National Action " . Photo credit : Joel Goodman/LNP
    LNP_White_Man_JGO_01.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures . 21/03/2015 . Newcastle , UK . Neo-Nazis and skinheads from across Europe organise a " White Man March " in Newcastle , under the banner of " National Action " . Photo credit : Joel Goodman/LNP
    LNP_White_Man_JGO_06.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures; 07/06/2020; Bristol, UK. People climb on the statue of slave trader Edward Colston before the statue is pulled down with a rope and thrown in Bristol Docks during a Black Lives Matter protest rally and march through the city centre in memory of George Floyd, a black man who was killed on May 25, 2020 in Minneapolis in the US by a white police officer kneeling on his neck for nearly 9 minutes. During the Bristol event the statue of Edward Colston was torn down and thrown into Bristol docks. Edward Colston (1636 – 1721) was a wealthy Bristol-born English merchant involved in the slave trade, a Member of Parliament and a philanthropist. He supported and endowed schools, almshouses, hospitals and churches in Bristol, London and elsewhere, and his name is commemorated in several Bristol landmarks, streets, three schools and the Colston bun. The killing of George Floyd has seen widespread protests in the US, the UK and other countries, despite the restrictions due to the Covid-19 coronavirus pandemic. People had been advised by the Bristol Mayor and Avon & Somerset's Chief Constable not to attend the event due due to the coronavirus pandemic and the need to maintain social distancing to avoid the spread of the virus. Photo credit: Mark Simmons/LNP.
    LNP_BLACK_LIVES_MATTERS_200607_MSI_0...JPG
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures; 13/06/2020; Bristol, UK. A black man appears to get punched and injured at an 'All Lives Matter' protest rally at the Cenotaph war memorial  in Bristol city centre. The injured man is then led away by police. The event comes nearly a week after the Black Lives Matter march when the statue of Bristol slave trader and philanthropist Edward Colston was pulled down from a plinth nearby and thrown into Bristol harbour. Despite the restrictions due to the Covid-19 coronavirus pandemic, Black Lives Matter protests have occurred across the world in memory of George Floyd, a black man who was killed on May 25, 2020 in Minneapolis in the US by a white police officer kneeling on his neck for nearly 9 minutes. Photo credit: Simon Chapman/LNP.
    LNP_ALL_LIVES_MATTER_200613_SCH_04.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures; 13/06/2020; Bristol, UK. A black man appears to get punched and injured at an 'All Lives Matter' protest rally at the Cenotaph war memorial  in Bristol city centre. The injured man is then led away by police. The event comes nearly a week after the Black Lives Matter march when the statue of Bristol slave trader and philanthropist Edward Colston was pulled down from a plinth nearby and thrown into Bristol harbour. Despite the restrictions due to the Covid-19 coronavirus pandemic, Black Lives Matter protests have occurred across the world in memory of George Floyd, a black man who was killed on May 25, 2020 in Minneapolis in the US by a white police officer kneeling on his neck for nearly 9 minutes. Photo credit: Simon Chapman/LNP.
    LNP_ALL_LIVES_MATTER_200613_SCH_01.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures; 13/06/2020; Bristol, UK. A black man appears to get punched and injured at an 'All Lives Matter' protest rally at the Cenotaph war memorial  in Bristol city centre. The injured man is then led away by police. The event comes nearly a week after the Black Lives Matter march when the statue of Bristol slave trader and philanthropist Edward Colston was pulled down from a plinth nearby and thrown into Bristol harbour. Despite the restrictions due to the Covid-19 coronavirus pandemic, Black Lives Matter protests have occurred across the world in memory of George Floyd, a black man who was killed on May 25, 2020 in Minneapolis in the US by a white police officer kneeling on his neck for nearly 9 minutes. Photo credit: Simon Chapman/LNP.
    LNP_ALL_LIVES_MATTER_200613_SCH_02.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures; 13/06/2020; Bristol, UK. A black man appears to get punched and injured at an 'All Lives Matter' protest rally at the Cenotaph war memorial  in Bristol city centre. The injured man is then led away by police. The event comes nearly a week after the Black Lives Matter march when the statue of Bristol slave trader and philanthropist Edward Colston was pulled down from a plinth nearby and thrown into Bristol harbour. Despite the restrictions due to the Covid-19 coronavirus pandemic, Black Lives Matter protests have occurred across the world in memory of George Floyd, a black man who was killed on May 25, 2020 in Minneapolis in the US by a white police officer kneeling on his neck for nearly 9 minutes. Photo credit: Simon Chapman/LNP.
    LNP_ALL_LIVES_MATTER_200613_SCH_09.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures; 13/06/2020; Bristol, UK. A black man appears to get punched and injured at an 'All Lives Matter' protest rally at the Cenotaph war memorial  in Bristol city centre. The injured man is then led away by police. The event comes nearly a week after the Black Lives Matter march when the statue of Bristol slave trader and philanthropist Edward Colston was pulled down from a plinth nearby and thrown into Bristol harbour. Despite the restrictions due to the Covid-19 coronavirus pandemic, Black Lives Matter protests have occurred across the world in memory of George Floyd, a black man who was killed on May 25, 2020 in Minneapolis in the US by a white police officer kneeling on his neck for nearly 9 minutes. Photo credit: Simon Chapman/LNP.
    LNP_ALL_LIVES_MATTER_200613_SCH_05.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures; 13/06/2020; Bristol, UK. A black man appears to get punched and injured at an 'All Lives Matter' protest rally at the Cenotaph war memorial  in Bristol city centre. The injured man is then led away by police. The event comes nearly a week after the Black Lives Matter march when the statue of Bristol slave trader and philanthropist Edward Colston was pulled down from a plinth nearby and thrown into Bristol harbour. Despite the restrictions due to the Covid-19 coronavirus pandemic, Black Lives Matter protests have occurred across the world in memory of George Floyd, a black man who was killed on May 25, 2020 in Minneapolis in the US by a white police officer kneeling on his neck for nearly 9 minutes. Photo credit: Simon Chapman/LNP.
    LNP_ALL_LIVES_MATTER_200613_SCH_03.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures; 13/06/2020; Bristol, UK. Protestors at an 'All Lives Matter' rally stand guard at the Cenotaph war memorial in Bristol city centre, alongside bikers. At the event there were scuffles and a black man appeared to get punched in the face and was led away by police. The 'All Lives Matter' rally comes nearly a week after the Black Lives Matter march when the statue of Bristol slave trader and philanthropist Edward Colston was pulled down from a plinth nearby and thrown into Bristol harbour. Despite the restrictions due to the Covid-19 coronavirus pandemic, Black Lives Matter protests have occurred across the world in memory of George Floyd, a black man who was killed on May 25, 2020 in Minneapolis in the US by a white police officer kneeling on his neck for nearly 9 minutes. Photo credit: Simon Chapman/LNP.
    LNP_ALL_LIVES_MATTER_200613_SCH_41.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures; 13/06/2020; Bristol, UK. Protestors at an 'All Lives Matter' rally stand guard at the Cenotaph war memorial in Bristol city centre, alongside bikers. At the event there were scuffles and a black man appeared to get punched in the face and was led away by police. The 'All Lives Matter' rally comes nearly a week after the Black Lives Matter march when the statue of Bristol slave trader and philanthropist Edward Colston was pulled down from a plinth nearby and thrown into Bristol harbour. Despite the restrictions due to the Covid-19 coronavirus pandemic, Black Lives Matter protests have occurred across the world in memory of George Floyd, a black man who was killed on May 25, 2020 in Minneapolis in the US by a white police officer kneeling on his neck for nearly 9 minutes. Photo credit: Simon Chapman/LNP.
    LNP_ALL_LIVES_MATTER_200613_SCH_40.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures; 13/06/2020; Bristol, UK. Protestors at an 'All Lives Matter' rally stand guard at the Cenotaph war memorial in Bristol city centre, alongside bikers. At the event there were scuffles and a black man appeared to get punched in the face and was led away by police. The 'All Lives Matter' rally comes nearly a week after the Black Lives Matter march when the statue of Bristol slave trader and philanthropist Edward Colston was pulled down from a plinth nearby and thrown into Bristol harbour. Despite the restrictions due to the Covid-19 coronavirus pandemic, Black Lives Matter protests have occurred across the world in memory of George Floyd, a black man who was killed on May 25, 2020 in Minneapolis in the US by a white police officer kneeling on his neck for nearly 9 minutes. Photo credit: Simon Chapman/LNP.
    LNP_ALL_LIVES_MATTER_200613_SCH_36.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures; 13/06/2020; Bristol, UK. Protestors at an 'All Lives Matter' rally stand guard at the Cenotaph war memorial in Bristol city centre, alongside bikers. At the event there were scuffles and a black man appeared to get punched in the face and was led away by police. The 'All Lives Matter' rally comes nearly a week after the Black Lives Matter march when the statue of Bristol slave trader and philanthropist Edward Colston was pulled down from a plinth nearby and thrown into Bristol harbour. Despite the restrictions due to the Covid-19 coronavirus pandemic, Black Lives Matter protests have occurred across the world in memory of George Floyd, a black man who was killed on May 25, 2020 in Minneapolis in the US by a white police officer kneeling on his neck for nearly 9 minutes. Photo credit: Simon Chapman/LNP.
    LNP_ALL_LIVES_MATTER_200613_SCH_34.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures; 13/06/2020; Bristol, UK. A small counter protest is seen in opposition to an 'All Lives Matter' rally at the Cenotaph war memorial in Bristol city centre. Earlier at the event there were scuffles and a black man appeared to get punched in the face and was led away by police. The 'All Lives Matter' rally comes nearly a week after the Black Lives Matter march when the statue of Bristol slave trader and philanthropist Edward Colston was pulled down from a plinth nearby and thrown into Bristol harbour. Despite the restrictions due to the Covid-19 coronavirus pandemic, Black Lives Matter protests have occurred across the world in memory of George Floyd, a black man who was killed on May 25, 2020 in Minneapolis in the US by a white police officer kneeling on his neck for nearly 9 minutes. Photo credit: Simon Chapman/LNP.
    LNP_ALL_LIVES_MATTER_200613_SCH_30.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures; 13/06/2020; Bristol, UK. A woman on a bicycle appears to remonstrate with protestors at an 'All Lives Matter' protest rally at the Cenotaph war memorial in Bristol city centre. Police pulled her away from protestors and bikers who were leaving the plaza. Earlier at the event there were scuffles and a black man appeared to get punched in the face. The event comes nearly a week after the Black Lives Matter march when the statue of Bristol slave trader and philanthropist Edward Colston was pulled down from a plinth nearby and thrown into Bristol harbour. Despite the restrictions due to the Covid-19 coronavirus pandemic, Black Lives Matter protests have occurred across the world in memory of George Floyd, a black man who was killed on May 25, 2020 in Minneapolis in the US by a white police officer kneeling on his neck for nearly 9 minutes. Photo credit: Simon Chapman/LNP.
    LNP_ALL_LIVES_MATTER_200613_SCH_24.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures; 13/06/2020; Bristol, UK. A woman on a bicycle appears to remonstrate with protestors at an 'All Lives Matter' protest rally at the Cenotaph war memorial in Bristol city centre. Police pulled her away from protestors and bikers who were leaving the plaza. Earlier at the event there were scuffles and a black man appeared to get punched in the face. The event comes nearly a week after the Black Lives Matter march when the statue of Bristol slave trader and philanthropist Edward Colston was pulled down from a plinth nearby and thrown into Bristol harbour. Despite the restrictions due to the Covid-19 coronavirus pandemic, Black Lives Matter protests have occurred across the world in memory of George Floyd, a black man who was killed on May 25, 2020 in Minneapolis in the US by a white police officer kneeling on his neck for nearly 9 minutes. Photo credit: Simon Chapman/LNP.
    LNP_ALL_LIVES_MATTER_200613_SCH_23.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures; 13/06/2020; Bristol, UK. A woman on a bicycle appears to remonstrate with protestors at an 'All Lives Matter' protest rally at the Cenotaph war memorial in Bristol city centre. Police pulled her away from protestors and bikers who were leaving the plaza. Earlier at the event there were scuffles and a black man appeared to get punched in the face. The event comes nearly a week after the Black Lives Matter march when the statue of Bristol slave trader and philanthropist Edward Colston was pulled down from a plinth nearby and thrown into Bristol harbour. Despite the restrictions due to the Covid-19 coronavirus pandemic, Black Lives Matter protests have occurred across the world in memory of George Floyd, a black man who was killed on May 25, 2020 in Minneapolis in the US by a white police officer kneeling on his neck for nearly 9 minutes. Photo credit: Simon Chapman/LNP.
    LNP_ALL_LIVES_MATTER_200613_SCH_22.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures; 13/06/2020; Bristol, UK. A woman on a bicycle appears to remonstrate with protestors at an 'All Lives Matter' protest rally at the Cenotaph war memorial in Bristol city centre. Police pulled her away from protestors and bikers who were leaving the plaza. Earlier at the event there were scuffles and a black man appeared to get punched in the face. The event comes nearly a week after the Black Lives Matter march when the statue of Bristol slave trader and philanthropist Edward Colston was pulled down from a plinth nearby and thrown into Bristol harbour. Despite the restrictions due to the Covid-19 coronavirus pandemic, Black Lives Matter protests have occurred across the world in memory of George Floyd, a black man who was killed on May 25, 2020 in Minneapolis in the US by a white police officer kneeling on his neck for nearly 9 minutes. Photo credit: Simon Chapman/LNP.
    LNP_ALL_LIVES_MATTER_200613_SCH_20.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures; 06/09/2020; Bristol, UK. Four people including LIZA BILAL (third from left), one of the organisers of an All Black Lives UK "Comeback March" and rally through Bristol city centre, pose for photos before the start of the march. Organisers of the Bristol protest have encouraged people to bring PPE (personal protective equipment). The All Black Lives group is youth-led and is separate to the Black Lives Matter movement, but both are united in striving for racial equality. All Black Lives UK are holding 'Comeback Marches' at several locations across the country today, including London, Bristol and Manchester, and have issued a series of demands: to end racial discrimination in the criminal justice, reform the education system, end racial health disparities, implement review recommendations, and stand with the Black community in the US. In Bristol the statue of slave trader Edward Colston was pulled down with ropes and thrown into Bristol docks on 07 June during an All Black Lives/Black Lives Matter protest that made headlines around the world. A month later in July a new sculpture titled "A Surge of Power (Jen Reid) 2020" by artist Marc Quinn was put up without permission from Bristol City council. Jen Reid was at the previous protest on 07 June which was in protest for the memory of George Floyd, a black man who was killed on May 25, 2020 in Minneapolis in the US by a white police officer kneeling on his neck for nearly 9 minutes. The killing of George Floyd has seen widespread protests in the US, the UK and other countries. Photo credit: Simon Chapman/LNP.
    LNP_ALL_BLACK_LIVES_200906_SCH_33.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures; 06/09/2020; Bristol, UK. LIZA BILAL (with megaphone), one of the organisers of an All Black Lives UK "Comeback March" and rally through Bristol city centre announces the start of the march. Organisers of the Bristol protest have encouraged people to bring PPE (personal protective equipment). The All Black Lives group is youth-led and is separate to the Black Lives Matter movement, but both are united in striving for racial equality. All Black Lives UK are holding 'Comeback Marches' at several locations across the country today, including London, Bristol and Manchester, and have issued a series of demands: to end racial discrimination in the criminal justice, reform the education system, end racial health disparities, implement review recommendations, and stand with the Black community in the US. In Bristol the statue of slave trader Edward Colston was pulled down with ropes and thrown into Bristol docks on 07 June during an All Black Lives/Black Lives Matter protest that made headlines around the world. A month later in July a new sculpture titled "A Surge of Power (Jen Reid) 2020" by artist Marc Quinn was put up without permission from Bristol City council. Jen Reid was at the previous protest on 07 June which was in protest for the memory of George Floyd, a black man who was killed on May 25, 2020 in Minneapolis in the US by a white police officer kneeling on his neck for nearly 9 minutes. The killing of George Floyd has seen widespread protests in the US, the UK and other countries. Photo credit: Simon Chapman/LNP.
    LNP_ALL_BLACK_LIVES_200906_SCH_31.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures; 06/09/2020; Bristol, UK. An All Black Lives UK "Comeback March" and rally takes place through Bristol city centre. Organisers of the Bristol protest have encouraged people to bring PPE (personal protective equipment). The All Black Lives group is youth-led and is separate to the Black Lives Matter movement, but both are united in striving for racial equality. All Black Lives UK are holding 'Comeback Marches' at several locations across the country today, including London, Bristol and Manchester, and have issued a series of demands: to end racial discrimination in the criminal justice, reform the education system, end racial health disparities, implement review recommendations, and stand with the Black community in the US. In Bristol the statue of slave trader Edward Colston was pulled down with ropes and thrown into Bristol docks on 07 June during an All Black Lives/Black Lives Matter protest that made headlines around the world. A month later in July a new sculpture titled "A Surge of Power (Jen Reid) 2020" by artist Marc Quinn was put up without permission from Bristol City council. Jen Reid was at the previous protest on 07 June which was in protest for the memory of George Floyd, a black man who was killed on May 25, 2020 in Minneapolis in the US by a white police officer kneeling on his neck for nearly 9 minutes. The killing of George Floyd has seen widespread protests in the US, the UK and other countries. Photo credit: Simon Chapman/LNP.
    LNP_ALL_BLACK_LIVES_200906_SCH_34.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures; 06/09/2020; Bristol, UK. An All Black Lives UK "Comeback March" and rally takes place through Bristol city centre. Organisers of the Bristol protest have encouraged people to bring PPE (personal protective equipment). The All Black Lives group is youth-led and is separate to the Black Lives Matter movement, but both are united in striving for racial equality. All Black Lives UK are holding 'Comeback Marches' at several locations across the country today, including London, Bristol and Manchester, and have issued a series of demands: to end racial discrimination in the criminal justice, reform the education system, end racial health disparities, implement review recommendations, and stand with the Black community in the US. In Bristol the statue of slave trader Edward Colston was pulled down with ropes and thrown into Bristol docks on 07 June during an All Black Lives/Black Lives Matter protest that made headlines around the world. A month later in July a new sculpture titled "A Surge of Power (Jen Reid) 2020" by artist Marc Quinn was put up without permission from Bristol City council. Jen Reid was at the previous protest on 07 June which was in protest for the memory of George Floyd, a black man who was killed on May 25, 2020 in Minneapolis in the US by a white police officer kneeling on his neck for nearly 9 minutes. The killing of George Floyd has seen widespread protests in the US, the UK and other countries. Photo credit: Simon Chapman/LNP.
    LNP_ALL_BLACK_LIVES_200906_SCH_30.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures; 06/09/2020; Bristol, UK. An All Black Lives UK "Comeback March" and rally takes place through Bristol city centre. Organisers of the Bristol protest have encouraged people to bring PPE (personal protective equipment). The All Black Lives group is youth-led and is separate to the Black Lives Matter movement, but both are united in striving for racial equality. All Black Lives UK are holding 'Comeback Marches' at several locations across the country today, including London, Bristol and Manchester, and have issued a series of demands: to end racial discrimination in the criminal justice, reform the education system, end racial health disparities, implement review recommendations, and stand with the Black community in the US. In Bristol the statue of slave trader Edward Colston was pulled down with ropes and thrown into Bristol docks on 07 June during an All Black Lives/Black Lives Matter protest that made headlines around the world. A month later in July a new sculpture titled "A Surge of Power (Jen Reid) 2020" by artist Marc Quinn was put up without permission from Bristol City council. Jen Reid was at the previous protest on 07 June which was in protest for the memory of George Floyd, a black man who was killed on May 25, 2020 in Minneapolis in the US by a white police officer kneeling on his neck for nearly 9 minutes. The killing of George Floyd has seen widespread protests in the US, the UK and other countries. Photo credit: Simon Chapman/LNP.
    LNP_ALL_BLACK_LIVES_200906_SCH_29.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures; 06/09/2020; Bristol, UK. An All Black Lives UK "Comeback March" and rally takes place through Bristol city centre. Organisers of the Bristol protest have encouraged people to bring PPE (personal protective equipment). The All Black Lives group is youth-led and is separate to the Black Lives Matter movement, but both are united in striving for racial equality. All Black Lives UK are holding 'Comeback Marches' at several locations across the country today, including London, Bristol and Manchester, and have issued a series of demands: to end racial discrimination in the criminal justice, reform the education system, end racial health disparities, implement review recommendations, and stand with the Black community in the US. In Bristol the statue of slave trader Edward Colston was pulled down with ropes and thrown into Bristol docks on 07 June during an All Black Lives/Black Lives Matter protest that made headlines around the world. A month later in July a new sculpture titled "A Surge of Power (Jen Reid) 2020" by artist Marc Quinn was put up without permission from Bristol City council. Jen Reid was at the previous protest on 07 June which was in protest for the memory of George Floyd, a black man who was killed on May 25, 2020 in Minneapolis in the US by a white police officer kneeling on his neck for nearly 9 minutes. The killing of George Floyd has seen widespread protests in the US, the UK and other countries. Photo credit: Simon Chapman/LNP.
    LNP_ALL_BLACK_LIVES_200906_SCH_27.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures; 06/09/2020; Bristol, UK. An All Black Lives UK "Comeback March" and rally takes place through Bristol city centre. Organisers of the Bristol protest have encouraged people to bring PPE (personal protective equipment). The All Black Lives group is youth-led and is separate to the Black Lives Matter movement, but both are united in striving for racial equality. All Black Lives UK are holding 'Comeback Marches' at several locations across the country today, including London, Bristol and Manchester, and have issued a series of demands: to end racial discrimination in the criminal justice, reform the education system, end racial health disparities, implement review recommendations, and stand with the Black community in the US. In Bristol the statue of slave trader Edward Colston was pulled down with ropes and thrown into Bristol docks on 07 June during an All Black Lives/Black Lives Matter protest that made headlines around the world. A month later in July a new sculpture titled "A Surge of Power (Jen Reid) 2020" by artist Marc Quinn was put up without permission from Bristol City council. Jen Reid was at the previous protest on 07 June which was in protest for the memory of George Floyd, a black man who was killed on May 25, 2020 in Minneapolis in the US by a white police officer kneeling on his neck for nearly 9 minutes. The killing of George Floyd has seen widespread protests in the US, the UK and other countries. Photo credit: Simon Chapman/LNP.
    LNP_ALL_BLACK_LIVES_200906_SCH_22.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures; 06/09/2020; Bristol, UK. An All Black Lives UK "Comeback March" and rally takes place through Bristol city centre. Organisers of the Bristol protest have encouraged people to bring PPE (personal protective equipment). The All Black Lives group is youth-led and is separate to the Black Lives Matter movement, but both are united in striving for racial equality. All Black Lives UK are holding 'Comeback Marches' at several locations across the country today, including London, Bristol and Manchester, and have issued a series of demands: to end racial discrimination in the criminal justice, reform the education system, end racial health disparities, implement review recommendations, and stand with the Black community in the US. In Bristol the statue of slave trader Edward Colston was pulled down with ropes and thrown into Bristol docks on 07 June during an All Black Lives/Black Lives Matter protest that made headlines around the world. A month later in July a new sculpture titled "A Surge of Power (Jen Reid) 2020" by artist Marc Quinn was put up without permission from Bristol City council. Jen Reid was at the previous protest on 07 June which was in protest for the memory of George Floyd, a black man who was killed on May 25, 2020 in Minneapolis in the US by a white police officer kneeling on his neck for nearly 9 minutes. The killing of George Floyd has seen widespread protests in the US, the UK and other countries. Photo credit: Simon Chapman/LNP.
    LNP_ALL_BLACK_LIVES_200906_SCH_21.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures; 06/09/2020; Bristol, UK. An All Black Lives UK "Comeback March" and rally takes place through Bristol city centre. Organisers of the Bristol protest have encouraged people to bring PPE (personal protective equipment). The All Black Lives group is youth-led and is separate to the Black Lives Matter movement, but both are united in striving for racial equality. All Black Lives UK are holding 'Comeback Marches' at several locations across the country today, including London, Bristol and Manchester, and have issued a series of demands: to end racial discrimination in the criminal justice, reform the education system, end racial health disparities, implement review recommendations, and stand with the Black community in the US. In Bristol the statue of slave trader Edward Colston was pulled down with ropes and thrown into Bristol docks on 07 June during an All Black Lives/Black Lives Matter protest that made headlines around the world. A month later in July a new sculpture titled "A Surge of Power (Jen Reid) 2020" by artist Marc Quinn was put up without permission from Bristol City council. Jen Reid was at the previous protest on 07 June which was in protest for the memory of George Floyd, a black man who was killed on May 25, 2020 in Minneapolis in the US by a white police officer kneeling on his neck for nearly 9 minutes. The killing of George Floyd has seen widespread protests in the US, the UK and other countries. Photo credit: Simon Chapman/LNP.
    LNP_ALL_BLACK_LIVES_200906_SCH_20.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures; 06/09/2020; Bristol, UK. An All Black Lives UK "Comeback March" and rally takes place through Bristol city centre. Organisers of the Bristol protest have encouraged people to bring PPE (personal protective equipment). The All Black Lives group is youth-led and is separate to the Black Lives Matter movement, but both are united in striving for racial equality. All Black Lives UK are holding 'Comeback Marches' at several locations across the country today, including London, Bristol and Manchester, and have issued a series of demands: to end racial discrimination in the criminal justice, reform the education system, end racial health disparities, implement review recommendations, and stand with the Black community in the US. In Bristol the statue of slave trader Edward Colston was pulled down with ropes and thrown into Bristol docks on 07 June during an All Black Lives/Black Lives Matter protest that made headlines around the world. A month later in July a new sculpture titled "A Surge of Power (Jen Reid) 2020" by artist Marc Quinn was put up without permission from Bristol City council. Jen Reid was at the previous protest on 07 June which was in protest for the memory of George Floyd, a black man who was killed on May 25, 2020 in Minneapolis in the US by a white police officer kneeling on his neck for nearly 9 minutes. The killing of George Floyd has seen widespread protests in the US, the UK and other countries. Photo credit: Simon Chapman/LNP.
    LNP_ALL_BLACK_LIVES_200906_SCH_19.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures; 06/09/2020; Bristol, UK. An All Black Lives UK "Comeback March" and rally takes place through Bristol city centre. Organisers of the Bristol protest have encouraged people to bring PPE (personal protective equipment). The All Black Lives group is youth-led and is separate to the Black Lives Matter movement, but both are united in striving for racial equality. All Black Lives UK are holding 'Comeback Marches' at several locations across the country today, including London, Bristol and Manchester, and have issued a series of demands: to end racial discrimination in the criminal justice, reform the education system, end racial health disparities, implement review recommendations, and stand with the Black community in the US. In Bristol the statue of slave trader Edward Colston was pulled down with ropes and thrown into Bristol docks on 07 June during an All Black Lives/Black Lives Matter protest that made headlines around the world. A month later in July a new sculpture titled "A Surge of Power (Jen Reid) 2020" by artist Marc Quinn was put up without permission from Bristol City council. Jen Reid was at the previous protest on 07 June which was in protest for the memory of George Floyd, a black man who was killed on May 25, 2020 in Minneapolis in the US by a white police officer kneeling on his neck for nearly 9 minutes. The killing of George Floyd has seen widespread protests in the US, the UK and other countries. Photo credit: Simon Chapman/LNP.
    LNP_ALL_BLACK_LIVES_200906_SCH_16.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures; 06/09/2020; Bristol, UK. An All Black Lives UK "Comeback March" and rally takes place through Bristol city centre. Organisers of the Bristol protest have encouraged people to bring PPE (personal protective equipment). The All Black Lives group is youth-led and is separate to the Black Lives Matter movement, but both are united in striving for racial equality. All Black Lives UK are holding 'Comeback Marches' at several locations across the country today, including London, Bristol and Manchester, and have issued a series of demands: to end racial discrimination in the criminal justice, reform the education system, end racial health disparities, implement review recommendations, and stand with the Black community in the US. In Bristol the statue of slave trader Edward Colston was pulled down with ropes and thrown into Bristol docks on 07 June during an All Black Lives/Black Lives Matter protest that made headlines around the world. A month later in July a new sculpture titled "A Surge of Power (Jen Reid) 2020" by artist Marc Quinn was put up without permission from Bristol City council. Jen Reid was at the previous protest on 07 June which was in protest for the memory of George Floyd, a black man who was killed on May 25, 2020 in Minneapolis in the US by a white police officer kneeling on his neck for nearly 9 minutes. The killing of George Floyd has seen widespread protests in the US, the UK and other countries. Photo credit: Simon Chapman/LNP.
    LNP_ALL_BLACK_LIVES_200906_SCH_15.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures; 06/09/2020; Bristol, UK. An All Black Lives UK "Comeback March" and rally takes place through Bristol city centre. Organisers of the Bristol protest have encouraged people to bring PPE (personal protective equipment). The All Black Lives group is youth-led and is separate to the Black Lives Matter movement, but both are united in striving for racial equality. All Black Lives UK are holding 'Comeback Marches' at several locations across the country today, including London, Bristol and Manchester, and have issued a series of demands: to end racial discrimination in the criminal justice, reform the education system, end racial health disparities, implement review recommendations, and stand with the Black community in the US. In Bristol the statue of slave trader Edward Colston was pulled down with ropes and thrown into Bristol docks on 07 June during an All Black Lives/Black Lives Matter protest that made headlines around the world. A month later in July a new sculpture titled "A Surge of Power (Jen Reid) 2020" by artist Marc Quinn was put up without permission from Bristol City council. Jen Reid was at the previous protest on 07 June which was in protest for the memory of George Floyd, a black man who was killed on May 25, 2020 in Minneapolis in the US by a white police officer kneeling on his neck for nearly 9 minutes. The killing of George Floyd has seen widespread protests in the US, the UK and other countries. Photo credit: Simon Chapman/LNP.
    LNP_ALL_BLACK_LIVES_200906_SCH_13.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures; 06/09/2020; Bristol, UK. An All Black Lives UK "Comeback March" and rally takes place through Bristol city centre. Organisers of the Bristol protest have encouraged people to bring PPE (personal protective equipment). The All Black Lives group is youth-led and is separate to the Black Lives Matter movement, but both are united in striving for racial equality. All Black Lives UK are holding 'Comeback Marches' at several locations across the country today, including London, Bristol and Manchester, and have issued a series of demands: to end racial discrimination in the criminal justice, reform the education system, end racial health disparities, implement review recommendations, and stand with the Black community in the US. In Bristol the statue of slave trader Edward Colston was pulled down with ropes and thrown into Bristol docks on 07 June during an All Black Lives/Black Lives Matter protest that made headlines around the world. A month later in July a new sculpture titled "A Surge of Power (Jen Reid) 2020" by artist Marc Quinn was put up without permission from Bristol City council. Jen Reid was at the previous protest on 07 June which was in protest for the memory of George Floyd, a black man who was killed on May 25, 2020 in Minneapolis in the US by a white police officer kneeling on his neck for nearly 9 minutes. The killing of George Floyd has seen widespread protests in the US, the UK and other countries. Photo credit: Simon Chapman/LNP.
    LNP_ALL_BLACK_LIVES_200906_SCH_12.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures; 06/09/2020; Bristol, UK. An All Black Lives UK "Comeback March" and rally takes place through Bristol city centre. Organisers of the Bristol protest have encouraged people to bring PPE (personal protective equipment). The All Black Lives group is youth-led and is separate to the Black Lives Matter movement, but both are united in striving for racial equality. All Black Lives UK are holding 'Comeback Marches' at several locations across the country today, including London, Bristol and Manchester, and have issued a series of demands: to end racial discrimination in the criminal justice, reform the education system, end racial health disparities, implement review recommendations, and stand with the Black community in the US. In Bristol the statue of slave trader Edward Colston was pulled down with ropes and thrown into Bristol docks on 07 June during an All Black Lives/Black Lives Matter protest that made headlines around the world. A month later in July a new sculpture titled "A Surge of Power (Jen Reid) 2020" by artist Marc Quinn was put up without permission from Bristol City council. Jen Reid was at the previous protest on 07 June which was in protest for the memory of George Floyd, a black man who was killed on May 25, 2020 in Minneapolis in the US by a white police officer kneeling on his neck for nearly 9 minutes. The killing of George Floyd has seen widespread protests in the US, the UK and other countries. Photo credit: Simon Chapman/LNP.
    LNP_ALL_BLACK_LIVES_200906_SCH_11.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures; 06/09/2020; Bristol, UK. An All Black Lives UK "Comeback March" and rally takes place through Bristol city centre. Organisers of the Bristol protest have encouraged people to bring PPE (personal protective equipment). The All Black Lives group is youth-led and is separate to the Black Lives Matter movement, but both are united in striving for racial equality. All Black Lives UK are holding 'Comeback Marches' at several locations across the country today, including London, Bristol and Manchester, and have issued a series of demands: to end racial discrimination in the criminal justice, reform the education system, end racial health disparities, implement review recommendations, and stand with the Black community in the US. In Bristol the statue of slave trader Edward Colston was pulled down with ropes and thrown into Bristol docks on 07 June during an All Black Lives/Black Lives Matter protest that made headlines around the world. A month later in July a new sculpture titled "A Surge of Power (Jen Reid) 2020" by artist Marc Quinn was put up without permission from Bristol City council. Jen Reid was at the previous protest on 07 June which was in protest for the memory of George Floyd, a black man who was killed on May 25, 2020 in Minneapolis in the US by a white police officer kneeling on his neck for nearly 9 minutes. The killing of George Floyd has seen widespread protests in the US, the UK and other countries. Photo credit: Simon Chapman/LNP.
    LNP_ALL_BLACK_LIVES_200906_SCH_08.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures; 06/09/2020; Bristol, UK. An All Black Lives UK "Comeback March" and rally takes place through Bristol city centre. Organisers of the Bristol protest have encouraged people to bring PPE (personal protective equipment). The All Black Lives group is youth-led and is separate to the Black Lives Matter movement, but both are united in striving for racial equality. All Black Lives UK are holding 'Comeback Marches' at several locations across the country today, including London, Bristol and Manchester, and have issued a series of demands: to end racial discrimination in the criminal justice, reform the education system, end racial health disparities, implement review recommendations, and stand with the Black community in the US. In Bristol the statue of slave trader Edward Colston was pulled down with ropes and thrown into Bristol docks on 07 June during an All Black Lives/Black Lives Matter protest that made headlines around the world. A month later in July a new sculpture titled "A Surge of Power (Jen Reid) 2020" by artist Marc Quinn was put up without permission from Bristol City council. Jen Reid was at the previous protest on 07 June which was in protest for the memory of George Floyd, a black man who was killed on May 25, 2020 in Minneapolis in the US by a white police officer kneeling on his neck for nearly 9 minutes. The killing of George Floyd has seen widespread protests in the US, the UK and other countries. Photo credit: Simon Chapman/LNP.
    LNP_ALL_BLACK_LIVES_200906_SCH_06.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures; 06/09/2020; Bristol, UK. GRANTLEY MARSHALL (aka Daddy G from Massive Attack) is seen at an All Black Lives UK "Comeback March" and rally takes place through Bristol city centre. Organisers of the Bristol protest have encouraged people to bring PPE (personal protective equipment). The All Black Lives group is youth-led and is separate to the Black Lives Matter movement, but both are united in striving for racial equality. All Black Lives UK are holding 'Comeback Marches' at several locations across the country today, including London, Bristol and Manchester, and have issued a series of demands: to end racial discrimination in the criminal justice, reform the education system, end racial health disparities, implement review recommendations, and stand with the Black community in the US. In Bristol the statue of slave trader Edward Colston was pulled down with ropes and thrown into Bristol docks on 07 June during an All Black Lives/Black Lives Matter protest that made headlines around the world. A month later in July a new sculpture titled "A Surge of Power (Jen Reid) 2020" by artist Marc Quinn was put up without permission from Bristol City council. Jen Reid was at the previous protest on 07 June which was in protest for the memory of George Floyd, a black man who was killed on May 25, 2020 in Minneapolis in the US by a white police officer kneeling on his neck for nearly 9 minutes. The killing of George Floyd has seen widespread protests in the US, the UK and other countries. Photo credit: Simon Chapman/LNP.
    LNP_ALL_BLACK_LIVES_200906_SCH_03.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures; 07/06/2020; Bristol, UK. People climb on the statue of slave trader Edward Colston before the statue is pulled down with a rope and thrown in Bristol Docks during a Black Lives Matter protest rally and march through the city centre in memory of George Floyd, a black man who was killed on May 25, 2020 in Minneapolis in the US by a white police officer kneeling on his neck for nearly 9 minutes. During the Bristol event the statue of Edward Colston was torn down and thrown into Bristol docks. Edward Colston (1636 – 1721) was a wealthy Bristol-born English merchant involved in the slave trade, a Member of Parliament and a philanthropist. He supported and endowed schools, almshouses, hospitals and churches in Bristol, London and elsewhere, and his name is commemorated in several Bristol landmarks, streets, three schools and the Colston bun. The killing of George Floyd has seen widespread protests in the US, the UK and other countries, despite the restrictions due to the Covid-19 coronavirus pandemic. People had been advised by the Bristol Mayor and Avon & Somerset's Chief Constable not to attend the event due due to the coronavirus pandemic and the need to maintain social distancing to avoid the spread of the virus. Photo credit: Mark Simmons/LNP.
    LNP_BLACK_LIVES_MATTERS_200607_MSI_1...jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures; 07/06/2020; Bristol, UK. People climb on the statue of slave trader Edward Colston before the statue is pulled down with a rope and thrown in Bristol Docks during a Black Lives Matter protest rally and march through the city centre in memory of George Floyd, a black man who was killed on May 25, 2020 in Minneapolis in the US by a white police officer kneeling on his neck for nearly 9 minutes. During the Bristol event the statue of Edward Colston was torn down and thrown into Bristol docks. Edward Colston (1636 – 1721) was a wealthy Bristol-born English merchant involved in the slave trade, a Member of Parliament and a philanthropist. He supported and endowed schools, almshouses, hospitals and churches in Bristol, London and elsewhere, and his name is commemorated in several Bristol landmarks, streets, three schools and the Colston bun. The killing of George Floyd has seen widespread protests in the US, the UK and other countries, despite the restrictions due to the Covid-19 coronavirus pandemic. People had been advised by the Bristol Mayor and Avon & Somerset's Chief Constable not to attend the event due due to the coronavirus pandemic and the need to maintain social distancing to avoid the spread of the virus. Photo credit: Mark Simmons/LNP.
    LNP_BLACK_LIVES_MATTERS_200607_MSI_1...jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures; 07/06/2020; Bristol, UK. People climb on the statue of slave trader Edward Colston before the statue is pulled down with a rope and thrown in Bristol Docks during a Black Lives Matter protest rally and march through the city centre in memory of George Floyd, a black man who was killed on May 25, 2020 in Minneapolis in the US by a white police officer kneeling on his neck for nearly 9 minutes. During the Bristol event the statue of Edward Colston was torn down and thrown into Bristol docks. Edward Colston (1636 – 1721) was a wealthy Bristol-born English merchant involved in the slave trade, a Member of Parliament and a philanthropist. He supported and endowed schools, almshouses, hospitals and churches in Bristol, London and elsewhere, and his name is commemorated in several Bristol landmarks, streets, three schools and the Colston bun. The killing of George Floyd has seen widespread protests in the US, the UK and other countries, despite the restrictions due to the Covid-19 coronavirus pandemic. People had been advised by the Bristol Mayor and Avon & Somerset's Chief Constable not to attend the event due due to the coronavirus pandemic and the need to maintain social distancing to avoid the spread of the virus. Photo credit: Mark Simmons/LNP.
    LNP_BLACK_LIVES_MATTERS_200607_MSI_1...jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures; 07/06/2020; Bristol, UK. People climb on the statue of slave trader Edward Colston before the statue is pulled down with a rope and thrown in Bristol Docks during a Black Lives Matter protest rally and march through the city centre in memory of George Floyd, a black man who was killed on May 25, 2020 in Minneapolis in the US by a white police officer kneeling on his neck for nearly 9 minutes. During the Bristol event the statue of Edward Colston was torn down and thrown into Bristol docks. Edward Colston (1636 – 1721) was a wealthy Bristol-born English merchant involved in the slave trade, a Member of Parliament and a philanthropist. He supported and endowed schools, almshouses, hospitals and churches in Bristol, London and elsewhere, and his name is commemorated in several Bristol landmarks, streets, three schools and the Colston bun. The killing of George Floyd has seen widespread protests in the US, the UK and other countries, despite the restrictions due to the Covid-19 coronavirus pandemic. People had been advised by the Bristol Mayor and Avon & Somerset's Chief Constable not to attend the event due due to the coronavirus pandemic and the need to maintain social distancing to avoid the spread of the virus. Photo credit: Mark Simmons/LNP.
    LNP_BLACK_LIVES_MATTERS_200607_MSI_1...jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures; 07/06/2020; Bristol, UK. People climb on the statue of slave trader Edward Colston before the statue is pulled down with a rope and thrown in Bristol Docks during a Black Lives Matter protest rally and march through the city centre in memory of George Floyd, a black man who was killed on May 25, 2020 in Minneapolis in the US by a white police officer kneeling on his neck for nearly 9 minutes. During the Bristol event the statue of Edward Colston was torn down and thrown into Bristol docks. Edward Colston (1636 – 1721) was a wealthy Bristol-born English merchant involved in the slave trade, a Member of Parliament and a philanthropist. He supported and endowed schools, almshouses, hospitals and churches in Bristol, London and elsewhere, and his name is commemorated in several Bristol landmarks, streets, three schools and the Colston bun. The killing of George Floyd has seen widespread protests in the US, the UK and other countries, despite the restrictions due to the Covid-19 coronavirus pandemic. People had been advised by the Bristol Mayor and Avon & Somerset's Chief Constable not to attend the event due due to the coronavirus pandemic and the need to maintain social distancing to avoid the spread of the virus. Photo credit: Mark Simmons/LNP.
    LNP_BLACK_LIVES_MATTERS_200607_MSI_0...jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures; 07/06/2020; Bristol, UK. People climb on the statue of slave trader Edward Colston before the statue is pulled down with a rope and thrown in Bristol Docks during a Black Lives Matter protest rally and march through the city centre in memory of George Floyd, a black man who was killed on May 25, 2020 in Minneapolis in the US by a white police officer kneeling on his neck for nearly 9 minutes. During the Bristol event the statue of Edward Colston was torn down and thrown into Bristol docks. Edward Colston (1636 – 1721) was a wealthy Bristol-born English merchant involved in the slave trade, a Member of Parliament and a philanthropist. He supported and endowed schools, almshouses, hospitals and churches in Bristol, London and elsewhere, and his name is commemorated in several Bristol landmarks, streets, three schools and the Colston bun. The killing of George Floyd has seen widespread protests in the US, the UK and other countries, despite the restrictions due to the Covid-19 coronavirus pandemic. People had been advised by the Bristol Mayor and Avon & Somerset's Chief Constable not to attend the event due due to the coronavirus pandemic and the need to maintain social distancing to avoid the spread of the virus. Photo credit: Mark Simmons/LNP.
    LNP_BLACK_LIVES_MATTERS_200607_MSI_0...jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures; 07/06/2020; Bristol, UK. People climb on the statue of slave trader Edward Colston before the statue is pulled down with a rope and thrown in Bristol Docks during a Black Lives Matter protest rally and march through the city centre in memory of George Floyd, a black man who was killed on May 25, 2020 in Minneapolis in the US by a white police officer kneeling on his neck for nearly 9 minutes. During the Bristol event the statue of Edward Colston was torn down and thrown into Bristol docks. Edward Colston (1636 – 1721) was a wealthy Bristol-born English merchant involved in the slave trade, a Member of Parliament and a philanthropist. He supported and endowed schools, almshouses, hospitals and churches in Bristol, London and elsewhere, and his name is commemorated in several Bristol landmarks, streets, three schools and the Colston bun. The killing of George Floyd has seen widespread protests in the US, the UK and other countries, despite the restrictions due to the Covid-19 coronavirus pandemic. People had been advised by the Bristol Mayor and Avon & Somerset's Chief Constable not to attend the event due due to the coronavirus pandemic and the need to maintain social distancing to avoid the spread of the virus. Photo credit: Mark Simmons/LNP.
    LNP_BLACK_LIVES_MATTERS_200607_MSI_0...jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures; 07/06/2020; Bristol, UK. People climb on the statue of slave trader Edward Colston before the statue is pulled down with a rope and thrown in Bristol Docks during a Black Lives Matter protest rally and march through the city centre in memory of George Floyd, a black man who was killed on May 25, 2020 in Minneapolis in the US by a white police officer kneeling on his neck for nearly 9 minutes. During the Bristol event the statue of Edward Colston was torn down and thrown into Bristol docks. Edward Colston (1636 – 1721) was a wealthy Bristol-born English merchant involved in the slave trade, a Member of Parliament and a philanthropist. He supported and endowed schools, almshouses, hospitals and churches in Bristol, London and elsewhere, and his name is commemorated in several Bristol landmarks, streets, three schools and the Colston bun. The killing of George Floyd has seen widespread protests in the US, the UK and other countries, despite the restrictions due to the Covid-19 coronavirus pandemic. People had been advised by the Bristol Mayor and Avon & Somerset's Chief Constable not to attend the event due due to the coronavirus pandemic and the need to maintain social distancing to avoid the spread of the virus. Photo credit: Mark Simmons/LNP.
    LNP_BLACK_LIVES_MATTERS_200607_MSI_0...jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures; 07/06/2020; Bristol, UK. People climb on the statue of slave trader Edward Colston before the statue is pulled down with a rope and thrown in Bristol Docks during a Black Lives Matter protest rally and march through the city centre in memory of George Floyd, a black man who was killed on May 25, 2020 in Minneapolis in the US by a white police officer kneeling on his neck for nearly 9 minutes. During the Bristol event the statue of Edward Colston was torn down and thrown into Bristol docks. Edward Colston (1636 – 1721) was a wealthy Bristol-born English merchant involved in the slave trade, a Member of Parliament and a philanthropist. He supported and endowed schools, almshouses, hospitals and churches in Bristol, London and elsewhere, and his name is commemorated in several Bristol landmarks, streets, three schools and the Colston bun. The killing of George Floyd has seen widespread protests in the US, the UK and other countries, despite the restrictions due to the Covid-19 coronavirus pandemic. People had been advised by the Bristol Mayor and Avon & Somerset's Chief Constable not to attend the event due due to the coronavirus pandemic and the need to maintain social distancing to avoid the spread of the virus. Photo credit: Mark Simmons/LNP.
    LNP_BLACK_LIVES_MATTERS_200607_MSI_0...jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures; 07/06/2020; Bristol, UK. People climb on the statue of slave trader Edward Colston before the statue is pulled down with a rope and thrown in Bristol Docks during a Black Lives Matter protest rally and march through the city centre in memory of George Floyd, a black man who was killed on May 25, 2020 in Minneapolis in the US by a white police officer kneeling on his neck for nearly 9 minutes. During the Bristol event the statue of Edward Colston was torn down and thrown into Bristol docks. Edward Colston (1636 – 1721) was a wealthy Bristol-born English merchant involved in the slave trade, a Member of Parliament and a philanthropist. He supported and endowed schools, almshouses, hospitals and churches in Bristol, London and elsewhere, and his name is commemorated in several Bristol landmarks, streets, three schools and the Colston bun. The killing of George Floyd has seen widespread protests in the US, the UK and other countries, despite the restrictions due to the Covid-19 coronavirus pandemic. People had been advised by the Bristol Mayor and Avon & Somerset's Chief Constable not to attend the event due due to the coronavirus pandemic and the need to maintain social distancing to avoid the spread of the virus. Photo credit: Mark Simmons/LNP.
    LNP_BLACK_LIVES_MATTERS_200607_MSI_0...jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures; 07/06/2020; Bristol, UK. MILES CHAMBERS, Bristol’s first city poet laureate, gives an impassioned poetry reading at the Black Lives Matter protest rally and march through the city centre in memory of George Floyd, a black man who was killed on May 25, 2020 in Minneapolis in the US by a white police officer kneeling on his neck for nearly 9 minutes. During the Bristol event the statue of Edward Colston was torn down and thrown into Bristol docks. Edward Colston (1636 – 1721) was a wealthy Bristol-born English merchant involved in the slave trade, a Member of Parliament and a philanthropist. He supported and endowed schools, almshouses, hospitals and churches in Bristol, London and elsewhere, and his name is commemorated in several Bristol landmarks, streets, three schools and the Colston bun. The killing of George Floyd has seen widespread protests in the US, the UK and other countries, despite the restrictions due to the Covid-19 coronavirus pandemic. People had been advised by the Bristol Mayor and Avon & Somerset's Chief Constable not to attend the event due due to the coronavirus pandemic and the need to maintain social distancing to avoid the spread of the virus. Photo credit: Simon Chapman/LNP.
    LNP_BLACK_LIVES_MATTER_200607_SCH_41.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures; 07/06/2020; Bristol, UK. Black Lives Matter protest rally and march through the city centre in memory of George Floyd, a black man who was killed on May 25, 2020 in Minneapolis in the US by a white police officer kneeling on his neck for nearly 9 minutes. During the Bristol event the statue of Edward Colston was torn down and thrown into Bristol docks. Edward Colston (1636 – 1721) was a wealthy Bristol-born English merchant involved in the slave trade, a Member of Parliament and a philanthropist. He supported and endowed schools, almshouses, hospitals and churches in Bristol, London and elsewhere, and his name is commemorated in several Bristol landmarks, streets, three schools and the Colston bun. The killing of George Floyd has seen widespread protests in the US, the UK and other countries, despite the restrictions due to the Covid-19 coronavirus pandemic. People had been advised by the Bristol Mayor and Avon & Somerset's Chief Constable not to attend the event due due to the coronavirus pandemic and the need to maintain social distancing to avoid the spread of the virus. Photo credit: Simon Chapman/LNP.
    LNP_BLACK_LIVES_MATTER_200607_SCH_36.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures; 07/06/2020; Bristol, UK. Black Lives Matter protest rally and march through the city centre in memory of George Floyd, a black man who was killed on May 25, 2020 in Minneapolis in the US by a white police officer kneeling on his neck for nearly 9 minutes. During the Bristol event the statue of Edward Colston was torn down and thrown into Bristol docks. Edward Colston (1636 – 1721) was a wealthy Bristol-born English merchant involved in the slave trade, a Member of Parliament and a philanthropist. He supported and endowed schools, almshouses, hospitals and churches in Bristol, London and elsewhere, and his name is commemorated in several Bristol landmarks, streets, three schools and the Colston bun. The killing of George Floyd has seen widespread protests in the US, the UK and other countries, despite the restrictions due to the Covid-19 coronavirus pandemic. People had been advised by the Bristol Mayor and Avon & Somerset's Chief Constable not to attend the event due due to the coronavirus pandemic and the need to maintain social distancing to avoid the spread of the virus. Photo credit: Simon Chapman/LNP.
    LNP_BLACK_LIVES_MATTER_200607_SCH_34.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures; 07/06/2020; Bristol, UK. Black Lives Matter protest rally and march through the city centre in memory of George Floyd, a black man who was killed on May 25, 2020 in Minneapolis in the US by a white police officer kneeling on his neck for nearly 9 minutes. During the Bristol event the statue of Edward Colston was torn down and thrown into Bristol docks. Edward Colston (1636 – 1721) was a wealthy Bristol-born English merchant involved in the slave trade, a Member of Parliament and a philanthropist. He supported and endowed schools, almshouses, hospitals and churches in Bristol, London and elsewhere, and his name is commemorated in several Bristol landmarks, streets, three schools and the Colston bun. The killing of George Floyd has seen widespread protests in the US, the UK and other countries, despite the restrictions due to the Covid-19 coronavirus pandemic. People had been advised by the Bristol Mayor and Avon & Somerset's Chief Constable not to attend the event due due to the coronavirus pandemic and the need to maintain social distancing to avoid the spread of the virus. Photo credit: Simon Chapman/LNP.
    LNP_BLACK_LIVES_MATTER_200607_SCH_33.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures; 07/06/2020; Bristol, UK. Black Lives Matter protest rally and march through the city centre in memory of George Floyd, a black man who was killed on May 25, 2020 in Minneapolis in the US by a white police officer kneeling on his neck for nearly 9 minutes. During the Bristol event the statue of Edward Colston was torn down and thrown into Bristol docks. Edward Colston (1636 – 1721) was a wealthy Bristol-born English merchant involved in the slave trade, a Member of Parliament and a philanthropist. He supported and endowed schools, almshouses, hospitals and churches in Bristol, London and elsewhere, and his name is commemorated in several Bristol landmarks, streets, three schools and the Colston bun. The killing of George Floyd has seen widespread protests in the US, the UK and other countries, despite the restrictions due to the Covid-19 coronavirus pandemic. People had been advised by the Bristol Mayor and Avon & Somerset's Chief Constable not to attend the event due due to the coronavirus pandemic and the need to maintain social distancing to avoid the spread of the virus. Photo credit: Simon Chapman/LNP.
    LNP_BLACK_LIVES_MATTER_200607_SCH_27.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures; 07/06/2020; Bristol, UK. Black Lives Matter protest rally and march through the city centre in memory of George Floyd, a black man who was killed on May 25, 2020 in Minneapolis in the US by a white police officer kneeling on his neck for nearly 9 minutes. During the Bristol event the statue of Edward Colston was torn down and thrown into Bristol docks. Edward Colston (1636 – 1721) was a wealthy Bristol-born English merchant involved in the slave trade, a Member of Parliament and a philanthropist. He supported and endowed schools, almshouses, hospitals and churches in Bristol, London and elsewhere, and his name is commemorated in several Bristol landmarks, streets, three schools and the Colston bun. The killing of George Floyd has seen widespread protests in the US, the UK and other countries, despite the restrictions due to the Covid-19 coronavirus pandemic. People had been advised by the Bristol Mayor and Avon & Somerset's Chief Constable not to attend the event due due to the coronavirus pandemic and the need to maintain social distancing to avoid the spread of the virus. Photo credit: Simon Chapman/LNP.
    LNP_BLACK_LIVES_MATTER_200607_SCH_26.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures; 07/06/2020; Bristol, UK. Black Lives Matter protest rally and march through the city centre in memory of George Floyd, a black man who was killed on May 25, 2020 in Minneapolis in the US by a white police officer kneeling on his neck for nearly 9 minutes. During the Bristol event the statue of Edward Colston was torn down and thrown into Bristol docks. Edward Colston (1636 – 1721) was a wealthy Bristol-born English merchant involved in the slave trade, a Member of Parliament and a philanthropist. He supported and endowed schools, almshouses, hospitals and churches in Bristol, London and elsewhere, and his name is commemorated in several Bristol landmarks, streets, three schools and the Colston bun. The killing of George Floyd has seen widespread protests in the US, the UK and other countries, despite the restrictions due to the Covid-19 coronavirus pandemic. People had been advised by the Bristol Mayor and Avon & Somerset's Chief Constable not to attend the event due due to the coronavirus pandemic and the need to maintain social distancing to avoid the spread of the virus. Photo credit: Simon Chapman/LNP.
    LNP_BLACK_LIVES_MATTER_200607_SCH_25.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures; 07/06/2020; Bristol, UK. Black Lives Matter protest rally and march through the city centre in memory of George Floyd, a black man who was killed on May 25, 2020 in Minneapolis in the US by a white police officer kneeling on his neck for nearly 9 minutes. During the Bristol event the statue of Edward Colston was torn down and thrown into Bristol docks. Edward Colston (1636 – 1721) was a wealthy Bristol-born English merchant involved in the slave trade, a Member of Parliament and a philanthropist. He supported and endowed schools, almshouses, hospitals and churches in Bristol, London and elsewhere, and his name is commemorated in several Bristol landmarks, streets, three schools and the Colston bun. The killing of George Floyd has seen widespread protests in the US, the UK and other countries, despite the restrictions due to the Covid-19 coronavirus pandemic. People had been advised by the Bristol Mayor and Avon & Somerset's Chief Constable not to attend the event due due to the coronavirus pandemic and the need to maintain social distancing to avoid the spread of the virus. Photo credit: Simon Chapman/LNP.
    LNP_BLACK_LIVES_MATTER_200607_SCH_19.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures; 07/06/2020; Bristol, UK. Black Lives Matter protest rally and march through the city centre in memory of George Floyd, a black man who was killed on May 25, 2020 in Minneapolis in the US by a white police officer kneeling on his neck for nearly 9 minutes. During the Bristol event the statue of Edward Colston was torn down and thrown into Bristol docks. Edward Colston (1636 – 1721) was a wealthy Bristol-born English merchant involved in the slave trade, a Member of Parliament and a philanthropist. He supported and endowed schools, almshouses, hospitals and churches in Bristol, London and elsewhere, and his name is commemorated in several Bristol landmarks, streets, three schools and the Colston bun. The killing of George Floyd has seen widespread protests in the US, the UK and other countries, despite the restrictions due to the Covid-19 coronavirus pandemic. People had been advised by the Bristol Mayor and Avon & Somerset's Chief Constable not to attend the event due due to the coronavirus pandemic and the need to maintain social distancing to avoid the spread of the virus. Photo credit: Simon Chapman/LNP.
    LNP_BLACK_LIVES_MATTER_200607_SCH_18.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures; 07/06/2020; Bristol, UK. Black Lives Matter protest rally and march through the city centre in memory of George Floyd, a black man who was killed on May 25, 2020 in Minneapolis in the US by a white police officer kneeling on his neck for nearly 9 minutes. During the Bristol event the statue of Edward Colston was torn down and thrown into Bristol docks. Edward Colston (1636 – 1721) was a wealthy Bristol-born English merchant involved in the slave trade, a Member of Parliament and a philanthropist. He supported and endowed schools, almshouses, hospitals and churches in Bristol, London and elsewhere, and his name is commemorated in several Bristol landmarks, streets, three schools and the Colston bun. The killing of George Floyd has seen widespread protests in the US, the UK and other countries, despite the restrictions due to the Covid-19 coronavirus pandemic. People had been advised by the Bristol Mayor and Avon & Somerset's Chief Constable not to attend the event due due to the coronavirus pandemic and the need to maintain social distancing to avoid the spread of the virus. Photo credit: Simon Chapman/LNP.
    LNP_BLACK_LIVES_MATTER_200607_SCH_13.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures; 07/06/2020; Bristol, UK. People climb on the statue of slave trader Edward Colston before the statue is pulled down with a rope and thrown in Bristol Docks during a Black Lives Matter protest rally and march through the city centre in memory of George Floyd, a black man who was killed on May 25, 2020 in Minneapolis in the US by a white police officer kneeling on his neck for nearly 9 minutes. During the Bristol event the statue of Edward Colston was torn down and thrown into Bristol docks. Edward Colston (1636 – 1721) was a wealthy Bristol-born English merchant involved in the slave trade, a Member of Parliament and a philanthropist. He supported and endowed schools, almshouses, hospitals and churches in Bristol, London and elsewhere, and his name is commemorated in several Bristol landmarks, streets, three schools and the Colston bun. The killing of George Floyd has seen widespread protests in the US, the UK and other countries, despite the restrictions due to the Covid-19 coronavirus pandemic. People had been advised by the Bristol Mayor and Avon & Somerset's Chief Constable not to attend the event due due to the coronavirus pandemic and the need to maintain social distancing to avoid the spread of the virus. Photo credit: Mark Simmons/LNP.
    LNP_BLACK_LIVES_MATTERS_200607_MSI_1...jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures; 07/06/2020; Bristol, UK. People climb on the statue of slave trader Edward Colston before the statue is pulled down with a rope and thrown in Bristol Docks during a Black Lives Matter protest rally and march through the city centre in memory of George Floyd, a black man who was killed on May 25, 2020 in Minneapolis in the US by a white police officer kneeling on his neck for nearly 9 minutes. During the Bristol event the statue of Edward Colston was torn down and thrown into Bristol docks. Edward Colston (1636 – 1721) was a wealthy Bristol-born English merchant involved in the slave trade, a Member of Parliament and a philanthropist. He supported and endowed schools, almshouses, hospitals and churches in Bristol, London and elsewhere, and his name is commemorated in several Bristol landmarks, streets, three schools and the Colston bun. The killing of George Floyd has seen widespread protests in the US, the UK and other countries, despite the restrictions due to the Covid-19 coronavirus pandemic. People had been advised by the Bristol Mayor and Avon & Somerset's Chief Constable not to attend the event due due to the coronavirus pandemic and the need to maintain social distancing to avoid the spread of the virus. Photo credit: Mark Simmons/LNP.
    LNP_BLACK_LIVES_MATTERS_200607_MSI_0...jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures; 07/06/2020; Bristol, UK. People climb on the statue of slave trader Edward Colston before the statue is pulled down with a rope and thrown in Bristol Docks during a Black Lives Matter protest rally and march through the city centre in memory of George Floyd, a black man who was killed on May 25, 2020 in Minneapolis in the US by a white police officer kneeling on his neck for nearly 9 minutes. During the Bristol event the statue of Edward Colston was torn down and thrown into Bristol docks. Edward Colston (1636 – 1721) was a wealthy Bristol-born English merchant involved in the slave trade, a Member of Parliament and a philanthropist. He supported and endowed schools, almshouses, hospitals and churches in Bristol, London and elsewhere, and his name is commemorated in several Bristol landmarks, streets, three schools and the Colston bun. The killing of George Floyd has seen widespread protests in the US, the UK and other countries, despite the restrictions due to the Covid-19 coronavirus pandemic. People had been advised by the Bristol Mayor and Avon & Somerset's Chief Constable not to attend the event due due to the coronavirus pandemic and the need to maintain social distancing to avoid the spread of the virus. Photo credit: Mark Simmons/LNP.
    LNP_BLACK_LIVES_MATTERS_200607_MSI_0...jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures; 07/06/2020; Bristol, UK. MILES CHAMBERS, Bristol’s first city poet laureate, gives an impassioned poetry reading at the Black Lives Matter protest rally and march through the city centre in memory of George Floyd, a black man who was killed on May 25, 2020 in Minneapolis in the US by a white police officer kneeling on his neck for nearly 9 minutes. During the Bristol event the statue of Edward Colston was torn down and thrown into Bristol docks. Edward Colston (1636 – 1721) was a wealthy Bristol-born English merchant involved in the slave trade, a Member of Parliament and a philanthropist. He supported and endowed schools, almshouses, hospitals and churches in Bristol, London and elsewhere, and his name is commemorated in several Bristol landmarks, streets, three schools and the Colston bun. The killing of George Floyd has seen widespread protests in the US, the UK and other countries, despite the restrictions due to the Covid-19 coronavirus pandemic. People had been advised by the Bristol Mayor and Avon & Somerset's Chief Constable not to attend the event due due to the coronavirus pandemic and the need to maintain social distancing to avoid the spread of the virus. Photo credit: Simon Chapman/LNP.
    LNP_BLACK_LIVES_MATTER_200607_SCH_39.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures; 07/07/2020; Bristol, UK. Protestors "take the knee" in commemoration and respect at a protest organised by Stand Up to Racism Bristol for "No Prosecutions over Colston Statue" taking place on College Green in front of City Hall. The protest opposing any prosecutions of people who toppled the statue of Edward Colston and threw it into the water at Bristol Harbourside is taking place just before a Bristol city council meeting where a motion is due for debate calling on the Government to set up a commission to acknowledge, apologise and instigate amends for wrongs that still have an impact today, and asking Labour mayor Marvin Rees to lead the city in lobbying Westminster for an all-party parliamentary inquiry. The motion was tabled by Green Party councillor and former Bristol lord mayor Cleo Lake who was also a founding member of the Countering Colston group, which has campaigned for the city to dismantle its public celebration of slave trader Edward Colston. The statue of Edward Colston was toppled from its plinth and thrown into Bristol Harbour during a Black Lives Matter protest rally and march on 07 June in memory of George Floyd, a black man who was killed on May 25, 2020 in Minneapolis in the US by a white police officer kneeling on his neck for nearly 9 minutes. Police in Bristol are seeking to identify 18 people in connection with what police say is criminal damage to the statue. The killing of George Floyd has seen widespread protests in the US, the UK and other countries, despite the restrictions due to the Covid-19 coronavirus pandemic. Today's event is organised by Stand Up to Racism Bristol and due to the coronavirus pandemic participants are advised of the need to wear masks and maintain social distancing to avoid the spread of the virus. Photo credit: Simon Chapman/LNP.
    LNP_COLSTON_PROTEST_200707_SCH_12.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures; 07/07/2020; Bristol, UK. Protestors "take the knee" in commemoration and respect at a protest organised by Stand Up to Racism Bristol for "No Prosecutions over Colston Statue" taking place on College Green in front of City Hall. The protest opposing any prosecutions of people who toppled the statue of Edward Colston and threw it into the water at Bristol Harbourside is taking place just before a Bristol city council meeting where a motion is due for debate calling on the Government to set up a commission to acknowledge, apologise and instigate amends for wrongs that still have an impact today, and asking Labour mayor Marvin Rees to lead the city in lobbying Westminster for an all-party parliamentary inquiry. The motion was tabled by Green Party councillor and former Bristol lord mayor Cleo Lake who was also a founding member of the Countering Colston group, which has campaigned for the city to dismantle its public celebration of slave trader Edward Colston. The statue of Edward Colston was toppled from its plinth and thrown into Bristol Harbour during a Black Lives Matter protest rally and march on 07 June in memory of George Floyd, a black man who was killed on May 25, 2020 in Minneapolis in the US by a white police officer kneeling on his neck for nearly 9 minutes. Police in Bristol are seeking to identify 18 people in connection with what police say is criminal damage to the statue. The killing of George Floyd has seen widespread protests in the US, the UK and other countries, despite the restrictions due to the Covid-19 coronavirus pandemic. Today's event is organised by Stand Up to Racism Bristol and due to the coronavirus pandemic participants are advised of the need to wear masks and maintain social distancing to avoid the spread of the virus. Photo credit: Simon Chapman/LNP.
    LNP_COLSTON_PROTEST_200707_SCH_11.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures; 07/07/2020; Bristol, UK. Protestors "take the knee" in commemoration and respect at a protest organised by Stand Up to Racism Bristol for "No Prosecutions over Colston Statue" taking place on College Green in front of City Hall. The protest opposing any prosecutions of people who toppled the statue of Edward Colston and threw it into the water at Bristol Harbourside is taking place just before a Bristol city council meeting where a motion is due for debate calling on the Government to set up a commission to acknowledge, apologise and instigate amends for wrongs that still have an impact today, and asking Labour mayor Marvin Rees to lead the city in lobbying Westminster for an all-party parliamentary inquiry. The motion was tabled by Green Party councillor and former Bristol lord mayor Cleo Lake who was also a founding member of the Countering Colston group, which has campaigned for the city to dismantle its public celebration of slave trader Edward Colston. The statue of Edward Colston was toppled from its plinth and thrown into Bristol Harbour during a Black Lives Matter protest rally and march on 07 June in memory of George Floyd, a black man who was killed on May 25, 2020 in Minneapolis in the US by a white police officer kneeling on his neck for nearly 9 minutes. Police in Bristol are seeking to identify 18 people in connection with what police say is criminal damage to the statue. The killing of George Floyd has seen widespread protests in the US, the UK and other countries, despite the restrictions due to the Covid-19 coronavirus pandemic. Today's event is organised by Stand Up to Racism Bristol and due to the coronavirus pandemic participants are advised of the need to wear masks and maintain social distancing to avoid the spread of the virus. Photo credit: Simon Chapman/LNP.
    LNP_COLSTON_PROTEST_200707_SCH_10.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures; 07/07/2020; Bristol, UK. A protest organised by Stand Up to Racism Bristol for "No Prosecutions over Colston Statue" taking place on College Green in front of City Hall. The protest opposing any prosecutions of people who toppled the statue of Edward Colston and threw it into the water at Bristol Harbourside is taking place just before a Bristol city council meeting where a motion is due for debate calling on the Government to set up a commission to acknowledge, apologise and instigate amends for wrongs that still have an impact today, and asking Labour mayor Marvin Rees to lead the city in lobbying Westminster for an all-party parliamentary inquiry. The motion was tabled by Green Party councillor and former Bristol lord mayor Cleo Lake who was also a founding member of the Countering Colston group, which has campaigned for the city to dismantle its public celebration of slave trader Edward Colston. The statue of Edward Colston was toppled from its plinth and thrown into Bristol Harbour during a Black Lives Matter protest rally and march on 07 June in memory of George Floyd, a black man who was killed on May 25, 2020 in Minneapolis in the US by a white police officer kneeling on his neck for nearly 9 minutes. Police in Bristol are seeking to identify 18 people in connection with what police say is criminal damage to the statue. The killing of George Floyd has seen widespread protests in the US, the UK and other countries, despite the restrictions due to the Covid-19 coronavirus pandemic. Today's event is organised by Stand Up to Racism Bristol and due to the coronavirus pandemic participants are advised of the need to wear masks and maintain social distancing to avoid the spread of the virus. Photo credit: Simon Chapman/LNP.
    LNP_COLSTON_PROTEST_200707_SCH_09.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures; 07/07/2020; Bristol, UK. A protest organised by Stand Up to Racism Bristol for "No Prosecutions over Colston Statue" taking place on College Green in front of City Hall. The protest opposing any prosecutions of people who toppled the statue of Edward Colston and threw it into the water at Bristol Harbourside is taking place just before a Bristol city council meeting where a motion is due for debate calling on the Government to set up a commission to acknowledge, apologise and instigate amends for wrongs that still have an impact today, and asking Labour mayor Marvin Rees to lead the city in lobbying Westminster for an all-party parliamentary inquiry. The motion was tabled by Green Party councillor and former Bristol lord mayor Cleo Lake who was also a founding member of the Countering Colston group, which has campaigned for the city to dismantle its public celebration of slave trader Edward Colston. The statue of Edward Colston was toppled from its plinth and thrown into Bristol Harbour during a Black Lives Matter protest rally and march on 07 June in memory of George Floyd, a black man who was killed on May 25, 2020 in Minneapolis in the US by a white police officer kneeling on his neck for nearly 9 minutes. Police in Bristol are seeking to identify 18 people in connection with what police say is criminal damage to the statue. The killing of George Floyd has seen widespread protests in the US, the UK and other countries, despite the restrictions due to the Covid-19 coronavirus pandemic. Today's event is organised by Stand Up to Racism Bristol and due to the coronavirus pandemic participants are advised of the need to wear masks and maintain social distancing to avoid the spread of the virus. Photo credit: Simon Chapman/LNP.
    LNP_COLSTON_PROTEST_200707_SCH_08.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures; 07/07/2020; Bristol, UK. A protest organised by Stand Up to Racism Bristol for "No Prosecutions over Colston Statue" taking place on College Green in front of City Hall. The protest opposing any prosecutions of people who toppled the statue of Edward Colston and threw it into the water at Bristol Harbourside is taking place just before a Bristol city council meeting where a motion is due for debate calling on the Government to set up a commission to acknowledge, apologise and instigate amends for wrongs that still have an impact today, and asking Labour mayor Marvin Rees to lead the city in lobbying Westminster for an all-party parliamentary inquiry. The motion was tabled by Green Party councillor and former Bristol lord mayor Cleo Lake who was also a founding member of the Countering Colston group, which has campaigned for the city to dismantle its public celebration of slave trader Edward Colston. The statue of Edward Colston was toppled from its plinth and thrown into Bristol Harbour during a Black Lives Matter protest rally and march on 07 June in memory of George Floyd, a black man who was killed on May 25, 2020 in Minneapolis in the US by a white police officer kneeling on his neck for nearly 9 minutes. Police in Bristol are seeking to identify 18 people in connection with what police say is criminal damage to the statue. The killing of George Floyd has seen widespread protests in the US, the UK and other countries, despite the restrictions due to the Covid-19 coronavirus pandemic. Today's event is organised by Stand Up to Racism Bristol and due to the coronavirus pandemic participants are advised of the need to wear masks and maintain social distancing to avoid the spread of the virus. Photo credit: Simon Chapman/LNP.
    LNP_COLSTON_PROTEST_200707_SCH_07.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures; 07/07/2020; Bristol, UK. A protest organised by Stand Up to Racism Bristol for "No Prosecutions over Colston Statue" taking place on College Green in front of City Hall. The protest opposing any prosecutions of people who toppled the statue of Edward Colston and threw it into the water at Bristol Harbourside is taking place just before a Bristol city council meeting where a motion is due for debate calling on the Government to set up a commission to acknowledge, apologise and instigate amends for wrongs that still have an impact today, and asking Labour mayor Marvin Rees to lead the city in lobbying Westminster for an all-party parliamentary inquiry. The motion was tabled by Green Party councillor and former Bristol lord mayor Cleo Lake who was also a founding member of the Countering Colston group, which has campaigned for the city to dismantle its public celebration of slave trader Edward Colston. The statue of Edward Colston was toppled from its plinth and thrown into Bristol Harbour during a Black Lives Matter protest rally and march on 07 June in memory of George Floyd, a black man who was killed on May 25, 2020 in Minneapolis in the US by a white police officer kneeling on his neck for nearly 9 minutes. Police in Bristol are seeking to identify 18 people in connection with what police say is criminal damage to the statue. The killing of George Floyd has seen widespread protests in the US, the UK and other countries, despite the restrictions due to the Covid-19 coronavirus pandemic. Today's event is organised by Stand Up to Racism Bristol and due to the coronavirus pandemic participants are advised of the need to wear masks and maintain social distancing to avoid the spread of the virus. Photo credit: Simon Chapman/LNP.
    LNP_COLSTON_PROTEST_200707_SCH_06.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures; 07/07/2020; Bristol, UK. A protest organised by Stand Up to Racism Bristol for "No Prosecutions over Colston Statue" taking place on College Green in front of City Hall. The protest opposing any prosecutions of people who toppled the statue of Edward Colston and threw it into the water at Bristol Harbourside is taking place just before a Bristol city council meeting where a motion is due for debate calling on the Government to set up a commission to acknowledge, apologise and instigate amends for wrongs that still have an impact today, and asking Labour mayor Marvin Rees to lead the city in lobbying Westminster for an all-party parliamentary inquiry. The motion was tabled by Green Party councillor and former Bristol lord mayor Cleo Lake who was also a founding member of the Countering Colston group, which has campaigned for the city to dismantle its public celebration of slave trader Edward Colston. The statue of Edward Colston was toppled from its plinth and thrown into Bristol Harbour during a Black Lives Matter protest rally and march on 07 June in memory of George Floyd, a black man who was killed on May 25, 2020 in Minneapolis in the US by a white police officer kneeling on his neck for nearly 9 minutes. Police in Bristol are seeking to identify 18 people in connection with what police say is criminal damage to the statue. The killing of George Floyd has seen widespread protests in the US, the UK and other countries, despite the restrictions due to the Covid-19 coronavirus pandemic. Today's event is organised by Stand Up to Racism Bristol and due to the coronavirus pandemic participants are advised of the need to wear masks and maintain social distancing to avoid the spread of the virus. Photo credit: Simon Chapman/LNP.
    LNP_COLSTON_PROTEST_200707_SCH_05.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures; 07/07/2020; Bristol, UK. CHRISTINE TOWNSEND speaks at a protest organised by Stand Up to Racism Bristol for "No Prosecutions over Colston Statue" taking place on College Green in front of City Hall. The protest opposing any prosecutions of people who toppled the statue of Edward Colston and threw it into the water at Bristol Harbourside is taking place just before a Bristol city council meeting where a motion is due for debate calling on the Government to set up a commission to acknowledge, apologise and instigate amends for wrongs that still have an impact today, and asking Labour mayor Marvin Rees to lead the city in lobbying Westminster for an all-party parliamentary inquiry. The motion was tabled by Green Party councillor and former Bristol lord mayor Cleo Lake who was also a founding member of the Countering Colston group, which has campaigned for the city to dismantle its public celebration of slave trader Edward Colston. The statue of Edward Colston was toppled from its plinth and thrown into Bristol Harbour during a Black Lives Matter protest rally and march on 07 June in memory of George Floyd, a black man who was killed on May 25, 2020 in Minneapolis in the US by a white police officer kneeling on his neck for nearly 9 minutes. Police in Bristol are seeking to identify 18 people in connection with what police say is criminal damage to the statue. The killing of George Floyd has seen widespread protests in the US, the UK and other countries, despite the restrictions due to the Covid-19 coronavirus pandemic. Today's event is organised by Stand Up to Racism Bristol and due to the coronavirus pandemic participants are advised of the need to wear masks and maintain social distancing to avoid the spread of the virus. Photo credit: Simon Chapman/LNP.
    LNP_COLSTON_PROTEST_200707_SCH_04.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures; 07/07/2020; Bristol, UK. Poet LAWRENCE HOO reads a poem at a protest organised by Stand Up to Racism Bristol for "No Prosecutions over Colston Statue" taking place on College Green in front of City Hall. The protest opposing any prosecutions of people who toppled the statue of Edward Colston and threw it into the water at Bristol Harbourside is taking place just before a Bristol city council meeting where a motion is due for debate calling on the Government to set up a commission to acknowledge, apologise and instigate amends for wrongs that still have an impact today, and asking Labour mayor Marvin Rees to lead the city in lobbying Westminster for an all-party parliamentary inquiry. The motion was tabled by Green Party councillor and former Bristol lord mayor Cleo Lake who was also a founding member of the Countering Colston group, which has campaigned for the city to dismantle its public celebration of slave trader Edward Colston. The statue of Edward Colston was toppled from its plinth and thrown into Bristol Harbour during a Black Lives Matter protest rally and march on 07 June in memory of George Floyd, a black man who was killed on May 25, 2020 in Minneapolis in the US by a white police officer kneeling on his neck for nearly 9 minutes. Police in Bristol are seeking to identify 18 people in connection with what police say is criminal damage to the statue. The killing of George Floyd has seen widespread protests in the US, the UK and other countries, despite the restrictions due to the Covid-19 coronavirus pandemic. Today's event is organised by Stand Up to Racism Bristol and due to the coronavirus pandemic participants are advised of the need to wear masks and maintain social distancing to avoid the spread of the virus. Photo credit: Simon Chapman/LNP.
    LNP_COLSTON_PROTEST_200707_SCH_03.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures; 07/07/2020; Bristol, UK. Poet LAWRENCE HOO reads a poem at a protest organised by Stand Up to Racism Bristol for "No Prosecutions over Colston Statue" taking place on College Green in front of City Hall. The protest opposing any prosecutions of people who toppled the statue of Edward Colston and threw it into the water at Bristol Harbourside is taking place just before a Bristol city council meeting where a motion is due for debate calling on the Government to set up a commission to acknowledge, apologise and instigate amends for wrongs that still have an impact today, and asking Labour mayor Marvin Rees to lead the city in lobbying Westminster for an all-party parliamentary inquiry. The motion was tabled by Green Party councillor and former Bristol lord mayor Cleo Lake who was also a founding member of the Countering Colston group, which has campaigned for the city to dismantle its public celebration of slave trader Edward Colston. The statue of Edward Colston was toppled from its plinth and thrown into Bristol Harbour during a Black Lives Matter protest rally and march on 07 June in memory of George Floyd, a black man who was killed on May 25, 2020 in Minneapolis in the US by a white police officer kneeling on his neck for nearly 9 minutes. Police in Bristol are seeking to identify 18 people in connection with what police say is criminal damage to the statue. The killing of George Floyd has seen widespread protests in the US, the UK and other countries, despite the restrictions due to the Covid-19 coronavirus pandemic. Today's event is organised by Stand Up to Racism Bristol and due to the coronavirus pandemic participants are advised of the need to wear masks and maintain social distancing to avoid the spread of the virus. Photo credit: Simon Chapman/LNP.
    LNP_COLSTON_PROTEST_200707_SCH_02.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures; 07/07/2020; Bristol, UK. A protest organised by Stand Up to Racism Bristol for "No Prosecutions over Colston Statue" taking place on College Green in front of City Hall. The protest opposing any prosecutions of people who toppled the statue of Edward Colston and threw it into the water at Bristol Harbourside is taking place just before a Bristol city council meeting where a motion is due for debate calling on the Government to set up a commission to acknowledge, apologise and instigate amends for wrongs that still have an impact today, and asking Labour mayor Marvin Rees to lead the city in lobbying Westminster for an all-party parliamentary inquiry. The motion was tabled by Green Party councillor and former Bristol lord mayor Cleo Lake who was also a founding member of the Countering Colston group, which has campaigned for the city to dismantle its public celebration of slave trader Edward Colston. The statue of Edward Colston was toppled from its plinth and thrown into Bristol Harbour during a Black Lives Matter protest rally and march on 07 June in memory of George Floyd, a black man who was killed on May 25, 2020 in Minneapolis in the US by a white police officer kneeling on his neck for nearly 9 minutes. Police in Bristol are seeking to identify 18 people in connection with what police say is criminal damage to the statue. The killing of George Floyd has seen widespread protests in the US, the UK and other countries, despite the restrictions due to the Covid-19 coronavirus pandemic. Today's event is organised by Stand Up to Racism Bristol and due to the coronavirus pandemic participants are advised of the need to wear masks and maintain social distancing to avoid the spread of the virus. Photo credit: Simon Chapman/LNP.
    LNP_COLSTON_PROTEST_200707_SCH_01.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures; 10/07/2020; Bristol, UK. A mural depicting the fall of slavetrader Edward Colston’s statue and the continuing fight for justice is seen installed on a billboard in Easton. The artwork is by RTiiiKA, a Bristol-based illustrator and co-founder of the Bristol Womxn Mural Collective, who drew the work the same day Colston’s statue was toppled from its plinth, dragged through the city centre and thrown into Bristol Harbour during a Black Lives Matter protest rally and march on 07 June in memory of George Floyd, a black man who was killed on May 25, 2020 in Minneapolis in the US by a white police officer kneeling on his neck for nearly 9 minutes. The killing of George Floyd has seen widespread protests in the US, the UK and other countries. RTiiiKA and Bristol Rising Tide, a direct action group collaborated to reclaim the billboard space, which is used by corporate advertising. RTiiiKA has said that the artwork is political both in its documentation of the statue’s fall and taking over advertising space, and in calling for continued anti-racist activism.<br />
The red rope is to illustrate that the violent oppression and racism that Colston and Bristol profited from centuries ago is still tangled to racism today and that the rope winding around the people in the crowd is also a call to RTiiiKA as a white person to recognise and untangle prejudices, privilege and position. RTiiiKA calls on white people to keep a grip on the rope and continue to fight against their biases and subconscious discrimination against black people. Photo credit: Simon Chapman/LNP.
    LNP_COLSTON_MURAL_200710_SCH_07.jpg
Next