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  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 11/06/2020. Whitby UK. File picture taken 21/03/2017 of the Captain Cook statue in Whitby on the Yorkshire coast. The website Topple the Racists has drawn up a hit-list of monuments and statues across the UK that should be taken down if they "celebrate slavery and racism". Among the 60-strong list is the Captain Cook statue in Great Ayton and Whitby residents now fear a statue dedicated to him in Whitby could become a target as well. Photo credit: Andrew McCaren/LNP
    LNP_CAPTAIN_COOK_STATUE_AMC_02.JPG
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 11/06/2020. Whitby UK. File picture taken 18/07/2018 of the Captain Cook statue in Whitby on the Yorkshire coast. The website Topple the Racists has drawn up a hit-list of monuments and statues across the UK that should be taken down if they "celebrate slavery and racism". Among the 60-strong list is the Captain Cook statue in Great Ayton and Whitby residents now fear a statue dedicated to him in Whitby could become a target as well. Photo credit: Andrew McCaren/LNP
    LNP_CAPTAIN_COOK_STATUE_AMC_01.JPG
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 16/01/2017. Liverpool UK. A statue of the late Cilla Black has been unveiled this morning outside the original entrance to the Cavern Club in Liverpool. Photo credit: Andrew McCaren/LNP
    LNP_CILLA_BLACK_STATUE_AMC_03.JPG
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 16/01/2017. Liverpool UK. A statue of the late Cilla Black has been unveiled this morning outside the original entrance to the Cavern Club in Liverpool. Photo credit: Andrew McCaren/LNP
    LNP_CILLA_BLACK_STATUE_AMC_08.JPG
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 16/01/2017. Liverpool UK. A statue of the late Cilla Black has been unveiled this morning outside the original entrance to the Cavern Club in Liverpool. Photo credit: Andrew McCaren/LNP
    LNP_CILLA_BLACK_STATUE_AMC_01.JPG
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 12/06/2020. London, UK.  Workmen board up the statue of Thomas Guy at Guys And St Thomas’s Hospital Trust after pressure from anti-racist groups recognise the legacy of colonialism, racism and slavery. In London, Britain, Jun 12, 2020. In a statement, the hospital trust had recognised the legacy of colonialism, racism and slavery of Thomas Guy. Photo credit: Ray Tang/LNP
    LNP_RTG_THOMAS_GUY_STATUE_10.JPG
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 12/06/2020. London, UK.  Workmen board up the statue of Thomas Guy at Guys And St Thomas’s Hospital Trust after pressure from anti-racist groups recognise the legacy of colonialism, racism and slavery. In London, Britain, Jun 12, 2020. In a statement, the hospital trust had recognised the legacy of colonialism, racism and slavery of Thomas Guy. Photo credit: Ray Tang/LNP
    LNP_RTG_THOMAS_GUY_STATUE_08.JPG
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 12/06/2020. London, UK.  Workmen board up the statue of Thomas Guy at Guys And St Thomas’s Hospital Trust after pressure from anti-racist groups recognise the legacy of colonialism, racism and slavery. In London, Britain, Jun 12, 2020. In a statement, the hospital trust had recognised the legacy of colonialism, racism and slavery of Thomas Guy. Photo credit: Ray Tang/LNP
    LNP_RTG_THOMAS_GUY_STATUE_07.JPG
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 12/06/2020. London, UK.  Workmen board up the statue of Thomas Guy at Guys And St Thomas’s Hospital Trust after pressure from anti-racist groups recognise the legacy of colonialism, racism and slavery. In London, Britain, Jun 12, 2020. In a statement, the hospital trust had recognised the legacy of colonialism, racism and slavery of Thomas Guy. Photo credit: Ray Tang/LNP
    LNP_RTG_THOMAS_GUY_STATUE_06.JPG
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 12/06/2020. London, UK.  Workmen board up the statue of Thomas Guy at Guys And St Thomas’s Hospital Trust after pressure from anti-racist groups recognise the legacy of colonialism, racism and slavery. In London, Britain, Jun 12, 2020. In a statement, the hospital trust had recognised the legacy of colonialism, racism and slavery of Thomas Guy. Photo credit: Ray Tang/LNP
    LNP_RTG_THOMAS_GUY_STATUE_05.JPG
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 12/06/2020. London, UK.  Workmen board up the statue of Thomas Guy at Guys And St Thomas’s Hospital Trust after pressure from anti-racist groups recognise the legacy of colonialism, racism and slavery. In London, Britain, Jun 12, 2020. In a statement, the hospital trust had recognised the legacy of colonialism, racism and slavery of Thomas Guy. Photo credit: Ray Tang/LNP
    LNP_RTG_THOMAS_GUY_STATUE_04.JPG
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 12/06/2020. London, UK.  Workmen board up the statue of Thomas Guy at Guys And St Thomas’s Hospital Trust after pressure from anti-racist groups recognise the legacy of colonialism, racism and slavery. In London, Britain, Jun 12, 2020. In a statement, the hospital trust had recognised the legacy of colonialism, racism and slavery of Thomas Guy. Photo credit: Ray Tang/LNP
    LNP_RTG_THOMAS_GUY_STATUE_03.JPG
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 12/06/2020. London, UK.  Workmen board up the statue of Thomas Guy at Guys And St Thomas’s Hospital Trust after pressure from anti-racist groups recognise the legacy of colonialism, racism and slavery. In London, Britain, Jun 12, 2020. In a statement, the hospital trust had recognised the legacy of colonialism, racism and slavery of Thomas Guy. Photo credit: Ray Tang/LNP
    LNP_RTG_THOMAS_GUY_STATUE_02.JPG
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 12/06/2020. London, UK.  Workmen board up the statue of Thomas Guy at Guys And St Thomas’s Hospital Trust after pressure from anti-racist groups recognise the legacy of colonialism, racism and slavery. In London, Britain, Jun 12, 2020. In a statement, the hospital trust had recognised the legacy of colonialism, racism and slavery of Thomas Guy. Photo credit: Ray Tang/LNP
    LNP_RTG_THOMAS_GUY_STATUE_01.JPG
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 16/01/2017. Liverpool UK. A statue of the late Cilla Black has been unveiled this morning outside the original entrance to the Cavern Club in Liverpool. Photo credit: Andrew McCaren/LNP
    LNP_CILLA_BLACK_STATUE_AMC_09.JPG
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 16/01/2017. Liverpool UK. A statue of the late Cilla Black has been unveiled this morning outside the original entrance to the Cavern Club in Liverpool. Photo credit: Andrew McCaren/LNP
    LNP_CILLA_BLACK_STATUE_AMC_07.JPG
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 16/01/2017. Liverpool UK. A statue of the late Cilla Black has been unveiled this morning outside the original entrance to the Cavern Club in Liverpool. Photo credit: Andrew McCaren/LNP
    LNP_CILLA_BLACK_STATUE_AMC_06.JPG
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 16/01/2017. Liverpool UK. A statue of the late Cilla Black has been unveiled this morning outside the original entrance to the Cavern Club in Liverpool. Photo credit: Andrew McCaren/LNP
    LNP_CILLA_BLACK_STATUE_AMC_05.JPG
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 16/01/2017. Liverpool UK. A statue of the late Cilla Black has been unveiled this morning outside the original entrance to the Cavern Club in Liverpool. Photo credit: Andrew McCaren/LNP
    LNP_CILLA_BLACK_STATUE_AMC_04.JPG
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 16/01/2017. Liverpool UK. A statue of the late Cilla Black has been unveiled this morning outside the original entrance to the Cavern Club in Liverpool. Photo credit: Andrew McCaren/LNP
    LNP_CILLA_BLACK_STATUE_AMC_02.JPG
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 12/06/2020. London, UK.  Workmen board up the statue of Thomas Guy at Guys And St Thomas’s Hospital Trust after pressure from anti-racist groups recognise the legacy of colonialism, racism and slavery. In London, Britain, Jun 12, 2020. In a statement, the hospital trust had recognised the legacy of colonialism, racism and slavery of Thomas Guy. Photo credit: Ray Tang/LNP
    LNP_RTG_THOMAS_GUY_STATUE_09.JPG
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures; 19/09/2020; Bristol, UK. People view and photograph a new statue and placards against child exploitation and child sex trafficking which have been placed on the plinth from where the statue of slave trader Edward Colston was pulled down and thrown into Bristol docks on 07 June during an All Black Lives/Black Lives Matter protest 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, that made headlines around the world. The artist behind this new statue against child exploitation is not known. Since the Colston statue was pulled down various other statues and artworks have been placed on the empty plinth without permission from Bristol City council, including a statue "A Surge of Power (Jen Reid) 2020" by sculptor Marc Quinn of protester Jen Reid who was at the previous protest on 07 June. Photo credit: Simon Chapman/LNP.
    LNP_SAVE_CHILDREN_STATUE_200919_SCH_...jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures; 19/09/2020; Bristol, UK. People view and photograph a new statue and placards against child exploitation and child sex trafficking which have been placed on the plinth from where the statue of slave trader Edward Colston was pulled down and thrown into Bristol docks on 07 June during an All Black Lives/Black Lives Matter protest 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, that made headlines around the world. The artist behind this new statue against child exploitation is not known. Since the Colston statue was pulled down various other statues and artworks have been placed on the empty plinth without permission from Bristol City council, including a statue "A Surge of Power (Jen Reid) 2020" by sculptor Marc Quinn of protester Jen Reid who was at the previous protest on 07 June. Photo credit: Simon Chapman/LNP.
    LNP_SAVE_CHILDREN_STATUE_200919_SCH_...jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures; 19/09/2020; Bristol, UK. People view and photograph a new statue and placards against child exploitation and child sex trafficking which have been placed on the plinth from where the statue of slave trader Edward Colston was pulled down and thrown into Bristol docks on 07 June during an All Black Lives/Black Lives Matter protest 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, that made headlines around the world. The artist behind this new statue against child exploitation is not known. Since the Colston statue was pulled down various other statues and artworks have been placed on the empty plinth without permission from Bristol City council, including a statue "A Surge of Power (Jen Reid) 2020" by sculptor Marc Quinn of protester Jen Reid who was at the previous protest on 07 June. Photo credit: Simon Chapman/LNP.
    LNP_SAVE_CHILDREN_STATUE_200919_SCH_...jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures; 19/09/2020; Bristol, UK. People view and photograph a new statue and placards against child exploitation and child sex trafficking which have been placed on the plinth from where the statue of slave trader Edward Colston was pulled down and thrown into Bristol docks on 07 June during an All Black Lives/Black Lives Matter protest 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, that made headlines around the world. The artist behind this new statue against child exploitation is not known. Since the Colston statue was pulled down various other statues and artworks have been placed on the empty plinth without permission from Bristol City council, including a statue "A Surge of Power (Jen Reid) 2020" by sculptor Marc Quinn of protester Jen Reid who was at the previous protest on 07 June. Photo credit: Simon Chapman/LNP.
    LNP_SAVE_CHILDREN_STATUE_200919_SCH_...jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures; 19/09/2020; Bristol, UK. People view and photograph a new statue and placards against child exploitation and child sex trafficking which have been placed on the plinth from where the statue of slave trader Edward Colston was pulled down and thrown into Bristol docks on 07 June during an All Black Lives/Black Lives Matter protest 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, that made headlines around the world. The artist behind this new statue against child exploitation is not known. Since the Colston statue was pulled down various other statues and artworks have been placed on the empty plinth without permission from Bristol City council, including a statue "A Surge of Power (Jen Reid) 2020" by sculptor Marc Quinn of protester Jen Reid who was at the previous protest on 07 June. Photo credit: Simon Chapman/LNP.
    LNP_SAVE_CHILDREN_STATUE_200919_SCH_...jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures; 19/09/2020; Bristol, UK. People view and photograph a new statue and placards against child exploitation and child sex trafficking which have been placed on the plinth from where the statue of slave trader Edward Colston was pulled down and thrown into Bristol docks on 07 June during an All Black Lives/Black Lives Matter protest 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, that made headlines around the world. The artist behind this new statue against child exploitation is not known. Since the Colston statue was pulled down various other statues and artworks have been placed on the empty plinth without permission from Bristol City council, including a statue "A Surge of Power (Jen Reid) 2020" by sculptor Marc Quinn of protester Jen Reid who was at the previous protest on 07 June. Photo credit: Simon Chapman/LNP.
    LNP_SAVE_CHILDREN_STATUE_200919_SCH_...jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures; 19/09/2020; Bristol, UK. People view and photograph a new statue and placards against child exploitation and child sex trafficking which have been placed on the plinth from where the statue of slave trader Edward Colston was pulled down and thrown into Bristol docks on 07 June during an All Black Lives/Black Lives Matter protest 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, that made headlines around the world. The artist behind this new statue against child exploitation is not known. Since the Colston statue was pulled down various other statues and artworks have been placed on the empty plinth without permission from Bristol City council, including a statue "A Surge of Power (Jen Reid) 2020" by sculptor Marc Quinn of protester Jen Reid who was at the previous protest on 07 June. Photo credit: Simon Chapman/LNP.
    LNP_SAVE_CHILDREN_STATUE_200919_SCH_...jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures; 19/09/2020; Bristol, UK. People view and photograph a new statue and placards against child exploitation and child sex trafficking which have been placed on the plinth from where the statue of slave trader Edward Colston was pulled down and thrown into Bristol docks on 07 June during an All Black Lives/Black Lives Matter protest 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, that made headlines around the world. The artist behind this new statue against child exploitation is not known. Since the Colston statue was pulled down various other statues and artworks have been placed on the empty plinth without permission from Bristol City council, including a statue "A Surge of Power (Jen Reid) 2020" by sculptor Marc Quinn of protester Jen Reid who was at the previous protest on 07 June. Photo credit: Simon Chapman/LNP.
    LNP_SAVE_CHILDREN_STATUE_200919_SCH_...jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures; 19/09/2020; Bristol, UK. People view and photograph a new statue and placards against child exploitation and child sex trafficking which have been placed on the plinth from where the statue of slave trader Edward Colston was pulled down and thrown into Bristol docks on 07 June during an All Black Lives/Black Lives Matter protest 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, that made headlines around the world. The artist behind this new statue against child exploitation is not known. Since the Colston statue was pulled down various other statues and artworks have been placed on the empty plinth without permission from Bristol City council, including a statue "A Surge of Power (Jen Reid) 2020" by sculptor Marc Quinn of protester Jen Reid who was at the previous protest on 07 June. Photo credit: Simon Chapman/LNP.
    LNP_SAVE_CHILDREN_STATUE_200919_SCH_...jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures; 19/09/2020; Bristol, UK. People view and photograph a new statue and placards against child exploitation and child sex trafficking which have been placed on the plinth from where the statue of slave trader Edward Colston was pulled down and thrown into Bristol docks on 07 June during an All Black Lives/Black Lives Matter protest 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, that made headlines around the world. The artist behind this new statue against child exploitation is not known. Since the Colston statue was pulled down various other statues and artworks have been placed on the empty plinth without permission from Bristol City council, including a statue "A Surge of Power (Jen Reid) 2020" by sculptor Marc Quinn of protester Jen Reid who was at the previous protest on 07 June. Photo credit: Simon Chapman/LNP.
    LNP_SAVE_CHILDREN_STATUE_200919_SCH_...jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures; 19/09/2020; Bristol, UK. People view and photograph a new statue and placards against child exploitation and child sex trafficking which have been placed on the plinth from where the statue of slave trader Edward Colston was pulled down and thrown into Bristol docks on 07 June during an All Black Lives/Black Lives Matter protest 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, that made headlines around the world. The artist behind this new statue against child exploitation is not known. Since the Colston statue was pulled down various other statues and artworks have been placed on the empty plinth without permission from Bristol City council, including a statue "A Surge of Power (Jen Reid) 2020" by sculptor Marc Quinn of protester Jen Reid who was at the previous protest on 07 June. Photo credit: Simon Chapman/LNP.
    LNP_SAVE_CHILDREN_STATUE_200919_SCH_...jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures; 15/06/2020; Bristol, UK. People view and photograph a new mystery statue of a caricature Englishman has been placed by the now empty Colston plinth on Monday morning, following an “All Lives Matter” protest at the weekend to “defend the Cenotaph”. The grey statue shows a bald man resting in a wheelie bin with the words "Spoiler: St George was Turkish" on the front. He is holding a small globe in one hand and a mobile phone in the other hand with a screen showing the St George flag and words "England for the English". The character wears a string vest over a beer belly and looks over to where Colston’s statue was torn down from its plinth a week ago. The artist is not known but the statue looks similar to "Ruth", a character who appeared on Victoria Street in April 2018. This comes just over a week after the statue of Edward Colston which has stood in Bristol city centre for over 100 years was pulled down by protestors and thrown in Bristol Docks during a Black Lives Matters rally and march through the city centre. The rally was held 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 against both modern day racism and historical legacies of slavery. 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. Photo credit: Simon Chapman/LNP.
    LNP_ENGLISHMAN_STATUE_200615_SCH_04.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 24/04/2018. Bristol, UK. A statue of an elderly lady holding her handbag and a hammer has been put up on Victoria Street in Bristol city centre. The statue has "OAP" with the "A" as an anarchist symbol painted on the plinth, and has been chained to two bicycle stands outside the offices of Age UK. Staff working at Age UK Bristol found the 10-foot tall statue in front of their offices when they arrived at work on Monday, but know nothing about the statue. There have been unconfirmed reports the statue is a tribute to a lady by an anonymous artist, as the name "Ruth" is written on the back of the plinth.  Photo credit: Simon Chapman/LNP
    LNP_OAP_STATUE_180424_SCH_07.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures; 15/06/2020; Bristol, UK. A new mystery statue of a caricature Englishman has been placed by the now empty Colston plinth on Monday morning, following an “All Lives Matter” protest at the weekend to “defend the Cenotaph”. The grey statue shows a bald man resting in a wheelie bin with the words "Spoiler: St George was Turkish" on the front. He is holding a small globe in one hand and a mobile phone in the other hand with a screen showing the St George flag and words "England for the English". The character wears a string vest over a beer belly and looks over to where Colston’s statue was torn down from its plinth a week ago. The artist is not known but the statue looks similar to "Ruth", a character who appeared on Victoria Street in April 2018. This comes just over a week after the statue of Edward Colston which has stood in Bristol city centre for over 100 years was pulled down by protestors and thrown in Bristol Docks during a Black Lives Matters rally and march through the city centre. The rally was held 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 against both modern day racism and historical legacies of slavery. 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. Photo credit: Simon Chapman/LNP.
    LNP_ENGLISHMAN_STATUE_200615_SCH_20.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures; 15/06/2020; Bristol, UK. A new mystery statue of a caricature Englishman has been placed by the now empty Colston plinth seen in the background on the Monday morning after an “All Lives Matter” protest at the weekend to “defend the Cenotaph”. The grey statue shows a bald man resting in a wheelie bin with the words "Spoiler: St George was Turkish" on the front. He is holding a small globe in one hand and a mobile phone in the other hand with a screen showing the St George flag and words "England for the English". The character wears a string vest over a beer belly and looks over to where Colston’s statue was torn down from its plinth a week ago. The artist is not known but the statue looks similar to "Ruth", a character who appeared on Victoria Street in April 2018. This comes just over a week after the statue of Edward Colston which has stood in Bristol city centre for over 100 years was pulled down by protestors and thrown in Bristol Docks during a Black Lives Matters rally and march through the city centre. The rally was held 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 against both modern day racism and historical legacies of slavery. 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. Photo credit: Simon Chapman/LNP.
    LNP_ENGLISHMAN_STATUE_200615_SCH_17.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures; 15/06/2020; Bristol, UK. People view and photograph a new mystery statue of a caricature Englishman has been placed by the now empty Colston plinth on Monday morning, following an “All Lives Matter” protest at the weekend to “defend the Cenotaph”. The grey statue shows a bald man resting in a wheelie bin with the words "Spoiler: St George was Turkish" on the front. He is holding a small globe in one hand and a mobile phone in the other hand with a screen showing the St George flag and words "England for the English". The character wears a string vest over a beer belly and looks over to where Colston’s statue was torn down from its plinth a week ago. The artist is not known but the statue looks similar to "Ruth", a character who appeared on Victoria Street in April 2018. This comes just over a week after the statue of Edward Colston which has stood in Bristol city centre for over 100 years was pulled down by protestors and thrown in Bristol Docks during a Black Lives Matters rally and march through the city centre. The rally was held 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 against both modern day racism and historical legacies of slavery. 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. Photo credit: Simon Chapman/LNP.
    LNP_ENGLISHMAN_STATUE_200615_SCH_16.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures; 15/06/2020; Bristol, UK. People view and photograph a new mystery statue of a caricature Englishman has been placed by the now empty Colston plinth on Monday morning, following an “All Lives Matter” protest at the weekend to “defend the Cenotaph”. The grey statue shows a bald man resting in a wheelie bin with the words "Spoiler: St George was Turkish" on the front. He is holding a small globe in one hand and a mobile phone in the other hand with a screen showing the St George flag and words "England for the English". The character wears a string vest over a beer belly and looks over to where Colston’s statue was torn down from its plinth a week ago. The artist is not known but the statue looks similar to "Ruth", a character who appeared on Victoria Street in April 2018. This comes just over a week after the statue of Edward Colston which has stood in Bristol city centre for over 100 years was pulled down by protestors and thrown in Bristol Docks during a Black Lives Matters rally and march through the city centre. The rally was held 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 against both modern day racism and historical legacies of slavery. 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. Photo credit: Simon Chapman/LNP.
    LNP_ENGLISHMAN_STATUE_200615_SCH_15.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures; 15/06/2020; Bristol, UK. A new mystery statue of a caricature Englishman has been placed by the now empty Colston plinth seen in the background on the Monday morning after an “All Lives Matter” protest at the weekend to “defend the Cenotaph”. The grey statue shows a bald man resting in a wheelie bin with the words "Spoiler: St George was Turkish" on the front. He is holding a small globe in one hand and a mobile phone in the other hand with a screen showing the St George flag and words "England for the English". The character wears a string vest over a beer belly and looks over to where Colston’s statue was torn down from its plinth a week ago. The artist is not known but the statue looks similar to "Ruth", a character who appeared on Victoria Street in April 2018. This comes just over a week after the statue of Edward Colston which has stood in Bristol city centre for over 100 years was pulled down by protestors and thrown in Bristol Docks during a Black Lives Matters rally and march through the city centre. The rally was held 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 against both modern day racism and historical legacies of slavery. 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. Photo credit: Simon Chapman/LNP.
    LNP_ENGLISHMAN_STATUE_200615_SCH_13.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures; 15/06/2020; Bristol, UK. People view and photograph a new mystery statue of a caricature Englishman has been placed by the now empty Colston plinth on Monday morning, following an “All Lives Matter” protest at the weekend to “defend the Cenotaph”. The grey statue shows a bald man resting in a wheelie bin with the words "Spoiler: St George was Turkish" on the front. He is holding a small globe in one hand and a mobile phone in the other hand with a screen showing the St George flag and words "England for the English". The character wears a string vest over a beer belly and looks over to where Colston’s statue was torn down from its plinth a week ago. The artist is not known but the statue looks similar to "Ruth", a character who appeared on Victoria Street in April 2018. This comes just over a week after the statue of Edward Colston which has stood in Bristol city centre for over 100 years was pulled down by protestors and thrown in Bristol Docks during a Black Lives Matters rally and march through the city centre. The rally was held 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 against both modern day racism and historical legacies of slavery. 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. Photo credit: Simon Chapman/LNP.
    LNP_ENGLISHMAN_STATUE_200615_SCH_10.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures; 15/06/2020; Bristol, UK. A new mystery statue of a caricature Englishman has been placed by the now empty Colston plinth on Monday morning, following an “All Lives Matter” protest at the weekend to “defend the Cenotaph”. The grey statue shows a bald man resting in a wheelie bin with the words "Spoiler: St George was Turkish" on the front. He is holding a small globe in one hand and a mobile phone in the other hand with a screen showing the St George flag and words "England for the English". The character wears a string vest over a beer belly and looks over to where Colston’s statue was torn down from its plinth a week ago. The artist is not known but the statue looks similar to "Ruth", a character who appeared on Victoria Street in April 2018. This comes just over a week after the statue of Edward Colston which has stood in Bristol city centre for over 100 years was pulled down by protestors and thrown in Bristol Docks during a Black Lives Matters rally and march through the city centre. The rally was held 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 against both modern day racism and historical legacies of slavery. 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. Photo credit: Simon Chapman/LNP.
    LNP_ENGLISHMAN_STATUE_200615_SCH_07.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures; 15/06/2020; Bristol, UK. People view and photograph a new mystery statue of a caricature Englishman has been placed by the now empty Colston plinth on Monday morning, following an “All Lives Matter” protest at the weekend to “defend the Cenotaph”. The grey statue shows a bald man resting in a wheelie bin with the words "Spoiler: St George was Turkish" on the front. He is holding a small globe in one hand and a mobile phone in the other hand with a screen showing the St George flag and words "England for the English". The character wears a string vest over a beer belly and looks over to where Colston’s statue was torn down from its plinth a week ago. The artist is not known but the statue looks similar to "Ruth", a character who appeared on Victoria Street in April 2018. This comes just over a week after the statue of Edward Colston which has stood in Bristol city centre for over 100 years was pulled down by protestors and thrown in Bristol Docks during a Black Lives Matters rally and march through the city centre. The rally was held 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 against both modern day racism and historical legacies of slavery. 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. Photo credit: Simon Chapman/LNP.
    LNP_ENGLISHMAN_STATUE_200615_SCH_03.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures; 15/06/2020; Bristol, UK. People view and photograph a new mystery statue of a caricature Englishman has been placed by the now empty Colston plinth on Monday morning, following an “All Lives Matter” protest at the weekend to “defend the Cenotaph”. The grey statue shows a bald man resting in a wheelie bin with the words "Spoiler: St George was Turkish" on the front. He is holding a small globe in one hand and a mobile phone in the other hand with a screen showing the St George flag and words "England for the English". The character wears a string vest over a beer belly and looks over to where Colston’s statue was torn down from its plinth a week ago. The artist is not known but the statue looks similar to "Ruth", a character who appeared on Victoria Street in April 2018. This comes just over a week after the statue of Edward Colston which has stood in Bristol city centre for over 100 years was pulled down by protestors and thrown in Bristol Docks during a Black Lives Matters rally and march through the city centre. The rally was held 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 against both modern day racism and historical legacies of slavery. 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. Photo credit: Simon Chapman/LNP.
    LNP_ENGLISHMAN_STATUE_200615_SCH_02.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 24/04/2018. Bristol, UK. A statue of an elderly lady holding her handbag and a hammer has been put up on Victoria Street in Bristol city centre. The statue has "OAP" with the "A" as an anarchist symbol painted on the plinth, and has been chained to two bicycle stands outside the offices of Age UK. Staff working at Age UK Bristol found the 10-foot tall statue in front of their offices when they arrived at work on Monday, but know nothing about the statue. There have been unconfirmed reports the statue is a tribute to a lady by an anonymous artist, as the name "Ruth" is written on the back of the plinth.  Photo credit: Simon Chapman/LNP
    LNP_OAP_STATUE_180424_SCH_23.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 24/04/2018. Bristol, UK. A statue of an elderly lady holding her handbag and a hammer has been put up on Victoria Street in Bristol city centre. The statue has "OAP" with the "A" as an anarchist symbol painted on the plinth, and has been chained to two bicycle stands outside the offices of Age UK. Staff working at Age UK Bristol found the 10-foot tall statue in front of their offices when they arrived at work on Monday, but know nothing about the statue. There have been unconfirmed reports the statue is a tribute to a lady by an anonymous artist, as the name "Ruth" is written on the back of the plinth.  Photo credit: Simon Chapman/LNP
    LNP_OAP_STATUE_180424_SCH_21.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 24/04/2018. Bristol, UK. A statue of an elderly lady holding her handbag and a hammer has been put up on Victoria Street in Bristol city centre. The statue has "OAP" with the "A" as an anarchist symbol painted on the plinth, and has been chained to two bicycle stands outside the offices of Age UK. Staff working at Age UK Bristol found the 10-foot tall statue in front of their offices when they arrived at work on Monday, but know nothing about the statue. There have been unconfirmed reports the statue is a tribute to a lady by an anonymous artist, as the name "Ruth" is written on the back of the plinth.  Photo credit: Simon Chapman/LNP
    LNP_OAP_STATUE_180424_SCH_19.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 24/04/2018. Bristol, UK. A statue of an elderly lady holding her handbag and a hammer has been put up on Victoria Street in Bristol city centre. The statue has "OAP" with the "A" as an anarchist symbol painted on the plinth, and has been chained to two bicycle stands outside the offices of Age UK. Staff working at Age UK Bristol found the 10-foot tall statue in front of their offices when they arrived at work on Monday, but know nothing about the statue. There have been unconfirmed reports the statue is a tribute to a lady by an anonymous artist, as the name "Ruth" is written on the back of the plinth.  Photo credit: Simon Chapman/LNP
    LNP_OAP_STATUE_180424_SCH_18.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 24/04/2018. Bristol, UK. A statue of an elderly lady holding her handbag and a hammer has been put up on Victoria Street in Bristol city centre. The statue has "OAP" with the "A" as an anarchist symbol painted on the plinth, and has been chained to two bicycle stands outside the offices of Age UK. Staff working at Age UK Bristol found the 10-foot tall statue in front of their offices when they arrived at work on Monday, but know nothing about the statue. There have been unconfirmed reports the statue is a tribute to a lady by an anonymous artist, as the name "Ruth" is written on the back of the plinth.  Photo credit: Simon Chapman/LNP
    LNP_OAP_STATUE_180424_SCH_15.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 24/04/2018. Bristol, UK. A statue of an elderly lady holding her handbag and a hammer has been put up on Victoria Street in Bristol city centre. The statue has "OAP" with the "A" as an anarchist symbol painted on the plinth, and has been chained to two bicycle stands outside the offices of Age UK. Staff working at Age UK Bristol found the 10-foot tall statue in front of their offices when they arrived at work on Monday, but know nothing about the statue. There have been unconfirmed reports the statue is a tribute to a lady by an anonymous artist, as the name "Ruth" is written on the back of the plinth.  Photo credit: Simon Chapman/LNP
    LNP_OAP_STATUE_180424_SCH_14.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 24/04/2018. Bristol, UK. A statue of an elderly lady holding her handbag and a hammer has been put up on Victoria Street in Bristol city centre. The statue has "OAP" with the "A" as an anarchist symbol painted on the plinth, and has been chained to two bicycle stands outside the offices of Age UK. Staff working at Age UK Bristol found the 10-foot tall statue in front of their offices when they arrived at work on Monday, but know nothing about the statue. There have been unconfirmed reports the statue is a tribute to a lady by an anonymous artist, as the name "Ruth" is written on the back of the plinth.  Photo credit: Simon Chapman/LNP
    LNP_OAP_STATUE_180424_SCH_13.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 24/04/2018. Bristol, UK. A statue of an elderly lady holding her handbag and a hammer has been put up on Victoria Street in Bristol city centre. The statue has "OAP" with the "A" as an anarchist symbol painted on the plinth, and has been chained to two bicycle stands outside the offices of Age UK. Staff working at Age UK Bristol found the 10-foot tall statue in front of their offices when they arrived at work on Monday, but know nothing about the statue. There have been unconfirmed reports the statue is a tribute to a lady by an anonymous artist, as the name "Ruth" is written on the back of the plinth.  Photo credit: Simon Chapman/LNP
    LNP_OAP_STATUE_180424_SCH_12.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 24/04/2018. Bristol, UK. A statue of an elderly lady holding her handbag and a hammer has been put up on Victoria Street in Bristol city centre. The statue has "OAP" with the "A" as an anarchist symbol painted on the plinth, and has been chained to two bicycle stands outside the offices of Age UK. Staff working at Age UK Bristol found the 10-foot tall statue in front of their offices when they arrived at work on Monday, but know nothing about the statue. There have been unconfirmed reports the statue is a tribute to a lady by an anonymous artist, as the name "Ruth" is written on the back of the plinth.  Photo credit: Simon Chapman/LNP
    LNP_OAP_STATUE_180424_SCH_11.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 24/04/2018. Bristol, UK. A statue of an elderly lady holding her handbag and a hammer has been put up on Victoria Street in Bristol city centre. The statue has "OAP" with the "A" as an anarchist symbol painted on the plinth, and has been chained to two bicycle stands outside the offices of Age UK. Staff working at Age UK Bristol found the 10-foot tall statue in front of their offices when they arrived at work on Monday, but know nothing about the statue. There have been unconfirmed reports the statue is a tribute to a lady by an anonymous artist, as the name "Ruth" is written on the back of the plinth.  Photo credit: Simon Chapman/LNP
    LNP_OAP_STATUE_180424_SCH_10.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 24/04/2018. Bristol, UK. A statue of an elderly lady holding her handbag and a hammer has been put up on Victoria Street in Bristol city centre. The statue has "OAP" with the "A" as an anarchist symbol painted on the plinth, and has been chained to two bicycle stands outside the offices of Age UK. Staff working at Age UK Bristol found the 10-foot tall statue in front of their offices when they arrived at work on Monday, but know nothing about the statue. There have been unconfirmed reports the statue is a tribute to a lady by an anonymous artist, as the name "Ruth" is written on the back of the plinth.  Photo credit: Simon Chapman/LNP
    LNP_OAP_STATUE_180424_SCH_08.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 24/04/2018. Bristol, UK. A statue of an elderly lady holding her handbag and a hammer has been put up on Victoria Street in Bristol city centre. The statue has "OAP" with the "A" as an anarchist symbol painted on the plinth, and has been chained to two bicycle stands outside the offices of Age UK. Staff working at Age UK Bristol found the 10-foot tall statue in front of their offices when they arrived at work on Monday, but know nothing about the statue. There have been unconfirmed reports the statue is a tribute to a lady by an anonymous artist, as the name "Ruth" is written on the back of the plinth.  Photo credit: Simon Chapman/LNP
    LNP_OAP_STATUE_180424_SCH_06.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 24/04/2018. Bristol, UK. A statue of an elderly lady holding her handbag and a hammer has been put up on Victoria Street in Bristol city centre. The statue has "OAP" with the "A" as an anarchist symbol painted on the plinth, and has been chained to two bicycle stands outside the offices of Age UK. Staff working at Age UK Bristol found the 10-foot tall statue in front of their offices when they arrived at work on Monday, but know nothing about the statue. There have been unconfirmed reports the statue is a tribute to a lady by an anonymous artist, as the name "Ruth" is written on the back of the plinth.  Photo credit: Simon Chapman/LNP
    LNP_OAP_STATUE_180424_SCH_03.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 24/04/2018. Bristol, UK. A statue of an elderly lady holding her handbag and a hammer has been put up on Victoria Street in Bristol city centre. The statue has "OAP" with the "A" as an anarchist symbol painted on the plinth, and has been chained to two bicycle stands outside the offices of Age UK. Staff working at Age UK Bristol found the 10-foot tall statue in front of their offices when they arrived at work on Monday, but know nothing about the statue. There have been unconfirmed reports the statue is a tribute to a lady by an anonymous artist, as the name "Ruth" is written on the back of the plinth.  Photo credit: Simon Chapman/LNP
    LNP_OAP_STATUE_180424_SCH_02.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures; 15/06/2020; Bristol, UK. A new mystery statue of a caricature Englishman has been placed by the now empty Colston plinth on Monday morning, following an “All Lives Matter” protest at the weekend to “defend the Cenotaph”. The grey statue shows a bald man resting in a wheelie bin with the words "Spoiler: St George was Turkish" on the front. He is holding a small globe in one hand and a mobile phone in the other hand with a screen showing the St George flag and words "England for the English". The character wears a string vest over a beer belly and looks over to where Colston’s statue was torn down from its plinth a week ago. The artist is not known but the statue looks similar to "Ruth", a character who appeared on Victoria Street in April 2018. This comes just over a week after the statue of Edward Colston which has stood in Bristol city centre for over 100 years was pulled down by protestors and thrown in Bristol Docks during a Black Lives Matters rally and march through the city centre. The rally was held 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 against both modern day racism and historical legacies of slavery. 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. Photo credit: Simon Chapman/LNP.
    LNP_ENGLISHMAN_STATUE_200615_SCH_09.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 24/04/2018. Bristol, UK. A statue of an elderly lady holding her handbag and a hammer has been put up on Victoria Street in Bristol city centre. The statue has "OAP" with the "A" as an anarchist symbol painted on the plinth, and has been chained to two bicycle stands outside the offices of Age UK. Staff working at Age UK Bristol found the 10-foot tall statue in front of their offices when they arrived at work on Monday, but know nothing about the statue. There have been unconfirmed reports the statue is a tribute to a lady by an anonymous artist, as the name "Ruth" is written on the back of the plinth.  Photo credit: Simon Chapman/LNP
    LNP_OAP_STATUE_180424_SCH_20.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 24/04/2018. Bristol, UK. A statue of an elderly lady holding her handbag and a hammer has been put up on Victoria Street in Bristol city centre. The statue has "OAP" with the "A" as an anarchist symbol painted on the plinth, and has been chained to two bicycle stands outside the offices of Age UK. Staff working at Age UK Bristol found the 10-foot tall statue in front of their offices when they arrived at work on Monday, but know nothing about the statue. There have been unconfirmed reports the statue is a tribute to a lady by an anonymous artist, as the name "Ruth" is written on the back of the plinth.  Photo credit: Simon Chapman/LNP
    LNP_OAP_STATUE_180424_SCH_05.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures; 15/07/2020; Bristol, UK. People view and photograph a new statue of a black lives matter protestor, Jen Reid, which has been placed on the plinth from where 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. The new sculpture is titled "A Surge of Power (Jen Reid) 2020" by artist Marc Quinn and is made of black resin and steel and was put up around dawn this morning without any 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_BLM_STATUE_200715_SCH_39.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures; 15/07/2020; Bristol, UK. People view and photograph a new statue of a black lives matter protestor, Jen Reid, which has been placed on the plinth from where 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. The new sculpture is titled "A Surge of Power (Jen Reid) 2020" by artist Marc Quinn and is made of black resin and steel and was put up around dawn this morning without any 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_BLM_STATUE_200715_SCH_29.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures; 15/07/2020; Bristol, UK. People view and photograph a new statue of a black lives matter protestor has been placed on the plinth from where 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. The new sculpture is titled "A Surge of Power (Jen Reid) 2020" by artist Marc Quinn and is made of black resin and steel and was put up around dawn this morning without any 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_BLM_STATUE_200715_SCH_14.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures; 15/07/2020; Bristol, UK. People view and photograph a new statue of a black lives matter protestor has been placed on the plinth from where 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. The new sculpture is titled "A Surge of Power (Jen Reid) 2020" by artist Marc Quinn and is made of black resin and steel and was put up around dawn this morning without any 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_BLM_STATUE_200715_SCH_09.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures; 15/07/2020; Bristol, UK. People view and photograph a new statue of a black lives matter protestor has been placed on the plinth from where 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. The new sculpture is titled "A Surge of Power (Jen Reid) 2020" by artist Marc Quinn and is made of black resin and steel and was put up around dawn this morning without any 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_BLM_STATUE_200715_SCH_08.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures; 15/07/2020; Bristol, UK. People view and photograph a new statue of a black lives matter protestor, Jen Reid, which has been placed on the plinth from where 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. The new sculpture is titled "A Surge of Power (Jen Reid) 2020" by artist Marc Quinn and is made of black resin and steel and was put up around dawn this morning without any 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_BLM_STATUE_200715_SCH_30.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures; 15/07/2020; Bristol, UK. People view and photograph a new statue of a black lives matter protestor, Jen Reid, which has been placed on the plinth from where 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. The new sculpture is titled "A Surge of Power (Jen Reid) 2020" by artist Marc Quinn and is made of black resin and steel and was put up around dawn this morning without any 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_BLM_STATUE_200715_SCH_49.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures; 15/07/2020; Bristol, UK. People view and photograph a new statue of a black lives matter protestor, Jen Reid, which has been placed on the plinth from where 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. The new sculpture is titled "A Surge of Power (Jen Reid) 2020" by artist Marc Quinn and is made of black resin and steel and was put up around dawn this morning without any 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_BLM_STATUE_200715_SCH_47.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures; 15/07/2020; Bristol, UK. People view and photograph a new statue of a black lives matter protestor, Jen Reid, which has been placed on the plinth from where 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. The new sculpture is titled "A Surge of Power (Jen Reid) 2020" by artist Marc Quinn and is made of black resin and steel and was put up around dawn this morning without any 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_BLM_STATUE_200715_SCH_46.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures; 15/07/2020; Bristol, UK. People view and photograph a new statue of a black lives matter protestor, Jen Reid, which has been placed on the plinth from where 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. The new sculpture is titled "A Surge of Power (Jen Reid) 2020" by artist Marc Quinn and is made of black resin and steel and was put up around dawn this morning without any 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_BLM_STATUE_200715_SCH_44.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures; 15/07/2020; Bristol, UK. People view and photograph a new statue of a black lives matter protestor, Jen Reid, which has been placed on the plinth from where 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. The new sculpture is titled "A Surge of Power (Jen Reid) 2020" by artist Marc Quinn and is made of black resin and steel and was put up around dawn this morning without any 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_BLM_STATUE_200715_SCH_42.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures; 15/07/2020; Bristol, UK. People view and photograph a new statue of a black lives matter protestor, Jen Reid, which has been placed on the plinth from where 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. The new sculpture is titled "A Surge of Power (Jen Reid) 2020" by artist Marc Quinn and is made of black resin and steel and was put up around dawn this morning without any 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_BLM_STATUE_200715_SCH_36.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures; 15/07/2020; Bristol, UK. People view and photograph a new statue of a black lives matter protestor, Jen Reid, which has been placed on the plinth from where 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. The new sculpture is titled "A Surge of Power (Jen Reid) 2020" by artist Marc Quinn and is made of black resin and steel and was put up around dawn this morning without any 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_BLM_STATUE_200715_SCH_32.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures; 15/07/2020; Bristol, UK. People view and photograph a new statue of a black lives matter protestor, Jen Reid, which has been placed on the plinth from where 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. The new sculpture is titled "A Surge of Power (Jen Reid) 2020" by artist Marc Quinn and is made of black resin and steel and was put up around dawn this morning without any 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_BLM_STATUE_200715_SCH_27.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures; 15/07/2020; Bristol, UK. People view and photograph a new statue of a black lives matter protestor, Jen Reid, which has been placed on the plinth from where 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. The new sculpture is titled "A Surge of Power (Jen Reid) 2020" by artist Marc Quinn and is made of black resin and steel and was put up around dawn this morning without any 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_BLM_STATUE_200715_SCH_26.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures; 15/07/2020; Bristol, UK. People view and photograph a new statue of a black lives matter protestor, Jen Reid, which has been placed on the plinth from where 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. The new sculpture is titled "A Surge of Power (Jen Reid) 2020" by artist Marc Quinn and is made of black resin and steel and was put up around dawn this morning without any 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_BLM_STATUE_200715_SCH_24.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures; 15/07/2020; Bristol, UK. People view and photograph a new statue of a black lives matter protestor has been placed on the plinth from where 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. The new sculpture is titled "A Surge of Power (Jen Reid) 2020" by artist Marc Quinn and is made of black resin and steel and was put up around dawn this morning without any 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_BLM_STATUE_200715_SCH_23.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures; 15/07/2020; Bristol, UK. People view and photograph a new statue of a black lives matter protestor has been placed on the plinth from where 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. The new sculpture is titled "A Surge of Power (Jen Reid) 2020" by artist Marc Quinn and is made of black resin and steel and was put up around dawn this morning without any 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_BLM_STATUE_200715_SCH_22.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures; 15/07/2020; Bristol, UK. People view and photograph a new statue of a black lives matter protestor has been placed on the plinth from where 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. The new sculpture is titled "A Surge of Power (Jen Reid) 2020" by artist Marc Quinn and is made of black resin and steel and was put up around dawn this morning without any 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_BLM_STATUE_200715_SCH_21.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures; 15/07/2020; Bristol, UK. People view and photograph a new statue of a black lives matter protestor has been placed on the plinth from where 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. The new sculpture is titled "A Surge of Power (Jen Reid) 2020" by artist Marc Quinn and is made of black resin and steel and was put up around dawn this morning without any 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_BLM_STATUE_200715_SCH_16.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures; 15/07/2020; Bristol, UK. People view and photograph a new statue of a black lives matter protestor has been placed on the plinth from where 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. The new sculpture is titled "A Surge of Power (Jen Reid) 2020" by artist Marc Quinn and is made of black resin and steel and was put up around dawn this morning without any 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_BLM_STATUE_200715_SCH_15.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures; 15/07/2020; Bristol, UK. People view and photograph a new statue of a black lives matter protestor has been placed on the plinth from where 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. The new sculpture is titled "A Surge of Power (Jen Reid) 2020" by artist Marc Quinn and is made of black resin and steel and was put up around dawn this morning without any 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_BLM_STATUE_200715_SCH_13.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures; 15/07/2020; Bristol, UK. People view and photograph a new statue of a black lives matter protestor has been placed on the plinth from where 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. The new sculpture is titled "A Surge of Power (Jen Reid) 2020" by artist Marc Quinn and is made of black resin and steel and was put up around dawn this morning without any 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_BLM_STATUE_200715_SCH_07.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures; 15/07/2020; Bristol, UK. People view and photograph a new statue of a black lives matter protestor, Jen Reid, which has been placed on the plinth from where 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. The new sculpture is titled "A Surge of Power (Jen Reid) 2020" by artist Marc Quinn and is made of black resin and steel and was put up around dawn this morning without any 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_BLM_STATUE_200715_SCH_33.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures; 15/07/2020; Bristol, UK. People view and photograph a new statue of a black lives matter protestor has been placed on the plinth from where 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. The new sculpture is titled "A Surge of Power (Jen Reid) 2020" by artist Marc Quinn and is made of black resin and steel and was put up around dawn this morning without any 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_BLM_STATUE_200715_SCH_20.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures; 12/06/2020; Bristol, UK. The statue of Jamaican-born playwright, poet and actor Alfred Fagon in St Pauls, Bristol. Today, 12 June 2020, the statue has been covered with what appears to be a corrosive substance thought to be bleach. At a Black Lives Matter protest on 07 June 2020 the statue of slave trader and philanthropist Edward Colston which has stood in Bristol city centre for over 100 years was pulled down with ropes and thrown in Bristol Docks by protesters during the BLM 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. The killing of George Floyd has seen widespread protests in the US, the UK and other countries. Photo credit: Simon Chapman/LNP.
    LNP_FAGON_STATUE_200612_SCH_19.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures; 12/06/2020; Bristol, UK. The statue of Jamaican-born playwright, poet and actor Alfred Fagon in St Pauls, Bristol. Today, 12 June 2020, the statue has been covered with what appears to be a corrosive substance thought to be bleach. At a Black Lives Matter protest on 07 June 2020 the statue of slave trader and philanthropist Edward Colston which has stood in Bristol city centre for over 100 years was pulled down with ropes and thrown in Bristol Docks by protesters during the BLM 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. The killing of George Floyd has seen widespread protests in the US, the UK and other countries. Photo credit: Simon Chapman/LNP.
    LNP_FAGON_STATUE_200612_SCH_18.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures; 12/06/2020; Bristol, UK. The statue of Jamaican-born playwright, poet and actor Alfred Fagon in St Pauls, Bristol. Today, 12 June 2020, the statue has been covered with what appears to be a corrosive substance thought to be bleach. At a Black Lives Matter protest on 07 June 2020 the statue of slave trader and philanthropist Edward Colston which has stood in Bristol city centre for over 100 years was pulled down with ropes and thrown in Bristol Docks by protesters during the BLM 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. The killing of George Floyd has seen widespread protests in the US, the UK and other countries. Photo credit: Simon Chapman/LNP.
    LNP_FAGON_STATUE_200612_SCH_14.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures; 12/06/2020; Bristol, UK. The statue of Jamaican-born playwright, poet and actor Alfred Fagon in St Pauls, Bristol. Today, 12 June 2020, the statue has been covered with what appears to be a corrosive substance thought to be bleach. At a Black Lives Matter protest on 07 June 2020 the statue of slave trader and philanthropist Edward Colston which has stood in Bristol city centre for over 100 years was pulled down with ropes and thrown in Bristol Docks by protesters during the BLM 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. The killing of George Floyd has seen widespread protests in the US, the UK and other countries. Photo credit: Simon Chapman/LNP.
    LNP_FAGON_STATUE_200612_SCH_12.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures; 12/06/2020; Bristol, UK. The statue of Jamaican-born playwright, poet and actor Alfred Fagon in St Pauls, Bristol. Today, 12 June 2020, the statue has been covered with what appears to be a corrosive substance thought to be bleach. At a Black Lives Matter protest on 07 June 2020 the statue of slave trader and philanthropist Edward Colston which has stood in Bristol city centre for over 100 years was pulled down with ropes and thrown in Bristol Docks by protesters during the BLM 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. The killing of George Floyd has seen widespread protests in the US, the UK and other countries. Photo credit: Simon Chapman/LNP.
    LNP_FAGON_STATUE_200612_SCH_11.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures; 12/06/2020; Bristol, UK. File Picture dated 28/05/2018 of the statue of Jamaican-born playwright, poet and actor Alfred Fagon in St Pauls, Bristol. Today, 12 June 2020, the statue has been covered with what appears to be a corrosive substance thought to be bleach. At a Black Lives Matter protest on 07 June 2020 the statue of slave trader and philanthropist Edward Colston which has stood in Bristol city centre for over 100 years was pulled down with ropes and thrown in Bristol Docks by protesters during the BLM 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. The killing of George Floyd has seen widespread protests in the US, the UK and other countries. Photo credit: Simon Chapman/LNP.
    LNP_FAGON_STATUE_200612_SCH_03.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures; 12/06/2020; Bristol, UK. The statue of Jamaican-born playwright, poet and actor Alfred Fagon in St Pauls, Bristol. Today, 12 June 2020, the statue has been covered with what appears to be a corrosive substance thought to be bleach. At a Black Lives Matter protest on 07 June 2020 the statue of slave trader and philanthropist Edward Colston which has stood in Bristol city centre for over 100 years was pulled down with ropes and thrown in Bristol Docks by protesters during the BLM 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. The killing of George Floyd has seen widespread protests in the US, the UK and other countries. Photo credit: Simon Chapman/LNP.
    LNP_FAGON_STATUE_200612_SCH_07.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures.15/07/2020. Bristol, UK. A statue of BLM protester Jen Reid, made by Mark Quinn is installed in Bristol on the empty plinth where the statue of 17th century slave trader and Bristol philanthropist Edward Colston used to stand. . Photo credit: Marcin Nowak/LNP
    LNP_Bristol_Statue_MNO_34.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures.15/07/2020. Bristol, UK. A statue of BLM protester Jen Reid (pictured), made by Mark Quinn is installed in Bristol on the empty plinth where the statue of 17th century slave trader and Bristol philanthropist Edward Colston used to stand. . Photo credit: Marcin Nowak/LNP
    LNP_Bristol_Statue_MNO_32.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures.15/07/2020. Bristol, UK. A statue of BLM protester Jen Reid (pictured), made by Mark Quinn is installed in Bristol on the empty plinth where the statue of 17th century slave trader and Bristol philanthropist Edward Colston used to stand. . Photo credit: Marcin Nowak/LNP
    LNP_Bristol_Statue_MNO_29.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 15/07/2020. Bristol, UK. A statue of BLM protester Jen Reid, made by Mark Quinn is installed in Bristol on the empty plinth where the statue of 17th century slave trader and Bristol philanthropist Edward Colston used to stand. . Photo credit: Marcin Nowak/LNP
    LNP_Bristol_Statue_MNO_27.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 15/07/2020. Bristol, UK. A statue of BLM protester Jen Reid, made by Mark Quinn is installed in Bristol on the empty plinth where the statue of 17th century slave trader and Bristol philanthropist Edward Colston used to stand. . Photo credit: Marcin Nowak/LNP
    LNP_Bristol_Statue_MNO_25.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 15/07/2020. Bristol, UK. A statue of BLM protester Jen Reid, made by Mark Quinn is installed in Bristol on the empty plinth where the statue of 17th century slave trader and Bristol philanthropist Edward Colston used to stand. . Photo credit: Marcin Nowak/LNP
    LNP_Bristol_Statue_MNO_19.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 15/07/2020. Bristol, UK. A statue of BLM protester Jen Reid, made by Mark Quinn is installed in Bristol on the empty plinth where the statue of 17th century slave trader and Bristol philanthropist Edward Colston used to stand. . Photo credit: Marcin Nowak/LNP
    LNP_Bristol_Statue_MNO_21.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 15/07/2020. Bristol, UK. A statue of BLM protester Jen Reid, made by Mark Quinn is installed in Bristol on the empty plinth where the statue of 17th century slave trader and Bristol philanthropist Edward Colston used to stand. . Photo credit: Marcin Nowak/LNP
    LNP_Bristol_Statue_MNO_18.jpg
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