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Thursday March 28, 2024

Thousands march in London against looming Brexit

By our correspondents
March 26, 2017

LONDON: Tens of thousands of pro-EU protesters took to London’s streets on Saturday, in defiance of the terror threat, to mark the bloc’s 60th anniversary just days before Brexit begins.

Organisers said around 80,000 people had joined the march calling for Britain to stay in the European Union, even as Prime Minister Theresa May prepares to start the withdrawal process on Wednesday.

A sea of blue EU flags stretched down Piccadilly and past Trafalgar Square, interspersed by signs saying "I am European" and "I’m 15 -- I want my future back!" The crowd fell silent as it filed into Parliament Square, the scene of terror this week when a homegrown killer drove a car through crowds of people before crashing into parliament and stabbing a policeman. "Terrorism won’t divide us -- Brexit will," said one banner held aloft, while another said: "Stop sleepwalking, stop this madness."

There were calls to cancel the march after Wednesday’s attack, which left four people and the perpetrator dead, but organisers said: "We will not be intimidated."

Police said that "an appropriate policing plan is in place" but an AFP reporter said security was discreet.

In a referendum on June 23, Britons voted by 52 percent to end their four-decade membership of the EU. But 48 percent voted to stay -- and are unhappy with May’s plans to leave the EU’s single market in order to cut immigration, and her refusal to guarantee the rights of three million Europeans living in Britain.