Published August 23, 2025 2:29pm
Updated August 23, 2025 7:58pm
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At least 15 protesters have been arrested after clashing with police outside of migrant hotels up and down the UK with more than 30 demonstrations this weekend.
Protests have erupted in Bristol, Exeter, Tamworth, Cannock, Nuneaton, Liverpool, Wakefield, Newcastle, Horley, Canary Wharf, Aberdeen and Perth in Scotland, and Mold in Wales this weekend.
Punches were thrown between anti-protesters and counter-demonstrators in Bristol, with officers forced to intervene and escort people away.
A 37-year-old woman was arrested on suspicion of assaulting an emergency worker at the conclusion of the protest in the city centre.
Merseyside Police confirmed 11 people have been arrested fter a Ukip protest in Liverpool.
Offences included being drunk and disorderly, assault and affray.
Meanwhile Surrey Police said they had arrested three people – two for breach of the peace and one for breaching the conditions of a community protection notice.
Demonstrations also took place last night in Leeds, Cheshunt, Cardiff and Portsmouth.
It comes after a landmark ruling allowed for The Bell Hotel in Epping, Essex, to be closed to asylum seekers.
Residents in other towns and cities across the country have followed suit, waving Union Jack and St George’s flags outside of local asylum hotels.
In Newcastle, more than 100 people waved Union Jack flags and held up banners outside the New Bridge Hotel, where around 800 male asylum seekers are being housed.
They chanted: ‘Stop the boats! Get them out! Send them back!’
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They also shouted about ‘saving women and children’.
But counter-protesters were also at the scene, and shouted: ‘No hate, no fear, refugees are welcome here!’
Refugee Ariya is a teenage victim of torture who made a treacherous journey to the UK by boat after fleeing the dictatorship in Iran.
At a protest earlier this month, the 18-year-old said: ‘We all feel good about the counter protest, but we are also stressed because we don’t know what is going to happen.
‘I have come from Iran. I had to leave because I was tortured. I got into trouble with the authorities for changing my religion.
‘The journey here was very hard. I would not be here if I did not have to be.’
In Horley, one protester shouted ‘you’re all scum and you should be ashamed’ after he was accused of racism from a pro-migration group.
Lines of police have been forced to separate the two groups. Stand Up to Racism protesters chanted ‘no hate, no fear, refugees are welcome here’ which were met with ‘no they’re f****** not’ from the other side of the street.
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