Two women pulled apart by security after Boxing Day sales turn violent on Oxford Street

  • london
  • December 27, 2022
  • Comments Off on Two women pulled apart by security after Boxing Day sales turn violent on Oxford Street
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A huge brawl erupted in a London shop after tensions rose during Boxing Day sales.

Two women in Pull&Bear’s Oxford Street branch had to be forcibly pulled apart by security.

The store had been busy on December 26, with a large number of festive shoppers on the hunt for a bargain.

A video captured the moments peaceful shopping descended into chaos.

Two people were forced apart as they clashed inside the store – with one seemingly wielding a pair of jeans in the scuffle.

The Metropolitan Police confirmed to MyLondon that officers attended a shop on Oxford Street at 6.10pm on Monday, December 26 following reports of a fight.

In a statement, the force said: ‘Police were called at 18:10hrs on Monday, 26 December to reports of an altercation at a shop in Oxford Street.

‘Officers found a member of staff with a head injury. He declined medical assistance and continued his work.

‘There have been no arrests. Enquiries are ongoing.’

Boxing Day footfall this year was up by more than a third on the UK’s high streets despite train strikes and the cost-of-living crisis.

Concerns had been raised that strikes and tightening budgets could scare consumers away from shopping destinations on the first day of the sales.

But industry analyst Springboard said data from Monday showed footfall was 38.8% higher than last year.

There were increases across all three key retail destination types compared with the same period in 2021.

On high streets it was up by 44.1%, in shopping centres by 40.4%, and in retail parks by 25.9%.

Central London, which has been hit hard by industrial action by transport unions, saw footfall more than double on Boxing Day. The figure for London was just 7.8% lower than the same day in 2019.

Diane Wehrle, insights director at Springboard, said a likely factor in the increase was that Boxing Day 2021 fell on a Sunday rather than a weekday, but added that the latest figures showed that the morning was particularly busy this year.

‘Over the 24 hours of Boxing Day footfall was up from 2021 by about 39%,’ she said.

‘So a slightly smaller increase than the period up to 12pm, but it was in line with our expectations. We did expect the uplift to turn off slightly towards the end of the day. That is exactly what happened.

‘It demonstrates that the morning of Boxing Day this year was much busier than the morning of Boxing Day last year.’

Up to noon footfall was up by 59.4% on high streets, 46.6% in shopping centres, and 33.7% in retail parks.

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