Tag Archives: Londons

Bruce Buffer Visits London’s Famous Savile Row Ahead of UFC 286 Edwards vs Usman – UFC – Ultimate Fighting Championship

  1. Bruce Buffer Visits London’s Famous Savile Row Ahead of UFC 286 Edwards vs Usman UFC – Ultimate Fighting Championship
  2. UFC 286 weigh-in results: Leon Edwards, Kamaru Usman official for trilogy bout, one fighter misses by 3.5 pou… MMA Fighting
  3. Dana White talks Covington as a backup for UFC 286, Jones vs. Miocic, Conor McGregor’s USADA situation, more MMA Junkie
  4. What is wrong with Leon Edwards? Bloody Elbow
  5. ‘Pork pies?…B*******?!’ | UFC 286 stars guess Cockney slang! | Featuring Edwards, Usman & more! Sky Sports
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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‘You People’ Actor Claims Jonah Hill and Lauren London’s Pivotal Kiss Was Faked With CGI – Hollywood Reporter

  1. ‘You People’ Actor Claims Jonah Hill and Lauren London’s Pivotal Kiss Was Faked With CGI Hollywood Reporter
  2. Jonah Hill and Lauren London’s You People Kiss Was Faked with CGI, Costar Claims Yahoo Entertainment
  3. Jonah Hill And Lauren London’s ‘You People’ Kiss Was CGI, According To Costar HuffPost
  4. Jonah Hill and Lauren London had ‘a FAKE KISS’ created by CGI in You People says costar Daily Mail
  5. Was The ‘You People’ Kiss Between Jonah Hill and Lauren London Faked Using CGI? Rumors Explode After a Controversial Podcast Episode Drops Decider
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Queen Elizabeth II’s coffin arrives at London’s Buckingham Palace

London — The coffin of Queen Elizabeth II has arrived back at Buckingham Palace, the Associated Press reported. Earlier Tuesday, the late monarch left Scotland for the final time.

The coffin of Queen Elizabeth II arrives in the Royal Hearse at Buckingham Palace in London on Sept. 13, 2022, where it will rest in the Palace’s Bow Room overnight.

JUSTIN TALLIS/AFP via Getty Images


A military C-17 Globemaster carrying the queen’s remains touched down Tuesday evening at RAF Northolt, an air force base in the west of London, about an hour after it left Edinburgh, Scotland, the Associated Press reported. The State Hearse carrying the coffin made its way through the rainy streets of London, where crowds of mourners lined up to pay their respects.

Earlier in the day, crowds filled Scotland’s capital to pay their respects to the queen in person.

The coffin of Queen Elizabeth II is carried off a plane by the Queen’s Colour Squadron at RAF Northolt in London, to be taken to Buckingham Palace, Tuesday, Sept. 13, 2022. 

Kirsty Wigglesworth / AP


Hundreds of thousands are expected to wait hours for an opportunity to see the queen’s coffin later this week as it lies in state at Westminster Hall.

The casket earlier was taken from St Giles’ Cathedral in Edinburgh, after it was carried in a solemn procession through the Scottish capital to hushed crowds.  

At the airport, as the Royal Regiment of Scotland, in ceremonial kilts, looked on, a Royal Air Force bearer party carried the coffin slowly on board.

The coffin of Queen Elizabeth II is carried to the RAF aircraft at Edinburgh Airport, Scotland, Tuesday Sept. 13, 2022, for the final journey from Scotland in a Royal Air Force plane to London.

Andrew Milligan / AP


The revamped national anthem was played as the plane taxied to the runway and the queen, who died at her beloved Balmoral home in the Highlands last week aged 96, left Scotland for the final time.

The late monarch will first be brought to Buckingham Palace for the night before being transported to Westminster Hall on Wednesday, where some well-wishers have been queueing for 24 hours already to bid farewell to Britain’s longest-serving sovereign.  

The coffin of Queen Elizabeth II is carried into St Giles Cathedral, after making its way along The Royal Mile, September 12, 2022, in Edinburgh, Scotland.

Pool/Samir Hussein


Two women, Grace and Vanessa, said they had already taken their place in the line, waiting overnight to pay their respects a full day before the queen’s coffin was even due to arrive at Westminster.

“This morning, we went to the actual rehearsal of Her Majesty’s coffin going into Westminster Hall. It was heartbreaking, the solemnness of the occasion,” Grace told the BBC. “I think the whole nation is going to be heartbroken and in floods of tears. We were.”

“This is the way we want to pay respect to the queen, who has done a great service to the country and the commonwealth and the world,” Vanessa said.


How will the British monarchy change under King Charles III?

04:17

The coffin will be transported by hearse to Buckingham Palace in the heart of the capital. On Wednesday, the queen’s coffin will be moved in a procession the short distance from the palace to Westminster Hall, where the late monarch will lie in state until her state funeral on Monday. 

King Charles III, alongside his wife Camilla, the queen consort, were visiting Belfast, Northern Ireland on Tuesday. They will meet politicians and religious leaders and attend a service at St. Anne’s Cathedral before returning to London later in the day.

AFP contributed to this report.

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London’s High Court rules against Venezuela’s Maduro in $1 bln gold battle

Venezuela’s President Nicolas Maduro looks on during a meeting with Alejandro Dominguez, president of the South American Football Confederation CONMEBOL, at the Miraflores Palace, in Caracas, Venezuela July 11, 2022. REUTERS/Leonardo Fernandez Viloria

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LONDON, July 29 (Reuters) – London’s High Court has rejected President Nicolas Maduro’s latest efforts to gain control of more than $1 billion of Venezuela’s gold reserves stored in the Bank of England’s underground vaults in London.

The court ruled on Friday that previous decisions by the Maduro-backed Venezuelan Supreme Court, aimed at reducing opposition leader Juan Guaido’s say over the gold, should be disregarded.

It marked the latest victory for Guaido, who has won a series of legal clashes over the bullion after the British government recognised him rather than Maduro as the South American country’s president.

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“I have … concluded that the Guaido Board succeeds: that the STJ (Venezuelan supreme court) judgements are not capable of being recognised,” the judge in the case said.

The Maduro and Guaido camps have each appointed a different board to the Central Bank of Venezuela (BCV) and the two have issued conflicting instructions concerning the gold reserves.

Lawyers for the Maduro-backed BCV board said the central bank was considering an appeal after Friday’s ruling, while Guiado, who has seen some international support falter over the last 18 months, called it an important victory.

The Maduro-backed BCV board said in a statement it rejected the court’s ruling and reserved “all legal action at its disposal to appeal this unusual and disastrous” decision.

Shortly after, the vice president and finance minister Delcy Rodriguez said on state television that “the damage caused to our people is serious” and that the court “has to rectify.”

Maduro’s legal team has said he would like to sell some of the 31 tonnes of gold to finance Venezuela’s response to the pandemic and bolster a health system gutted by years of economic crisis.

Guaido’s opposition has alleged that Maduro’s cash-strapped administration wants to use the money to pay off his foreign allies, which his lawyers deny.

“This decision represents another step in the process of protecting Venezuela’s international gold reserves and preserving them for the Venezuelan people,” Guaido said in a statement.

“This type of honest and transparent judicial process does not exist in Venezuela.”

The British government in early 2019 joined dozens of nations in backing Guaido, after he declared an interim presidency and denounced Maduro for rigging 2018 elections.

Guaido at that time asked the Bank of England to prevent Maduro’s government from accessing the gold. Maduro’s central bank then sued the Bank of England to recover control, saying it was depriving the BCV of funds needed to finance Venezuela’s coronavirus response.

Legal experts have said the latest case has been unprecedented as it has seen one of a country’s highest courts interpreting the constitution of another.

“This is an unfortunate ruling,” said Sarosh Zaiwalla at Zaiwalla & Co, which represented the Maduro-backed central bank, adding it would continue to pursue the case despite Friday’s decision.

“The BCV remains concerned that the cumulative effect of the judgments of the English Court appears to accord a simple statement by the UK Government recognising as a head of state a person with no effective control or power over any part of that state,” Zaiwalla added.

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Reporting by Marc Jones; Editing by Michael Holden, Catherine Evans, Barbara Lewis and Daniel Wallis

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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Adele moved to tears as she performs at London’s BST Hyde Park Festival

Singer Adele brought her packed London gig to a halt on Friday several times to help fans in the crowd needing assistance.

The multi-Grammy Award winner returned to the stage in front of a live audience for her first concert in five years as she headlined London’s BST Hyde Park Festival.

The star was visibly overcome with emotion before she even made it through her first song, telling the 65,000-strong audience, “My God, I’m back at home.”

“It’s so strange to be in front of a crowd again. I get so nervous before each show but I love being up here,” the “Someone Like You” hitmaker added.

“It was an unforgettable night,” concertgoer Alana Sulway, 24, who hails from London, told The Post. “I lucked out getting a ticket in the first place, so it was unreal to see her [Adele] sing in front of a live audience after all this time.”

Adele stopped her London gig multiple times to help fans needing medical assistance.
Getty Images

After finding out that some keen fans waited for the singer for over seven hours in the heat, the singer sent water out to those at the front of the loaded audience.

Throughout her two-hour-long set, the singer stopped her show four times to get help to several concertgoers who were left needing medical attention.

Sulway said the star “put the safety of her fans before anything else” during the two-hour set.

The star sang many of her old classics, including “Rolling In The Deep,” “Someone Like You,” and “Skyfall.”
Getty Images

“Anytime the crowd waved her down she stopped singing and got her security to help. It’s not something you tend to see so often,” Sulway told The Post.

The singer donned an elegant black halter neck off-the-shoulder gown for the occasion, and revealed to the audience she was wearing black anti slip socks under the glamorous frock.

“I was told it was going to be slippery so wore these just in case,” the “Rolling In The Deep” singer told the audience as she showed them her socks.

The stage at London’s Hyde Park during Adele’s electric two-hour set.
Alana Sulway

The star held back tears as she addressed the audience and told them she was “f–king s–ing herself” after performing her first song.

Adele sang some of her new hits, including “Easy On Me,” “Oh My God,” and “I Drink Wine,” and dedicated the rest of her 15 songs to her previous albums and most famous smash hits.

Before taking to the stage, Adele was supported by a star-studded all-female line-up, including Gabrielle, Tiana Major9, and country superstar Kacey Musgraves.

The star was overcome with emotion before even finishing her first song of the night.
Getty Images

The performance marked the first public show Adele played since she headlined two concerts at London’s Wembley Stadium in 2017. She postponed her Las Vegas residency in January.

Adele is set to perform again on Saturday night to cap off her two-day stint at London’s BST Hyde Park Festival.

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Johnny Depp gets standing ovation at London’s Royal Albert Hall

Johnny Depp was greeted with a standing ovation from his fans at Royal Albert Hall in London on Monday night as the actor awaits the verdict in his defamation trial against his ex-wife Amber Heard.

Fans rejoiced to see Depp alongside his friend and singer Jeff Beck perform a series of music covers including John Lennon’s “Isolation,” and Marvin Gay’s “What’s Going On,” for the second night in the row.

Depp fans took to Instagram and Twitter to share their views of the American actor’s performance on stage.

“Johnny is an absolute mad man… leaves court Friday. playing a gig in Sheffield UK Sunday withJeff Beck mind blown,” Twitter user @OneloveEarth said.

Meanwhile, the actor’s daughter, Lily-Rose Depp celebrated her 23rd birthday on social media over the weekend.

Lily-Rose shared three snapshots — captioned simply, “🍦23🍧🌸!” — to her Instagram feed, including one of a bouquet of flowers and two photos of her wearing a cheerful pink sash that reads “Birthday Princess.”

Johnny Depp performed a series of music covers at Royal Albert Hall in London alongside his friend and singer Jeff Beck.
UnBoxPHD / SplashNews.com
Fans greeted the actor with rounds of applause.
UnBoxPHD / SplashNews.com

The Depp-Heard trial wrapped with closing arguments on Friday, before heading to the jury for deliberations.

The 58-year-old actor and Heard have been battling it out at Fairfax County Courthouse Virginia after Depp filed a $50 million defamation lawsuit against his ex-wife over a 2018 op-ed she wrote in the Washington Post, in which she claimed that she was a victim of “domestic abuse” but didn’t identify him. Heard is countersuing him for $100 million.

Depp’s team declined to comment when asked if the actor will appear in Fairfax County Courthouse tomorrow as jury deliberations resume.



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Towers Rise Over London’s Brick Lane, Clouding Its Future

LONDON — Ornate English and Bengali typography adorns the signs of Taj Stores, one of the oldest Bangladeshi-run supermarkets in the Brick Lane neighborhood of East London. The signs evoke a part of the area’s past, when it became known as “Banglatown,” and eventually home to the largest Bangladeshi community in Britain.

But Brick Lane’s future is looking very uncertain, said Jamal Khalique, standing inside a supermarket opened in 1936 by his great-uncle and now run by Mr. Khalique and his two brothers.

Modern office buildings of glass and steel and a cluster of apartments and cranes tower above the skyline. New coffee shops, restaurants, food markets and hotels appear in the neighborhood each year. According to one study, the borough of Tower Hamlets, which contains Brick Lane, had the most gentrification in London from 2010 to 2016.

In September, a borough committee approved plans — under discussion for five years — to build a five-story shopping mall in and around a disused parking lot beside a former brewery complex that houses independent shops, galleries, markets, bars and restaurants.

The project would include brand-name chain stores, office spaces and a public square.

Like many Brick Lane residents, Mr. Khalique is ambivalent about the development. Initially, he was not opposed. “I’ve seen a hell of a change from a deprived, dirty area, to a trendy, diversified, multicultural area,” said Mr. Khalique, 50.

But now he worries that the new shopping center will undermine the area’s architectural character by adding glass features amid the weathered brick, and will siphon customers from long-established stores. “It will really kill small, independent businesses,” he said.

In a statement, Zeloof Partnership, which owns the brewery site and a handful of other nearby properties, said the new center would create several hundred jobs, mostly for local people. Its design was consistent with the look of the area and did not involve demolishing buildings, the statement said.

It added that a fixed discount for rent would be offered to a select number of independent businesses currently operating from the brewery.

The company said there was no firm date yet for when construction would start or when the new center would open.

The plans have met fierce resistance from some local residents and campaigners.

The district’s member of Parliament, Rushanara Ali of the opposition Labour Party, said residents had expressed concerns about the “limited concessions” made by the developers, adding that the Conservative government had reduced “local powers and accountability to local communities” over development.

Opponents of the development also argue that it could cause rents and housing prices to rise in what has long been a working-class area.

In December 2020, a “Save Brick Lane” campaign gained widespread attention online, in part through the participation of Nijjor Manush, a British Bangladeshi activist group. The borough council received more than 7,000 letters of objection, though only several hundred were from local residents, a sign of what a point of contention the proposed development had become beyond just Brick Lane.

In September last year, soon after Zeloof’s plans were approved, campaigners and residents marched in protest, unfurling “Save Brick Lane” banners behind pallbearers carrying an empty coffin to represent what they describe as the corrosive effects of gentrification.

Still, not everyone is opposed to the plans.

“Brick Lane was dying a long time ago,” said Shams Uddin, 62, who arrived in the area from Bangladesh in 1976 and has been the proprietor of Monsoon, one of the many Bangladeshi-run curry restaurants that once flourished in the neighborhood, since 1999.

Indeed, in the past 15 years, 62 percent of Brick Lane’s curry restaurants have closed because of rising rent, difficulties obtaining visas for new chefs and a lack of government support, according to a study by Runnymede Trust, a research institute focusing on racial equality.

Mr. Uddin said that international travel restrictions imposed by the pandemic, the chilling effect of Brexit and the opening of franchises in a historic market area nearby had deterred customers from visiting. In this environment, he said, the new shopping center could lift up the waning businesses around it.

“When customers finish their business with the shopping center, they may come to my restaurant,” he said. “This is a good thing for our business.”

The changing face of Brick Lane is startling to many longtime residents who remember the many empty properties in London’s East End five decades ago.

“This area had been abandoned,” said Dan Cruickshank, a historian and member of the Spitalfields Trust, a local heritage and conservation group.

When he bought his home in Spitalfields in the 1970s — a property that had stood empty for more than 10 years — Mr. Cruickshank said he struggled to secure a mortgage. East London, he said, was “deemed dark, dangerous, remote and to be avoided” by mortgage lenders and property developers.

Now, in what Mr. Cruickshank derides as a “peculiar case of gentrification,” homes in Brick Lane have acquired a Midas touch. Average property prices in the neighborhood have tripled in little over a decade, according to real estate agents’ collations of government data, with some soaring over millions of dollars.

With the average home in London costing nearly 12 times the average salary in Britain, affordable housing options are scarce.

For centuries, Brick Lane has been a sanctuary for minority communities: Huguenot silk weavers who fled religious persecution in 17th-century France, Ashkenazi Jews escaping antisemitism and pogroms in Eastern Europe, and then Bangladeshi Muslims in the 1970s, during Bangladesh’s fight for independence from Pakistan and the ensuing violence. Since the 1990s, it has become a symbol of multicultural London, celebrated in novels, memoirs, movies and museum exhibits.

In the 1970s, Bangladeshis were drawn to Brick Lane by cheap places to live and abundant work opportunities in the textile industry.

But the arrivals were greeted by discriminatory housing policies and occasional racist violence from followers of the National Front — a far-right British political party with headquarters nearby. Racists smeared swastikas and “KKK” on some buildings. Mr. Khalique, the grocery store owner, said he was permanently scarred on his right leg when he was attacked in his youth by a dog belonging to a National Front supporter.

Hundreds of Bangladeshi families squatted in empty properties in defiance of the attacks — squatting was not then a criminal offense in England — while demanding better housing options.

Among those families was Halima Begum’s. For years, as a child, she lived in a derelict building marked for demolition until her father, a factory worker, broke into an abandoned flat close to Brick Lane. Ms. Begum lived there until she left for college.

Now the director of Runnymede Trust, Ms. Begum has witnessed Brick Lane’s transformation into what she described as a “tale of two cities,” where wealthy workers from the neighboring financial district live in an area with what the charity Trust for London says are the capital’s highest child poverty rates.

Overcrowding is rampant in Tower Hamlets, where more than 20,000 applicants await low-income housing. Opponents of the shopping center point out that the plans do not include any social housing.

“How on earth would British Bangladeshi communities who are experiencing significant poverty be able to maintain a lifestyle where this area develops into Manhattan?” she said, citing the gentrification of the East Village in New York City in the 1980s. “The way in which we regenerate has to be more inclusive.”

Occasionally, the pushback has gone beyond petitions and local laments. A cafe specializing in hard-to-find varieties of breakfast cereal, which some held up as the ultimate example of “hipsterfication,” was vandalized in 2015 by anti-gentrification protesters. (The business closed its doors in Brick Lane in July 2020, but it continues to run a store online.)

Aaron Mo, 39, who in July last year opened a pop-up Chinese bakery, Ong Ong Buns, near the planned development, is cautious about predicting the shopping center’s effect on small independent businesses like his.

But he said he learned something instructive when, a nearby branch of the sandwich chain Pret A Manger unexpectedly closed for two weeks last year. The effect was palpable, he said: “We got more customers.”

For Mr. Khalique, the concerns about gentrification go beyond business — they are also deeply personal.

Outside his store, Brick Lane’s history is visible in the lamp posts painted in green and red, the colors of the Bangladeshi flag, and in street signs that are in both English and Bengali.

“Our elders have fought really hard for this area,” he said of his father’s generation. “It’s in my blood.’’

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Jourdan Dunn steps out in London’s Mayfair with rapper fiancé Dion Hamilton

She’s known for her showstopping satorial looks.

And as Jourdan Dunn stepped out in London tonight to attend the VIP dinner for A$AP Ferg’s luxury belt brand Devoni’s relaunch at the Maine in Mayfair she looked every inch the daring starlet.

The actress and model wore a gorgeous plunging black net ensemble as she giggled with her British rapper fiancé Dion Hamilton.

Daring: Jourdan Dunn wore a gorgeous plunging black net ensemble as she giggled with her British rapper fiancé Dion Hamilton

The 31-year-old paired her sheer net outfit with intricate black stilettos.

Jourdan’s ensemble comprised of a plunging black bralet and net trousers.

She wore her raven tresses in an updo as she posed for cameras. 

Glowing as she stepped out in London, she kept her makeup simple, donning pink lipstick and light eyeshadow.

The Brent-born beauty kept her accessories minimal, complementing her daring outfit with silver rings.

The net revealed the stunning model’s toned midriff as she walked through the streets of London. 

Giggles: Glowing as she stepped out in London, she kept her makeup simple, donning pastel lipstick and light eyeshadow

Her beau Dion Hamilton wrapped up warm in a green puffer jacket paired with a crisp white t-shirt, blue jeans and brown boots.

Jourdan and Dion were two of the many celebrities tonight seen stepping out in London for the relaunch of the New York rapper A$AP Ferg’s luxury belt brand Devoni.

A$AP Ferg relaunched his belt brand after a 15-year break.

The rapper was a newcomer on the rap scene when he first launched the belts.

Love: Her beau Dion Hamilton wrapped up warm in a green puffer jacket paired with a crisp white t-shirt, blue jeans and brown boots

Relaunch: A$AP Ferg relaunched his belt brand after a 15-year break. The rapper was a newcomer on the scene when he first launched the belts

He had to put a pause on his belt range when he was catapulted to rap superstardom but now his Devoni collection is back.

Devoni was inspired by the work of A$AP Ferg’s late father who was an iconic stalwart of fashion history.

His late father trained under Dapper Dan and A$AP Ferg was also inspired by Hermes, Ralph Lauren and watchmaker Richard Mille.

Happy: Jourdan’s London night out comes after her February 2020 engagement to rapper fiancé Dion Hamilton

Jourdan’s London night out comes after her February 2020 engagement to rapper fiancé Dion Hamilton.

Speaking to Harpers Bazaar in October 2020, she revealed she had decided to quit modelling to focus on acting after finding ‘the one’ .

She said: ‘Before lockdown, I decided I wanted to take the time to focus on acting. When lockdown happened, it felt like the perfect time to dedicate to it. I started therapy…’

Bare:  The Brent-born beauty kept her accessories minimal, complementing her daring outfit with silver rings

Focusing on her acting, she said she wanted to be in Marvel films, on stage, whatever was possible for her. 

The actress said she would like to be in Marvel films so that her son Riley, 11, will think she is the ‘coolest mum ever.’ 

She is keeping the acting dream alive, speaking out previously and saying she wants to be ‘flipping amazing.’

The mum-of-one also spoke out about self love, revealing in June that she is teaching her son to be positive and kind to himself.

She said she was ‘very hard’ on herself growing up and is trying to prevent her son from using the same negative self talk. 

Chic: The actress said she would like to be in Marvel films so that her son Riley, 11, will think she is the ‘coolest mum ever’

The actress also previously revealed her guilt after her son was diagnosed with sickle-cell disease at birth.

She said that she was carrying the gene which gave the disease to her child.

It was ‘a lot’ mentally for her despite the support of her mother and friends.

Stepping out: The actress also previously revealed her guilt after her son was diagnosed with sickle-cell disease at birth

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Extinction Rebellion protesters block London’s Tower Bridge

LONDON, Aug 30 (Reuters) – Demonstrators from the Extinction Rebellion group, which is demanding urgent action by governments and business to limit climate change and biodiversity loss, staged a sit-down protest that stopped traffic from using Tower Bridge in London on Monday.

A Reuters photographer saw around 200 protesters taking part in the demonstration at the north end of the bridge while groups of police officers tried to prevent others from joining.

Extinction Rebellion is targeting the City of London financial district – located close to Tower Bridge – in a two-week series of protests. The group accuses the finance industry of funding climate change.

Police later said the bridge had been reopened and 11 people had been arrested in relation to protests by the group on Monday, taking the total number of arrests since the start of the demonstrations on Aug. 22 to 367.

Reporting by Tom Nicholson and Juby Babu
Writing by William Schomberg; editing by Barbara Lewis and Sandra Maler

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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London’s Tower Bridge stuck open due to technical fault

(CNN) — A technical fault has left world-famous London landmark Tower Bridge stuck open on Monday afternoon, with cars and pedestrians unable to cross.
City of London police confirmed in a tweet that the bridge was stuck due to “technical failure,” while numerous pictures and videos posted on social media show the bascules stuck in an upright position after being opened to allow a tall ship to pass through.

Bascules are the movable sections of road on the bridge that can be raised and lowered using counterweights. According to the Tower Bridge tourism website, the bridge opens about 800 times a year.

The technical fault caused long lines of traffic across the city, with pedestrians having to find other ways to get across the river. The City of London police urged people to avoid the area.

Spanning the River Thames, the 787-foot-long landmark was completed in 1894. Once powered by steam, the hydraulic bascules have been driven by oil and electricity since 1976.

The bridge also became stuck in August 2020, with the official bridge Twitter account blaming “mechanical failure.”

Tower Bridge is a popular tourist attraction, and visitors can stroll along the walkways connecting the two towers.

The walkways were originally public, but they closed in 1910. They reopened in the 1980s as an exhibition space.



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