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MARK KERRISON | Photojournalist

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  • London, UK. 6 July, 2019. Activists from Lesbians and Gays Support The Migrants, African Rainbow Family, the Outside Project, Micro Rainbow and many other LGBT+ groups take part in a London Pride Solidarity March at the very rear of Pride in London - stewards tried to prevent them from joining - in solidarity with those for whom Pride in London is inaccessible and in protest against the corporatisation of Pride in London.
    LGSM-Pride-in-London-protest-030.jpg
  • London, UK. 6 July, 2019. Activists from Lesbians and Gays Support The Migrants, African Rainbow Family, the Outside Project, Micro Rainbow and many other LGBT+ groups take part in a London Pride Solidarity March at the very rear of Pride in London - stewards tried to prevent them from joining - in solidarity with those for whom Pride in London is inaccessible and in protest against the corporatisation of Pride in London.
    LGSM-Pride-in-London-protest-053.jpg
  • London, UK. 6 July, 2019. Activists from Lesbians and Gays Support The Migrants, African Rainbow Family, the Outside Project, Micro Rainbow and many other LGBT+ groups take part in a London Pride Solidarity March at the very rear of Pride in London - stewards tried to prevent them from joining - in solidarity with those for whom Pride in London is inaccessible and in protest against the corporatisation of Pride in London.
    LGSM-Pride-in-London-protest-011.jpg
  • London, UK. 24 July, 2019. Police officers try to move protesters from antifascist and LGBT+ groups out of the road in Parliament Square during a protest against Boris Johnson’s appointment as Prime Minister following his election as leader of the Conservative Party by its members. The protest was named after a lyric in a song by rapper Stormzy recently sung by thousands of festival goers at Glastonbury. Credit: Mark Kerrison/Alamy Live News
    Fck-Government-Fck-Boris-008.jpg
  • London, UK. 24 July, 2019. Thousands of people, mainly young and from antifascist, antiracist and/or LGBT+ groups, protest in Westminster against Boris Johnson’s appointment as Prime Minister following his election as leader of the Conservative Party by its members. The protest was named after a lyric in a song by rapper Stormzy recently sung by thousands of festival goers at Glastonbury. Credit: Mark Kerrison/Alamy Live News
    Fck-Government-Fck-Boris-035.jpg
  • London, UK. 24 July, 2019. Thousands of people, mainly young and from antifascist, antiracist and/or LGBT+ groups, protest in Westminster against Boris Johnson’s appointment as Prime Minister following his election as leader of the Conservative Party by its members. The protest was named after a lyric in a song by rapper Stormzy recently sung by thousands of festival goers at Glastonbury. Credit: Mark Kerrison/Alamy Live News
    Fck-Government-Fck-Boris-034.jpg
  • London, UK. 24 July, 2019. Thousands of people, mainly young and from antifascist, antiracist and/or LGBT+ groups, protest in Westminster against Boris Johnson’s appointment as Prime Minister following his election as leader of the Conservative Party by its members. The protest was named after a lyric in a song by rapper Stormzy recently sung by thousands of festival goers at Glastonbury. Credit: Mark Kerrison/Alamy Live News
    Fck-Government-Fck-Boris-044.jpg
  • London, UK. 24 July, 2019. Police officers, accompanied by Tobias Ellwood MP, try to move protesters from antifascist and LGBT+ groups out of the road in Parliament Square during a protest against Boris Johnson’s appointment as Prime Minister following his election as leader of the Conservative Party by its members. The protest was named after a lyric in a song by rapper Stormzy recently sung by thousands of festival goers at Glastonbury. Credit: Mark Kerrison/Alamy Live News
    Fck-Government-Fck-Boris-018.jpg
  • London, UK. 24 July, 2019. Police officers, accompanied by Tobias Ellwood MP, try to move protesters from antifascist and LGBT+ groups out of the road in Parliament Square during a protest against Boris Johnson’s appointment as Prime Minister following his election as leader of the Conservative Party by its members. The protest was named after a lyric in a song by rapper Stormzy recently sung by thousands of festival goers at Glastonbury. Credit: Mark Kerrison/Alamy Live News
    Fck-Government-Fck-Boris-038.jpg
  • London, UK. 24 July, 2019. Police officers, accompanied by Tobias Ellwood MP, try to move protesters from antifascist and LGBT+ groups out of the road in Parliament Square during a protest against Boris Johnson’s appointment as Prime Minister following his election as leader of the Conservative Party by its members. The protest was named after a lyric in a song by rapper Stormzy recently sung by thousands of festival goers at Glastonbury. Credit: Mark Kerrison/Alamy Live News
    Fck-Government-Fck-Boris-003.jpg
  • London, UK. 24 July, 2019. Thousands of people, mainly young and from antifascist, antiracist and/or LGBT+ groups, protest in Westminster against Boris Johnson’s appointment as Prime Minister following his election as leader of the Conservative Party by its members. The protest was named after a lyric in a song by rapper Stormzy recently sung by thousands of festival goers at Glastonbury. Credit: Mark Kerrison/Alamy Live News
    Fck-Government-Fck-Boris-020.jpg
  • London, UK. 10 July, 2019. Campaigners from groups including Movement for Justice and Out and Proud protest outside the Home Office against the government department’s decision to try to block the return to the UK of PN, a Ugandan lesbian removed from the UK using the now unlawful fast track procedure in 2013 but who the High Court ordered on 24th June must be returned to the UK by the Home Office after the handling of her case was ruled to be ‘procedurally unfair’.
    Home-Office-PN-Uganda-protest-034.jpg
  • London, UK. 10 July, 2019. Antonia Bright of Movement for Justice addresses a protest outside the Home Office against the government department’s decision to try to block the return to the UK of PN, a Ugandan lesbian removed from the UK using the now unlawful fast track procedure in 2013 but who the High Court ordered on 24th June must be returned to the UK by the Home Office after the handling of her case was ruled to be ‘procedurally unfair’.
    Home-Office-PN-Uganda-protest-036.jpg
  • London, UK. 10 July, 2019. Antonia Bright of Movement for Justice addresses a protest outside the Home Office against the government department’s decision to try to block the return to the UK of PN, a Ugandan lesbian removed from the UK using the now unlawful fast track procedure in 2013 but who the High Court ordered on 24th June must be returned to the UK by the Home Office after the handling of her case was ruled to be ‘procedurally unfair’.
    Home-Office-PN-Uganda-protest-039.jpg
  • London, UK. 10 July, 2019. Campaigners from groups including Movement for Justice and Out and Proud protest outside the Home Office against the government department’s decision to try to block the return to the UK of PN, a Ugandan lesbian removed from the UK using the now unlawful fast track procedure in 2013 but who the High Court ordered on 24th June must be returned to the UK by the Home Office after the handling of her case was ruled to be ‘procedurally unfair’.
    Home-Office-PN-Uganda-protest-033.jpg
  • London, UK. 10 July, 2019. Campaigners from groups including Movement for Justice and Out and Proud protest outside the Home Office against the government department’s decision to try to block the return to the UK of PN, a Ugandan lesbian removed from the UK using the now unlawful fast track procedure in 2013 but who the High Court ordered on 24th June must be returned to the UK by the Home Office after the handling of her case was ruled to be ‘procedurally unfair’.
    Home-Office-PN-Uganda-protest-017.jpg
  • London, UK. 10 July, 2019. Campaigners from groups including Movement for Justice and Out and Proud protest outside the Home Office against the government department’s decision to try to block the return to the UK of PN, a Ugandan lesbian removed from the UK using the now unlawful fast track procedure in 2013 but who the High Court ordered on 24th June must be returned to the UK by the Home Office after the handling of her case was ruled to be ‘procedurally unfair’.
    Home-Office-PN-Uganda-protest-003.jpg
  • London, UK. 10 July, 2019. Campaigners from groups including Movement for Justice and Out and Proud protest outside the Home Office against the government department’s decision to try to block the return to the UK of PN, a Ugandan lesbian removed from the UK using the now unlawful fast track procedure in 2013 but who the High Court ordered on 24th June must be returned to the UK by the Home Office after the handling of her case was ruled to be ‘procedurally unfair’.
    Home-Office-PN-Uganda-protest-007.jpg
  • London, UK. 10 July, 2019. Karen Doyle of Movement for Justice addresses fellow campaigners at a protest outside the Home Office against the government department’s decision to try to block the return to the UK of PN, a Ugandan lesbian removed from the UK using the now unlawful fast track procedure in 2013 but who the High Court ordered on 24th June must be returned to the UK by the Home Office after the handling of her case was ruled to be ‘procedurally unfair’.
    Home-Office-PN-Uganda-protest-008.jpg
  • London, UK. 6 July, 2019. Activists from Lesbians and Gays Support The Migrants, African Rainbow Family, the Outside Project, Micro Rainbow and other LGBT+ groups take part in a London Pride Solidarity March at the very rear of Pride in London after storming the parade in solidarity with those for whom Pride in London is inaccessible and in protest against the corporatisation of Pride in London.
    LGSM-Pride-in-London-protest-093.jpg
  • London, UK. 6 July, 2019. Adam Eli of Voices4 addresses activists from Lesbians and Gays Support The Migrants, African Rainbow Family, the Outside Project, Micro Rainbow and other LGBT+ groups preparing to take part in a London Pride Solidarity March in solidarity with those for whom Pride in London is inaccessible and in protest against the corporatisation of Pride in London.
    LGSM-Pride-in-London-protest-048.jpg
  • London, UK. 6 July, 2019. A speaker from African Rainbow Family (ARF), a not-for-profit charitable organisation that supports lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender intersexual and queer (LGBTIQ) people of African heritage and from the wider Black Asian Minority Ethnic groups, addresses activists preparing to take part in a London Pride Solidarity March in solidarity with those for whom Pride in London is inaccessible and in protest against the corporatisation of Pride in London.
    LGSM-Pride-in-London-protest-009.jpg
  • London, UK. 6 July, 2019. Activists from Lesbians and Gays Support The Migrants, African Rainbow Family, the Outside Project, Micro Rainbow and other LGBT+ groups take part in a London Pride Solidarity March at the very rear of Pride in London after storming the parade in solidarity with those for whom Pride in London is inaccessible and in protest against the corporatisation of Pride in London.
    LGSM-Pride-in-London-protest-091.jpg
  • London, UK. 6 July, 2019. Activists from Lesbians and Gays Support The Migrants, African Rainbow Family, the Outside Project, Micro Rainbow and other LGBT+ groups take part in a London Pride Solidarity March at the very rear of Pride in London after storming the parade in solidarity with those for whom Pride in London is inaccessible and in protest against the corporatisation of Pride in London.
    LGSM-Pride-in-London-protest-092.jpg
  • London, UK. 6 July, 2019. Activists from Lesbians and Gays Support The Migrants, African Rainbow Family, the Outside Project, Micro Rainbow and other LGBT+ groups storm the Pride in London parade in solidarity with those for whom Pride in London is inaccessible and in protest against the corporatisation of Pride in London.
    LGSM-Pride-in-London-protest-069.jpg
  • London, UK. 6 July, 2019. Ray Woolford, who runs the largest non-corporate foodbank in the UK, addresses activists from Lesbians and Gays Support The Migrants, African Rainbow Family, the Outside Project, Micro Rainbow and other LGBT+ groups preparing to take part in a London Pride Solidarity March in solidarity with those for whom Pride in London is inaccessible and in protest against the corporatisation of Pride in London.
    LGSM-Pride-in-London-protest-071.jpg
  • London, UK. 6 July, 2019. Activists from Lesbians and Gays Support The Migrants, African Rainbow Family, the Outside Project, Micro Rainbow and many other LGBT+ groups take part in a London Pride Solidarity March at the very rear of Pride in London - stewards tried to prevent them from joining - in solidarity with those for whom Pride in London is inaccessible and in protest against the corporatisation of Pride in London.
    LGSM-Pride-in-London-protest-013.jpg
  • London, UK. 6 July, 2019. Pride in London stewards form a cordon to prevent activists from Lesbians and Gays Support The Migrants, African Rainbow Family, the Outside Project, Micro Rainbow and many other LGBT+ groups from joining Pride in London. The activists broke through the cordon and joined the rear of the march behind a line of stewards and police officers, marching in solidarity with those for whom Pride in London is inaccessible and in protest against the corporatisation of Pride in London.
    LGSM-Pride-in-London-protest-028.jpg
  • London, UK. 6 July, 2019. Pride in London stewards form a cordon to prevent activists from Lesbians and Gays Support The Migrants, African Rainbow Family, the Outside Project, Micro Rainbow and many other LGBT+ groups from joining Pride in London. The activists broke through the cordon and joined the rear of the march behind a line of stewards and police officers, marching in solidarity with those for whom Pride in London is inaccessible and in protest against the corporatisation of Pride in London.
    LGSM-Pride-in-London-protest-042.jpg
  • London, UK. 6 July, 2019. Activists from Lesbians and Gays Support The Migrants, African Rainbow Family, the Outside Project, Micro Rainbow and many other LGBT+ groups take part in a London Pride Solidarity March at the very rear of Pride in London - stewards tried to prevent them from joining - in solidarity with those for whom Pride in London is inaccessible and in protest against the corporatisation of Pride in London.
    LGSM-Pride-in-London-protest-043.jpg
  • London, UK. 6 July, 2019. Activists from Lesbians and Gays Support The Migrants, African Rainbow Family, the Outside Project, Micro Rainbow and many other LGBT+ groups take part in a London Pride Solidarity March at the very rear of Pride in London - stewards tried to prevent them from joining - in solidarity with those for whom Pride in London is inaccessible and in protest against the corporatisation of Pride in London.
    LGSM-Pride-in-London-protest-005.jpg
  • London, UK. 21st November, 2018. Pro-Palestinian LGBT activists and supporters protest outside the Heaven nightclub against an appearance there by Israeli Eurovision winner Netta Barzilai, who they say has been acting as a cultural ambassador for the Israeli state, as well as against Israel's hosting of the next Eurovision song contest and its 'pinkwashing' of its human rights record.
    Protest-Israel-Eurovision-001.jpg
  • London, UK. 6 July, 2019. Activists from Lesbians and Gays Support The Migrants take part in a London Pride Solidarity March at the very rear of Pride in London - stewards tried to prevent them from joining - in solidarity with those for whom Pride in London is inaccessible and in protest against the corporatisation of Pride in London.
    2019-image-selection-019.jpg
  • London, UK. 24 July, 2019. Activists from Class War protest with thousands of people, mainly young and from antifascist and LGBT+ groups, demonstrating in Westminster against Boris Johnson’s appointment as Prime Minister following his election as leader of the Conservative Party by its members. The protest was named after a lyric in a song by rapper Stormzy recently sung by thousands of festival goers at Glastonbury. Credit: Mark Kerrison/Alamy Live News
    Fck-Government-Fck-Boris-036.jpg
  • London, UK. 24 July, 2019. Thousands of people, mainly young and from antifascist, antiracist and/or LGBT+ groups, protest in Westminster against Boris Johnson’s appointment as Prime Minister following his election as leader of the Conservative Party by its members. The protest was named after a lyric in a song by rapper Stormzy recently sung by thousands of festival goers at Glastonbury. Credit: Mark Kerrison/Alamy Live News
    Fck-Government-Fck-Boris-047.jpg
  • London, UK. 24 July, 2019. Thousands of people, mainly young and from antifascist, antiracist and/or LGBT+ groups, protest in Westminster against Boris Johnson’s appointment as Prime Minister following his election as leader of the Conservative Party by its members. The protest was named after a lyric in a song by rapper Stormzy recently sung by thousands of festival goers at Glastonbury. Credit: Mark Kerrison/Alamy Live News
    Fck-Government-Fck-Boris-031.jpg
  • London, UK. 24 July, 2019. Thousands of people, mainly young and from antifascist, antiracist and/or LGBT+ groups, protest in Westminster against Boris Johnson’s appointment as Prime Minister following his election as leader of the Conservative Party by its members. The protest was named after a lyric in a song by rapper Stormzy recently sung by thousands of festival goers at Glastonbury. Credit: Mark Kerrison/Alamy Live News
    Fck-Government-Fck-Boris-045.jpg
  • London, UK. 24 July, 2019. Thousands of people, mainly young and from antifascist, antiracist and/or LGBT+ groups, protest in Westminster against Boris Johnson’s appointment as Prime Minister following his election as leader of the Conservative Party by its members. The protest was named after a lyric in a song by rapper Stormzy recently sung by thousands of festival goers at Glastonbury. Credit: Mark Kerrison/Alamy Live News
    Fck-Government-Fck-Boris-021.jpg
  • London, UK. 24 July, 2019. Thousands of people, mainly young and from antifascist, antiracist and/or LGBT+ groups, protest in Westminster against Boris Johnson’s appointment as Prime Minister following his election as leader of the Conservative Party by its members. The protest was named after a lyric in a song by rapper Stormzy recently sung by thousands of festival goers at Glastonbury. Credit: Mark Kerrison/Alamy Live News
    Fck-Government-Fck-Boris-042.jpg
  • London, UK. 24 July, 2019. Thousands of people, mainly young and from antifascist, antiracist and/or LGBT+ groups, protest in Westminster against Boris Johnson’s appointment as Prime Minister following his election as leader of the Conservative Party by its members. The protest was named after a lyric in a song by rapper Stormzy recently sung by thousands of festival goers at Glastonbury. Credit: Mark Kerrison/Alamy Live News
    Fck-Government-Fck-Boris-028.jpg
  • London, UK. 24 July, 2019. Thousands of people, mainly young and from antifascist, antiracist and/or LGBT+ groups, protest in Westminster against Boris Johnson’s appointment as Prime Minister following his election as leader of the Conservative Party by its members. The protest was named after a lyric in a song by rapper Stormzy recently sung by thousands of festival goers at Glastonbury. Credit: Mark Kerrison/Alamy Live News
    Fck-Government-Fck-Boris-002.jpg
  • London, UK. 24 July, 2019. Thousands of people, mainly young and from antifascist, antiracist and/or LGBT+ groups, protest in Westminster against Boris Johnson’s appointment as Prime Minister following his election as leader of the Conservative Party by its members. The protest was named after a lyric in a song by rapper Stormzy recently sung by thousands of festival goers at Glastonbury. Credit: Mark Kerrison/Alamy Live News
    Fck-Government-Fck-Boris-013.jpg
  • London, UK. 24 July, 2019. Thousands of people, mainly young and from antifascist, antiracist and/or LGBT+ groups, protest in Westminster against Boris Johnson’s appointment as Prime Minister following his election as leader of the Conservative Party by its members. The protest was named after a lyric in a song by rapper Stormzy recently sung by thousands of festival goers at Glastonbury. Credit: Mark Kerrison/Alamy Live News
    Fck-Government-Fck-Boris-001.jpg
  • London, UK. 24 July, 2019. Thousands of people, mainly young and from antifascist, antiracist and/or LGBT+ groups, protest in Westminster against Boris Johnson’s appointment as Prime Minister following his election as leader of the Conservative Party by its members. The protest was named after a lyric in a song by rapper Stormzy recently sung by thousands of festival goers at Glastonbury. Credit: Mark Kerrison/Alamy Live News
    Fck-Government-Fck-Boris-005.jpg
  • London, UK. 24 July, 2019. Thousands of people, mainly young and from antifascist, antiracist and/or LGBT+ groups, protest in Westminster against Boris Johnson’s appointment as Prime Minister following his election as leader of the Conservative Party by its members. The protest was named after a lyric in a song by rapper Stormzy recently sung by thousands of festival goers at Glastonbury. Credit: Mark Kerrison/Alamy Live News
    Fck-Government-Fck-Boris-051.jpg
  • London, UK. 10 July, 2019. Campaigners from groups including Movement for Justice and Out and Proud protest outside the Home Office against the government department’s decision to try to block the return to the UK of PN, a Ugandan lesbian removed from the UK using the now unlawful fast track procedure in 2013 but who the High Court ordered on 24th June must be returned to the UK by the Home Office after the handling of her case was ruled to be ‘procedurally unfair’.
    Home-Office-PN-Uganda-protest-030.jpg
  • London, UK. 10 July, 2019. Campaigners from groups including Movement for Justice and Out and Proud protest outside the Home Office against the government department’s decision to try to block the return to the UK of PN, a Ugandan lesbian removed from the UK using the now unlawful fast track procedure in 2013 but who the High Court ordered on 24th June must be returned to the UK by the Home Office after the handling of her case was ruled to be ‘procedurally unfair’.
    Home-Office-PN-Uganda-protest-027.jpg
  • London, UK. 10 July, 2019. Campaigners from groups including Movement for Justice and Out and Proud protest outside the Home Office against the government department’s decision to try to block the return to the UK of PN, a Ugandan lesbian removed from the UK using the now unlawful fast track procedure in 2013 but who the High Court ordered on 24th June must be returned to the UK by the Home Office after the handling of her case was ruled to be ‘procedurally unfair’.
    Home-Office-PN-Uganda-protest-009.jpg
  • London, UK. 10 July, 2019. Campaigners from groups including Movement for Justice and Out and Proud protest outside the Home Office against the government department’s decision to try to block the return to the UK of PN, a Ugandan lesbian removed from the UK using the now unlawful fast track procedure in 2013 but who the High Court ordered on 24th June must be returned to the UK by the Home Office after the handling of her case was ruled to be ‘procedurally unfair’.
    Home-Office-PN-Uganda-protest-006.jpg
  • London, UK. 6 July, 2019. Activists from Lesbians and Gays Support The Migrants, African Rainbow Family, the Outside Project, Micro Rainbow and other LGBT+ groups storm the Pride in London parade in solidarity with those for whom Pride in London is inaccessible and in protest against the corporatisation of Pride in London.
    LGSM-Pride-in-London-protest-063.jpg
  • London, UK. 6 July, 2019. David Tovey of the Museum of Homelessness addresses activists from Lesbians and Gays Support The Migrants, African Rainbow Family, the Outside Project, Micro Rainbow and other LGBT+ groups preparing to take part in a London Pride Solidarity March in solidarity with those for whom Pride in London is inaccessible and in protest against the corporatisation of Pride in London.
    LGSM-Pride-in-London-protest-094.jpg
  • London, UK. 6 July, 2019. A speaker from Lesbians and Gays Support The Migrants addresses activists preparing to take part in a London Pride Solidarity March in solidarity with those for whom Pride in London is inaccessible and in protest against the corporatisation of Pride in London.
    LGSM-Pride-in-London-protest-015.jpg
  • London, UK. 6 July, 2019. Activists from Lesbians and Gays Support The Migrants, African Rainbow Family, the Outside Project, Micro Rainbow and other LGBT+ groups are preceded by rows of stewards and police officers as they take part in a London Pride Solidarity March at the very rear of Pride in London after storming the parade in solidarity with those for whom Pride in London is inaccessible and in protest against the corporatisation of Pride in London.
    LGSM-Pride-in-London-protest-079.jpg
  • London, UK. 6 July, 2019. Activists from Lesbians and Gays Support The Migrants, African Rainbow Family, the Outside Project, Micro Rainbow and other LGBT+ groups take part in a London Pride Solidarity March at the very rear of Pride in London after storming the parade in solidarity with those for whom Pride in London is inaccessible and in protest against the corporatisation of Pride in London.
    LGSM-Pride-in-London-protest-085.jpg
  • London, UK. 6 July, 2019. Activists from Lesbians and Gays Support The Migrants, African Rainbow Family, the Outside Project, Micro Rainbow and other LGBT+ groups take part in a London Pride Solidarity March at the very rear of Pride in London after storming the parade in solidarity with those for whom Pride in London is inaccessible and in protest against the corporatisation of Pride in London.
    LGSM-Pride-in-London-protest-075.jpg
  • London, UK. 6 July, 2019. Activists from Lesbians and Gays Support The Migrants, African Rainbow Family, the Outside Project, Micro Rainbow and other LGBT+ groups take part in a London Pride Solidarity March at the very rear of Pride in London after storming the parade in solidarity with those for whom Pride in London is inaccessible and in protest against the corporatisation of Pride in London.
    LGSM-Pride-in-London-protest-095.jpg
  • London, UK. 6 July, 2019. Activists from Lesbians and Gays Support The Migrants, African Rainbow Family, the Outside Project, Micro Rainbow and other LGBT+ groups storm the Pride in London parade in solidarity with those for whom Pride in London is inaccessible and in protest against the corporatisation of Pride in London.
    LGSM-Pride-in-London-protest-082.jpg
  • London, UK. 6 July, 2019. Activists from Lesbians and Gays Support The Migrants, African Rainbow Family, the Outside Project, Micro Rainbow and other LGBT+ groups storm the Pride in London parade in solidarity with those for whom Pride in London is inaccessible and in protest against the corporatisation of Pride in London.
    LGSM-Pride-in-London-protest-060.jpg
  • London, UK. 6 July, 2019. Activists from Lesbians and Gays Support The Migrants, African Rainbow Family, the Outside Project, Micro Rainbow and many other LGBT+ groups take part in a London Pride Solidarity March at the very rear of Pride in London - stewards tried to prevent them from joining - in solidarity with those for whom Pride in London is inaccessible and in protest against the corporatisation of Pride in London.
    LGSM-Pride-in-London-protest-035.jpg
  • London, UK. 6 July, 2019. Pride in London stewards form a cordon to prevent activists from Lesbians and Gays Support The Migrants, African Rainbow Family, the Outside Project, Micro Rainbow and many other LGBT+ groups from joining Pride in London. The activists broke through the cordon and joined the rear of the march behind a line of stewards and police officers, marching in solidarity with those for whom Pride in London is inaccessible and in protest against the corporatisation of Pride in London.
    LGSM-Pride-in-London-protest-051.jpg
  • London, UK. 6 July, 2019. Pride in London stewards form a cordon to prevent activists from Lesbians and Gays Support The Migrants, African Rainbow Family, the Outside Project, Micro Rainbow and many other LGBT+ groups from joining Pride in London. The activists broke through the cordon and joined the rear of the march behind a line of stewards and police officers, marching in solidarity with those for whom Pride in London is inaccessible and in protest against the corporatisation of Pride in London.
    LGSM-Pride-in-London-protest-047.jpg
  • London, UK. 6 July, 2019. Pride in London stewards form a cordon to prevent activists from Lesbians and Gays Support The Migrants, African Rainbow Family, the Outside Project, Micro Rainbow and many other LGBT+ groups from joining Pride in London. The activists broke through the cordon and joined the rear of the march behind a line of stewards and police officers, marching in solidarity with those for whom Pride in London is inaccessible and in protest against the corporatisation of Pride in London.
    LGSM-Pride-in-London-protest-023.jpg
  • London, UK. 6 July, 2019. Activists from Lesbians and Gays Support The Migrants take part in a London Pride Solidarity March at the very rear of Pride in London - stewards tried to prevent them from joining - in solidarity with those for whom Pride in London is inaccessible and in protest against the corporatisation of Pride in London.
    LGSM-Pride-in-London-protest-037.jpg
  • London, UK. 6 July, 2019. Activists from Lesbians and Gays Support The Migrants, African Rainbow Family, the Outside Project, Micro Rainbow and many other LGBT+ groups take part in a London Pride Solidarity March at the very rear of Pride in London - stewards tried to prevent them from joining - in solidarity with those for whom Pride in London is inaccessible and in protest against the corporatisation of Pride in London.
    LGSM-Pride-in-London-protest-020.jpg
  • London, UK. 6 July, 2019. Activists from Lesbians and Gays Support The Migrants, African Rainbow Family, the Outside Project, Micro Rainbow and many other LGBT+ groups take part in a London Pride Solidarity March at the very rear of Pride in London - stewards tried to prevent them from joining - in solidarity with those for whom Pride in London is inaccessible and in protest against the corporatisation of Pride in London.
    LGSM-Pride-in-London-protest-040.jpg
  • London, UK. 6 July, 2019. Activists from Lesbians and Gays Support The Migrants, African Rainbow Family, the Outside Project, Micro Rainbow and other LGBT+ groups break through a cordon formed in front of them by Pride in London stewards to join the rear of the march in solidarity with those for whom Pride in London is inaccessible and in protest against the corporatisation of Pride in London.
    LGSM-Pride-in-London-protest-004.jpg
  • London, UK. 6 July, 2019. Activists from Lesbians and Gays Support The Migrants, African Rainbow Family, the Outside Project, Micro Rainbow and other LGBT+ groups break through a cordon formed in front of them by Pride in London stewards to join the rear of the march in solidarity with those for whom Pride in London is inaccessible and in protest against the corporatisation of Pride in London.
    LGSM-Pride-in-London-protest-019.jpg
  • London, UK. 6 July, 2019. Pride in London stewards form a cordon to prevent activists from Lesbians and Gays Support The Migrants, African Rainbow Family, the Outside Project, Micro Rainbow and many other LGBT+ groups from joining Pride in London. The activists broke through the cordon and joined the rear of the march behind a line of stewards and police officers, marching in solidarity with those for whom Pride in London is inaccessible and in protest against the corporatisation of Pride in London.
    LGSM-Pride-in-London-protest-016.jpg
  • London, UK. 6 July, 2019. Activists from Lesbians and Gays Support The Migrants assemble to take part in a London Pride Solidarity March at the very rear of Pride in London - stewards tried to prevent them from joining - in solidarity with those for whom Pride in London is inaccessible and in protest against the corporatisation of Pride in London.
    LGSM-Pride-in-London-protest-014.jpg
  • London, UK. 24 July, 2019. Thousands of people, mainly young and from antifascist, antiracist and/or LGBT+ groups, protest in Westminster against Boris Johnson’s appointment as Prime Minister following his election as leader of the Conservative Party by its members. The protest was named after a lyric in a song by rapper Stormzy recently sung by thousands of festival goers at Glastonbury. Credit: Mark Kerrison/Alamy Live News
    Fck-Government-Fck-Boris-033.jpg
  • London, UK. 24 July, 2019. Thousands of people, mainly young and from antifascist, antiracist and/or LGBT+ groups, protest outside Downing Street against Boris Johnson’s appointment as Prime Minister following his election as leader of the Conservative Party by its members. The protest was named after a lyric in a song by rapper Stormzy recently sung by thousands of festival goers at Glastonbury. Credit: Mark Kerrison/Alamy Live News
    Fck-Government-Fck-Boris-043.jpg
  • London, UK. 24 July, 2019. Thousands of people, mainly young and from antifascist, antiracist and/or LGBT+ groups, protest in Westminster against Boris Johnson’s appointment as Prime Minister following his election as leader of the Conservative Party by its members. The protest was named after a lyric in a song by rapper Stormzy recently sung by thousands of festival goers at Glastonbury. Credit: Mark Kerrison/Alamy Live News
    Fck-Government-Fck-Boris-050.jpg
  • London, UK. 24 July, 2019. Thousands of people, mainly young and from antifascist, antiracist and/or LGBT+ groups, protest in Westminster against Boris Johnson’s appointment as Prime Minister following his election as leader of the Conservative Party by its members. The protest was named after a lyric in a song by rapper Stormzy recently sung by thousands of festival goers at Glastonbury. Credit: Mark Kerrison/Alamy Live News
    Fck-Government-Fck-Boris-048.jpg
  • London, UK. 24 July, 2019. Police officers, accompanied by Tobias Ellwood MP, try to move protesters from antifascist and LGBT+ groups out of the road in Parliament Square during a protest against Boris Johnson’s appointment as Prime Minister following his election as leader of the Conservative Party by its members. The protest was named after a lyric in a song by rapper Stormzy recently sung by thousands of festival goers at Glastonbury. Credit: Mark Kerrison/Alamy Live News
    Fck-Government-Fck-Boris-040.jpg
  • London, UK. 24 July, 2019. Police officers, accompanied by Tobias Ellwood MP, try to move protesters from antifascist and LGBT+ groups out of the road in Parliament Square during a protest against Boris Johnson’s appointment as Prime Minister following his election as leader of the Conservative Party by its members. The protest was named after a lyric in a song by rapper Stormzy recently sung by thousands of festival goers at Glastonbury. Credit: Mark Kerrison/Alamy Live News
    Fck-Government-Fck-Boris-039.jpg
  • London, UK. 24 July, 2019. Police officers, accompanied by Tobias Ellwood MP, try to move protesters from antifascist and LGBT+ groups out of the road in Parliament Square during a protest against Boris Johnson’s appointment as Prime Minister following his election as leader of the Conservative Party by its members. The protest was named after a lyric in a song by rapper Stormzy recently sung by thousands of festival goers at Glastonbury. Credit: Mark Kerrison/Alamy Live News
    Fck-Government-Fck-Boris-025.jpg
  • London, UK. 24 July, 2019. Police officers, accompanied by Tobias Ellwood MP, try to move protesters from antifascist and LGBT+ groups out of the road in Parliament Square during a protest against Boris Johnson’s appointment as Prime Minister following his election as leader of the Conservative Party by its members. The protest was named after a lyric in a song by rapper Stormzy recently sung by thousands of festival goers at Glastonbury. Credit: Mark Kerrison/Alamy Live News
    Fck-Government-Fck-Boris-032.jpg
  • London, UK. 24 July, 2019. Thousands of people, mainly young and from antifascist, antiracist and/or LGBT+ groups, protest in Westminster against Boris Johnson’s appointment as Prime Minister following his election as leader of the Conservative Party by its members. The protest was named after a lyric in a song by rapper Stormzy recently sung by thousands of festival goers at Glastonbury. Credit: Mark Kerrison/Alamy Live News
    Fck-Government-Fck-Boris-017.jpg
  • London, UK. 24 July, 2019. Thousands of people, mainly young and from antifascist, antiracist and/or LGBT+ groups, protest in Westminster against Boris Johnson’s appointment as Prime Minister following his election as leader of the Conservative Party by its members. The protest was named after a lyric in a song by rapper Stormzy recently sung by thousands of festival goers at Glastonbury. Credit: Mark Kerrison/Alamy Live News
    Fck-Government-Fck-Boris-012.jpg
  • London, UK. 24 July, 2019. Thousands of people, mainly young and from antifascist, antiracist and/or LGBT+ groups, protest in Westminster against Boris Johnson’s appointment as Prime Minister following his election as leader of the Conservative Party by its members. The protest was named after a lyric in a song by rapper Stormzy recently sung by thousands of festival goers at Glastonbury. Credit: Mark Kerrison/Alamy Live News
    Fck-Government-Fck-Boris-011.jpg
  • London, UK. 24 July, 2019. Thousands of people, mainly young and from antifascist, antiracist and/or LGBT+ groups, protest in Westminster against Boris Johnson’s appointment as Prime Minister following his election as leader of the Conservative Party by its members. The protest was named after a lyric in a song by rapper Stormzy recently sung by thousands of festival goers at Glastonbury. Credit: Mark Kerrison/Alamy Live News
    Fck-Government-Fck-Boris-030.jpg
  • London, UK. 10 July, 2019. Hamza, a Movement for Justice campaigner, addresses a  protest outside the Home Office against the government department’s decision to try to block the return to the UK of PN, a Ugandan lesbian removed from the UK using the now unlawful fast track procedure in 2013 but who the High Court ordered on 24th June must be returned to the UK by the Home Office after the handling of her case was ruled to be ‘procedurally unfair’.
    Home-Office-PN-Uganda-protest-018.jpg
  • London, UK. 10 July, 2019. A Movement for Justice campaigner speaks at a protest outside the Home Office against the government department’s decision to try to block the return to the UK of PN, a Ugandan lesbian removed from the UK using the now unlawful fast track procedure in 2013 but who the High Court ordered on 24th June must be returned to the UK by the Home Office after the handling of her case was ruled to be ‘procedurally unfair’.
    Home-Office-PN-Uganda-protest-035.jpg
  • London, UK. 10 July, 2019. Campaigners from groups including Movement for Justice and Out and Proud protest outside the Home Office against the government department’s decision to try to block the return to the UK of PN, a Ugandan lesbian removed from the UK using the now unlawful fast track procedure in 2013 but who the High Court ordered on 24th June must be returned to the UK by the Home Office after the handling of her case was ruled to be ‘procedurally unfair’.
    Home-Office-PN-Uganda-protest-029.jpg
  • London, UK. 10 July, 2019. A Movement for Justice campaigner speaks at a protest outside the Home Office against the government department’s decision to try to block the return to the UK of PN, a Ugandan lesbian removed from the UK using the now unlawful fast track procedure in 2013 but who the High Court ordered on 24th June must be returned to the UK by the Home Office after the handling of her case was ruled to be ‘procedurally unfair’.
    Home-Office-PN-Uganda-protest-031.jpg
  • London, UK. 10 July, 2019. Susan, a victim of the fast track deportation system from Uganda, addresses campaigners from groups including Movement for Justice and Out and Proud protesting outside the Home Office against the government department’s decision to try to block the return to the UK of PN, a Ugandan lesbian removed from the UK using the now unlawful fast track procedure in 2013 but who the High Court ordered on 24th June must be returned to the UK by the Home Office after the handling of her case was ruled to be ‘procedurally unfair’.
    Home-Office-PN-Uganda-protest-028.jpg
  • London, UK. 10 July, 2019. Campaigners from groups including Movement for Justice and Out and Proud protest outside the Home Office against the government department’s decision to try to block the return to the UK of PN, a Ugandan lesbian removed from the UK using the now unlawful fast track procedure in 2013 but who the High Court ordered on 24th June must be returned to the UK by the Home Office after the handling of her case was ruled to be ‘procedurally unfair’.
    Home-Office-PN-Uganda-protest-040.jpg
  • London, UK. 10 July, 2019. Susan, a victim of the fast track deportation system from Uganda, addresses campaigners from groups including Movement for Justice and Out and Proud protesting outside the Home Office against the government department’s decision to try to block the return to the UK of PN, a Ugandan lesbian removed from the UK using the now unlawful fast track procedure in 2013 but who the High Court ordered on 24th June must be returned to the UK by the Home Office after the handling of her case was ruled to be ‘procedurally unfair’.
    Home-Office-PN-Uganda-protest-002.jpg
  • London, UK. 10 July, 2019. Campaigners from groups including Movement for Justice and Out and Proud protest outside the Home Office against the government department’s decision to try to block the return to the UK of PN, a Ugandan lesbian removed from the UK using the now unlawful fast track procedure in 2013 but who the High Court ordered on 24th June must be returned to the UK by the Home Office after the handling of her case was ruled to be ‘procedurally unfair’.
    Home-Office-PN-Uganda-protest-014.jpg
  • London, UK. 6 July, 2019. Jon Glackin of Streets Kitchen addresses activists from Lesbians and Gays Support The Migrants, African Rainbow Family, the Outside Project, Micro Rainbow and other LGBT+ groups preparing to take part in a London Pride Solidarity March in solidarity with those for whom Pride in London is inaccessible and in protest against the corporatisation of Pride in London.
    LGSM-Pride-in-London-protest-025.jpg
  • London, UK. 6 July, 2019. A speaker from Radical Faeries addresses activists from Lesbians and Gays Support The Migrants, African Rainbow Family, the Outside Project, Micro Rainbow and other LGBT+ groups preparing to take part in a London Pride Solidarity March in solidarity with those for whom Pride in London is inaccessible and in protest against the corporatisation of Pride in London.
    LGSM-Pride-in-London-protest-087.jpg
  • London, UK. 6 July, 2019. Activists from Lesbians and Gays Support The Migrants, African Rainbow Family, the Outside Project, Micro Rainbow and other LGBT+ groups take part in a London Pride Solidarity March at the very rear of Pride in London after storming the parade in solidarity with those for whom Pride in London is inaccessible and in protest against the corporatisation of Pride in London.
    LGSM-Pride-in-London-protest-066.jpg
  • London, UK. 6 July, 2019. Activists from Lesbians and Gays Support The Migrants, African Rainbow Family, the Outside Project, Micro Rainbow and other LGBT+ groups take part in a London Pride Solidarity March at the very rear of Pride in London after storming the parade in solidarity with those for whom Pride in London is inaccessible and in protest against the corporatisation of Pride in London.
    LGSM-Pride-in-London-protest-065.jpg
  • London, UK. 6 July, 2019. Activists from Lesbians and Gays Support The Migrants, African Rainbow Family, the Outside Project, Micro Rainbow and other LGBT+ groups take part in a London Pride Solidarity March at the very rear of Pride in London after storming the parade in solidarity with those for whom Pride in London is inaccessible and in protest against the corporatisation of Pride in London.
    LGSM-Pride-in-London-protest-081.jpg
  • London, UK. 6 July, 2019. Activists from Lesbians and Gays Support The Migrants, African Rainbow Family, the Outside Project, Micro Rainbow and other LGBT+ groups storm the Pride in London parade in solidarity with those for whom Pride in London is inaccessible and in protest against the corporatisation of Pride in London.
    LGSM-Pride-in-London-protest-080.jpg
  • London, UK. 6 July, 2019. Activists from Lesbians and Gays Support The Migrants, African Rainbow Family, the Outside Project, Micro Rainbow and other LGBT+ groups storm the Pride in London parade in solidarity with those for whom Pride in London is inaccessible and in protest against the corporatisation of Pride in London.
    LGSM-Pride-in-London-protest-073.jpg
  • London, UK. 6 July, 2019. Activists from Lesbians and Gays Support The Migrants, African Rainbow Family, the Outside Project, Micro Rainbow and other LGBT+ groups take part in a London Pride Solidarity March in solidarity with those for whom Pride in London is inaccessible and in protest against the corporatisation of Pride in London.
    LGSM-Pride-in-London-protest-072.jpg
  • London, UK. 6 July, 2019. Jon Glackin (l) of Streets Kitchen and David Tovey (r) of the Museum of Homelessness prepare to take part in a London Pride Solidarity March in solidarity with those for whom Pride in London is inaccessible and in protest against the corporatisation of Pride in London.
    LGSM-Pride-in-London-protest-059.jpg
  • London, UK. 6 July, 2019. Activists from Lesbians and Gays Support The Migrants, African Rainbow Family, the Outside Project, Micro Rainbow and many other LGBT+ groups take part in a London Pride Solidarity March at the very rear of Pride in London - stewards tried to prevent them from joining - in solidarity with those for whom Pride in London is inaccessible and in protest against the corporatisation of Pride in London.
    LGSM-Pride-in-London-protest-049.jpg
  • London, UK. 6 July, 2019. Pride in London stewards form a cordon to prevent activists from Lesbians and Gays Support The Migrants, African Rainbow Family, the Outside Project, Micro Rainbow and many other LGBT+ groups from joining Pride in London. The activists broke through the cordon and joined the rear of the march behind a line of stewards and police officers, marching in solidarity with those for whom Pride in London is inaccessible and in protest against the corporatisation of Pride in London.
    LGSM-Pride-in-London-protest-039.jpg
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