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‘I didn't think twice about it’, says Black Lives Matter activist who rescued injured ‘far-right’ demonstrator from violence

'I didn’t see colour I just saw a human being on the floor possibly coming to his end,' says Patrick Hutchinson

Vincent Wood
Monday 15 June 2020 04:05 EDT
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Black Lives Matter activist Patrick Hutchinson who rescued injured ‘far-right’ demonstrator from violence speaks out

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A Black Lives Matter supporter carrying an alleged far-right demonstrator to safety amid violence in London has said he "didn’t even think twice about doing it".

The photo of Patrick Hutchinson lifting the injured white man away from a melee on Saturday has been shared widely online, with Labour MP Florence Eshalomi calling the image a "powerful symbol" amid a weekend of division and confrontation between right-wing protesters and anti-racism activists in the capital.

Mr Hutchinson told ITV News: "I didn’t even think twice about doing it, it was just an instinct. I didn’t see colour I just saw a human being on the floor possibly coming to his end.”

A grandfather and personal trainer, Mr Hutchinson said he attended the event with his friends, a group of security and martial arts experts, to protect anti-racist activists on a march through the capital.

It came as groups of football hooligans and far-right supporters took to the streets in response to recent Black Lives Matter protests in the wake of the police killing of George Floyd in Minneapolis.

In a separate interview with Channel 4 News, Mr Hutchinson said: "If the other three police officers who were standing around when George Floyd was murdered had thought about intervening like what we did, George Floyd would be alive today."

He added: “I just want equality - equality for all of us. At the moment the scales are unfairly balanced and i just want things to be fair - for my children and my grandchildren."

Mr Hutchinson's intervention came on the way home following the protest, when he saw far-right protestors who earlier had been concentrated in London's Parliament Square clashing with a group of young black men. As Mr Hutchinson carried the injured man away, his friends worked to hold back the crowd.

His friend Jamaine Facey, a personal trainer who was among the group, said: "For me I wasn't protecting him - I was protecting our kids. I was protecting their future because I knew the judge would not have seen what happened before. I was saving our kids future".

Police made more than 100 arrests across the course of the day, as 27 people including six officers were injured during clashes.

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