Friday 2 February 2018

Scuffle at Rees-Mogg student event at UWE Bristol


Media captionProtesters disrupt a speech by MP Jacob Rees-Mogg
Conservative MP Jacob Rees-Mogg was caught up in a scuffle after protesters disrupted a speech he was giving at a student event.
Videos online show the backbencher surrounded by a group of people, with shouting audible in the background.
BBC reporter James Craig, who was at the University of the West of England, said security cleared the protesters from the hall within five minutes.
Mr Rees-Mogg, who resumed his speech, said they were "entitled to protest".
However, it was "sad" they would not engage and discuss views to which they objected, he said.
Police said they had launched an investigation after they were called to the Frenchay Campus in Bristol, but no arrests had yet been made.
Mr Rees-Mogg had been speaking at an event organised by the university's Politics and International Relations Society.

At the scene: James Craig, BBC Somerset

It was due to be a fairly routine event - Jacob Rees-Mogg was booked to speak to a few hundred students at a ticketed event.
He would've spoken for about half an hour before taking questions.
Just a few minutes after he started speaking, a group of protestors came into the back of the lecture theatre and started shouting anti-Conservative rhetoric, very loudly, trying to shout him down.
Rather than halting the event, or ignoring them, Mr Rees-Mogg walked up to the back of the theatre to try and talk them down.
At that point, various other members of the audience got involved, leading to the scuffle which happened.
It looked to me that Mr Rees-Mogg was actually pushed and shoved, although he insists he wasn't.
But it was a very aggressive and unexpected scene.
After the scuffle, Mr Rees-Mogg said: "Some people who don't agree with me wanted to make their point, and I don't object to this.
"I think we live in a free society and freedom of speech is very important.
"And people like me, who advocate freedom of speech, support it when it's not exactly what we want, as well as when it is what we want."
Media caption"They weren't going to hit me," said Jacob Rees-Mogg MP
A post on the society's Facebook page, advertising the event, said it would be a "chance to talk to an experienced parliamentarian about the issues of the day, what it's like to be an MP and how you can get there".
On Twitter, eyewitness Chloe Kaye, who filmed the scuffle, described "a huge amount" of physical violence.
Others condemned the protesters.
Avon and Somerset Police said officers were called at about 18:30 GMT following a report of a public order incident.
"An investigation is under way to see if any criminal offences were committed," the force said, while appealing for mobile phone footage to be passed on to them.

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