Nearly 89,500 people confirmed they would attend the demonstration in support of the asylum seekers by registering at the Solidarity with Refugees group on Facebook. The event was called on the eve of a meeting of EU interior ministers scheduled for Monday, September 14, to discuss the European response to the refugee crisis.
The meeting will be attended by UK Home Secretary Theresa May, for whom the Solidarity with Refugees group had a message: "It is vital that she takes with her the conviction that the British people that she represents are open to helping refugees," Solidarity with Refugees group writes.
Thousands now marching through Hyde park after resounding Corbyn victory and holding refugees welcome banners pic.twitter.com/ayKfgowioj
— Laura Burdon-Manley (@LauraBM_RT) September 12, 2015Europe "can't continue to allow thousands to die trying to reach the EU and their legal right to claim asylum," the group added.
The rally began as scheduled, at noon as people convened at Park Lane and then marched to Downing Street, with speeches in Parliament Square.
Thousands of activists, as seen on a live feed, have taken to the streets of London demanding the UK government to provide greater support to the refugees, particularly those currently residing in camps across Europe.
Europe is facing a wave of forced migration unprecedented since WWII. Thousands of unprocessed and unregistered asylum seekers are now arriving to the EU from countries of the Middle East and Africa, devastated by conflicts, to a great extent instigated by US foreign policies.
Masses streaming in to speakers corner. Jeremy Corbyn should be addressing the crowd in around an hours time pic.twitter.com/QFuNiMrorS
— Laura Burdon-Manley (@LauraBM_RT) September 12, 2015Ros Ereira, the initiator of the pro-refugee march, says the rally is her first of any kind, yet the march in support of refugees has found massive support not only from the population, with 20 activist groups and solidarity organizations, such as Amnesty International and Stop the War Coalition, joining in.
The Solidarity with Refugees group wants to persuade Prime Minister David Cameron to accept to the UK more than the 20,000 refugees he pledged to let into the country this week.
BREAKING: Jeremy Corbyn wins election for new #Labour leader http://t.co/hqDnBVB8Mi #labourleadership pic.twitter.com/iqA8po4i6C
— RT (@RT_com) September 12, 2015The first thing the new leader of the UK Labour party, Jeremy Corbyn, did after winning the election with a landslide 59.5 percent of the vote in the first round, was joining the rally in support of refugees.
"Let us be a force for change in the world, a force for humanity in the world, a force for peace in the world, and a force that recognises we cannot go on like this," Corbyn said during his acceptance speech.
Corbyn: I say to ordinary decent people in Hungary who helped Syrian people, thank you very much #london #refugeeswelcome
— Laura Burdon-Manley (@LauraBM_RT) September 12, 2015Corbyn added he would conduct a policy ensuring that "people don't end up in poverty, in refugee camps, wasting their lives away."
Labour's new leader was expected to address the London rally together with Tim Farron, leader of the Liberal Democrats and representatives of such groups as the Refugee Council, Amnesty International and the Stop the War Coalition, of which Corbyn is a co-founder.




Comment: It's heartening to see that citizens of the UK have a conscience, unlike most of their psychopathic leaders who have been instrumental in creating the crisis, yet couldn't care less about the humanitarian devastation their policies have wrought.
'Refugees are welcome here': Thousands march in Berlin to support migrants, Greece