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Anti-vaccine protesters tried to storm the BBC’s offices. But they had the wrong address.
2021-08-10 00:00:00.0     华盛顿邮报-世界     原网页

       

       A group of coronavirus vaccine protesters attempted to storm the offices of British public broadcaster BBC on Monday. But they had one big problem: the wrong address.

       Instead of targeting the BBC’s news operations, which some activists have blamed for helping promote coronavirus vaccines, they charged toward a former BBC building in west London that now houses upscale apartments, restaurants and studios used by another British media company to produce daytime talk shows.

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       “Not sure what protesters were hoping to achieve, but all they would’ve found was me, Jane, Nadia and Penny on @loosewomen talking about the menopause,” tweeted Charlene White, a host on the ITV show “Loose Women,” which was live on air when protesters attempted to enter the building.

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       Videos posted on social media showed protesters clashing with police as they attempted to force their way into the building, which is about four miles west of central London. Hundreds of people outside the studio building chanted “shame on you,” the Guardian newspaper reported, adding that many appeared to think they were protesting a major BBC News operation and that pre-protest material had played up the building’s links to the broadcaster.

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       “Officers were pushed by a small number of demonstrators [running toward the entrance,] but the arrival of additional officers quickly restored calm,” London’s Metropolitan Police said in a statement. It added that an officer suffered a minor facial injury and that no arrests were made. The BBC declined to comment.

       Australian prime minister calls lockdown-violating protests ‘selfish and self-defeating’

       The BBC remains broadly popular with the British public, who fund the broadcaster via a license fee. But it has often been attacked by right-of-center commentators for allegedly being elitist and too reflective of a liberal, urban worldview. Its journalists have also faced verbal and physical attacks during the pandemic, with the political editor of its “Newsnight” program, Nick Watt, targeted outside Downing Street by anti-lockdown protesters earlier this year.

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       The circular Television Centre building, known as “the doughnut,” opened in 1960. The broadcaster vacated the building in 2012 — it retains a non-news operation there — and it was later refurbished. The majority of the BBC’s London-based news staff are based at Broadcasting House. A smaller group of demonstrators later marched to that central London building.

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       “Is there a link between stupidity and anti-vaccine?” wrote Andrew Neil, a center-right media entrepreneur and former BBC host, on Twitter, noting that Monday’s events made the antics of “The Gang That Couldn’t Shoot Straight,” a 1971 American crime comedy film, “look sensible.”

       Monday’s event is not the first coronavirus protest to meet with public derision. Demonstrators protesting a lockdown in Sydney last month provoked outrage among residents, especially when a man was arrested for attacking a police horse.

       An image of the horse, named Tobruk, allegedly being struck on the nose by the man went viral after being shared on social media. The man was later arrested and charged with animal cruelty and affray. Tobruk was showered with licorice, apples and carrots from “many well-wishers across the community,” his rider told local media.

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       Vaccine passes have also spurred another round of pandemic protests in Europe. Both in France and in Germany, some protesters — rallying alongside far-right activists — have accused their governments of resembling the Nazi regime, The Washington Post reported.

       In the United States, the Biden administration last month announced mandate-like guidelines for the millions who work in the federal government, requiring them to be vaccinated or undergo repeated testing. Many major U.S. employers have made inoculation a condition of employment.

       Read more:

       Despite weeks of protests, France implements health pass at cafes and train stations with little drama

       Vaccine passes in Europe spur the pandemic’s second wave of protests

       FOMO in the U.K., sausages in Germany, Dracula’s castle in Romania: Countries dangle coronavirus vaccine incentives

       


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关键词: demonstrators     broadcaster     advertisement     media     attempted     coronavirus vaccine protesters     building    
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