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U.K. Black Lives Matter blocks Heathrow Airport road

U.K. Black Lives Matter organizers say roads shutdown protests racism and mourns those who have died in custody

Activists in U.K. Black Lives Matter

Activists in U.K. Black Lives Matter lay on the road outside Nottingham Theatre Royal as they attempt to shut down part of the city centre tram and bus network in Nottingham, England Friday Aug. 5, 2016 to protest for social justice.  (Edward Smith/PA via AP)

LONDON — Activists linked to the U.S.-based group Black Lives Matter blocked a road Friday leading to London’s Heathrow Airport. They also held protests in other British cities.

Organizer Joshua Virasami told the BBC that the movement — founded to protest the killings of black people by American police — was needed “in Britain and all over the world.”

U.K. Black Lives Matter said in a statement it was holding a “shutdown” of roads in London and other cities to “mourn those who have died in custody and to protest the ongoing racist violence of the police, border enforcement, structural inequalities and the everyday indignity of street racism.”

London’s Metropolitan Police said officers arrested 10 people blocking a road leading from a main highway to Heathrow on Friday morning. Six of those arrested were “locked” to one another.

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Photos showed police moving a group of people attached together lying across the road beside a banner saying “this is a crisis.”

Police said one lane of the road was open. Traffic was backed up getting into one of the world’s busiest airports. Heathrow said it was not aware of passengers missing flights because of the protest.

In other protests, a small group of demonstrators in the central England city of Nottingham disrupted public transport by lying down on tram tracks. Police also removed protesters from a road near Birmingham Airport, 100 miles (160 kilometres) north of London.

The protesters said they were marking the fifth anniversary of the death of Mark Duggan, a 29-year-old black man shot by London police under disputed circumstances on Aug. 4, 2011. The killing sparked Britain’s worst civil disorder in decades.

Activists say black men in Britain are unfairly targeted by law enforcement and disproportionately represented among prison inmates. According to official figures, 26 per cent of inmates in England and Wales are non-white, compared to 12 per cent of the overall population there.

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