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Last Updated Monday November 16 2020 05:29 PM IST

20,000 refugee supporters march through London

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20,000 refugee supporters march through London Demonstrators including refugees march to the Houses of Parliament, during an Amnesty International protest in support of refugees, in London, Britain September 17, 2016. Reuters

London: Around 20,000 pro-refugee demonstrators took to the streets on London on Saturday, according to police, to call on prime minister Theresa May to do more to tackle the migrant crisis.

Protesters marched down the affluent Park Lane and the central thoroughfare Piccadilly carrying an array of colorful placards and shouting slogans including "say it loud, say it clear: refugees are welcome here!"

At one point, a group at the front of the protest performed a song and dance routine to Carly Rae Jepsen's "I Really Like You", cheered on by fellow protesters.

Some carried signs reading "no-one is illegal", "stop the drowning", while others chanted "refugees - let them stay...Let's deport Theresa May!"

"I've come here today because my kids go to sleep in a safe house every night with full stomachs and I think every child should have that," mother-of-two Claire-Marie Goggin, 47, told AFP.

20,000 refugee supporters march through London Demonstrators including refugees march to the Houses of Parliament, during an Amnesty International protest in support of refugees, in London, Britain September 17, 2016. Reuters

Volunteer worker Felicity Rose, 33, said the message was "to look after our brothers and sisters from round the world and let them come and to stop penalizing them because of where they come from and the color of their skin."

The event was organized by Solidarity with Refugees, and was supported by groups including Amnesty International, Oxfam, Medecins Sans Frontiers, the Refugee Council and Stop the War Coalition.

It comes ahead of Monday's UN Summit for refugees and migrants in New York, to be hosted by US President Barack Obama and attended by prime minister May.

Britain's then prime minister David Cameron announced last year the country would accept up to 20,000 refugees from Syria over the next five years.

(With agency inputs)

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