Two Just Stop Oil (JSO) activists have been arrested after smashing the glass cover of a painting once famously slashed by a suffragette.
The pair were held on suspicion of criminal damage after Diego Velazquez’s The Rokeby Venus was targeted at the National Gallery in central London on Monday, the Metropolitan Police said.
In 1914, suffragette Mary Richardson attacked the painting with a meat cleaver in a protest against the arrest of Emmeline Pankhurst.
JSO said students Hanan, 22, and Harrison, 20, used safety hammers to smash the glass covering the artwork.
It added: “Politics is failing us. It failed women in 1914 and it is failing us now. New oil and gas will kill millions.
“If we love art, if we love life, if we love our families we must Just Stop Oil.”
It is the latest in a string of stunts, which have seen demonstrators throw soup at Van Gogh’s Sunflowers painting and glue themselves to the frames of other masterpieces.
Meanwhile, the Met said they arrested at least 40 JSO activists who were slow-marching in Whitehall, with some of those held around the Cenotaph, according to protesters and an officer.
The campaign group was accused of targeting the war memorial – which it strongly denied, saying activists had been moved to its base by police officers after shutting down traffic on the road.
A mother-of-one who was lying handcuffed at the base of the Cenotaph said: “They arrested us in the road and we were dragged to the pavement and then back over here.”
A police officer said the protesters had been moved to the area “to get them off the road”, adding: “It was for their own safety.”
However, politicians including Tory party deputy chairman Lee Anderson, London Mayor Sadiq Khan and Labour’s shadow home secretary Yvette Cooper accused the group of targeting the Cenotaph in social media posts on X.
Mr Khan and Ms Cooper later removed the posts.
The climate change group, which is calling on the government to stop all new gas and oil projects in the UK, is currently carrying out a four-week campaign of demonstrations.
An extra £500m of additional funding will be given to neighbourhood policing, the home secretary is set to announce.
Yvette Cooper will also lay out plans for a new unit to improve the performances of police forces across the country to end the “postcode lottery” of how effectively crimes are dealt with.
The Home Office says the unit will directly monitor police performance in areas prioritised by the government, including tackling violence against women and girls and knife crime.
The home secretary will make the announcements in her first major speech at the annual conference of the National Police Chiefs’ Council and Association of Police and Crime Commissioners on Tuesday.
Ms Cooper is expected to say: “Public confidence is the bedrock of our British policing model but in recent years it has been badly eroded, as neighbourhood policing has been cut back and as outdated systems and structures have left the police struggling to keep up with a fast-changing criminal landscape.
“That’s why we’re determined to rebuild neighbourhood policing, to improve performance across police forces and to ensure the highest standards are being upheld across the service.
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“The challenge of rebuilding public confidence is a shared one for government and policing.
“This is an opportunity for a fundamental reset in that relationship, and together we will embark on this roadmap for reform to regain the trust and support of the people we all serve and to reinvigorate the best of policing.”
As well as the new government performance unit, ministers also hope to improve the relationship between the public and the police by standardising and measuring police response times – something that is not currently monitored.
In the aftermath of the summer riots, sparked by the Southport stabbings on 29 July, Ms Cooper said respect for the police needed to be restored after the “brazen abuse and contempt” shown by the perpetrators.
She said too often people feel “crime has no consequences” and that “has to change” as she promised to restore confidence in policing and the criminal justice system.
Dr Rick Muir, director of policing thinktank the Police Foundation, said: “A serious reform programme like this in policing is long overdue.
“Too often in the past, officers at the frontline have been let down by outdated technology, inadequate training and inefficient support services.
“Until these issues are addressed, the public won’t get the quality of policing they deserve.”
Four suspects have so far been identified by police investigating possible criminal charges in the Post Office scandal, Sky News has learned.
Sources have said that among the offences being considered are perverting the course of justice and perjury.
Hundreds of sub-postmasters were wrongly prosecuted for stealing from their branches between 1999 and 2015 after faulty Horizon software caused accounting errors.
The Metropolitan Police is a so-called core participant in the Post Office public inquiry and has been monitoring and assessing material submitted.
It is expected that the number of suspects being investigated by police could rise in the next six to 12 months.
More than a million documents are believed to be being sifted through and the number of police officers investigating the scandal has also risen from 80 to 100, with work across every single police force.
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It is not expected, however, that any charges will be brought before 2027/28, and that time frame could be extended.
A Sky News source said the number of suspects was seemingly “just a starting point”.
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A meeting took place this weekend between more than 150 sub-postmasters, including Sir Alan Bates, and the Metropolitan Police.
Sir Alan said he had been told by officers that “it was going to take a few years” and that there are “no restrictions on how high investigations will take them”.
He also said the priority for sub-postmasters was financial redress and then, after that, victims will be “looking for people to be held to account”.
A Metropolitan police spokesperson said: “Yesterday [17 November] we met with Alan Bates and some of the affected sub-postmasters to provide a brief on our progress and next steps.
“Our investigation team, comprising around 100 officers from forces across the UK, is now in place and we will be sharing further details in due course.
“Initially four suspects have been identified and we anticipate this number to grow as the investigation progresses.”
A “technical issue” at British Airways has delayed flights, reportedly for thousands of passengers.
Travel journalist Simon Calder said on X: “British Airways IT system failure is causing delays of 1-2 hours on many BA flights this evening… As delays build up I fear there will be cancellations tonight/tomorrow.”
In a statement on Monday evening, British Airways said flights were “currently operating, but are experiencing delays” and that its teams were working to “resolve a technical issue affecting some of our systems”.
Later they said it had been resolved: “Our teams worked hard to resolve an issue we experienced for a short time earlier this evening.
“We’ve apologised to customers for delays to their flights and ensured they were able to reach their destinations as planned.”
Earlier media reports suggested dozens of flights were grounded and that communications systems were affected.
One X user pictured people queueing on the tarmac in Verona, Italy. “What has happened to the nations airline? Not fit for purpose,” they said.
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Replying to another X user BA said: “Our website is down. We are doing all we can to return online as soon as possible.
“Hopefully not too long before the Captain has his load sheet. Thanks for your understanding. Have a good journey when it is safe for you to be airborne.”
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A spokesperson for Heathrow Airport said: “We are aware of a technical issue that British Airways are investigating, and we will be working with them to provide updates to passengers as soon as they are available. Heathrow systems are operating as normal.”
In June many British Airways (BA) flights in Heathrow were delayed by several hours by a “technical fault” with baggage handling.
BA said there had been a “temporary technical fault” which had disrupted its baggage system at the airport and had apologised for the problems it caused.
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