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Just Stop Oil protesters spray Grade I listed Wellington Arch with orange paint

Three protesters were arrested on suspicion of criminal damage after the protest action on Wednesday.

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Wellington Arch in central London after Just Stop Oil protesters sprayed the building with orange paint

Just Stop Oil (JSO) protesters have sprayed orange paint on Wellington Arch in central London in their latest stunt objecting to new fossil fuel licences.

Three supporters set off smoke flares near the monument at around 10.15am on Wednesday, before spraying the Grade I listed structure with orange paint using fire extinguishers, JSO said.

One of the activists, Joe Hogan, 40, from Hertfordshire, said: “Traditional, managed, sanitised forms of protest have done nothing; the only way forward is through sustained, disruptive civil resistance.”

The trio were arrested on suspicion of criminal damage.

Orange paint sprayed on Wellington Arch
Just Stop Oil protesters sprayed orange paint on the historic structure at Hyde Park Corner on Wednesday (Just Stop Oil/PA)

In an entry on the Met Police Events X account, the force said: “Police were made aware of Just Stop Oil protestors spraying paint on Wellington Arch today at 10:19am.

“Officers that were nearby immediately responded.

“Three people have been arrested on suspicion of criminal damage.”

The back view of a protester holding two orange JSO banners.
One of the protesters holding two orange JSO banners (Just Stop Oil/PA)

The protest comes after three other JSO supporters were each given a 12-month community order and 60 hours’ unpaid work for invading the pitch at Lords cricket ground.

Judit Murray, 69, Daniel Knorr, 21, and Jacob Bourne, 27, were sentenced at Westminster Magistrates’ Court on Tuesday for stopping play during the second Test between England and Australia on June 28.

England player Jonny Bairstow carried Knorr off the pitch, champagne corks and fruit were thrown by cricket fans at Bourne as he was led off the field, and Murray was tackled before she could reach the wicket and held down on the grass.

England’s Jonny Bairstow removes a Just Stop Oil protester from the pitch during day one of the second Ashes test match at Lord’s, London, in June.
England’s Jonny Bairstow removes a Just Stop Oil protester from the pitch during day one of the second Ashes Test match at Lords, London, in June (Mike Egerton/PA)

In a separate case at the High Court, 12 JSO supporters are accused of breaching a court injunction by staging protest action on the M25 in November last year.

On Tuesday 76-year-old grandmother Gaie Delap, from Bristol, told the judge in the hearing, Mr Justice Soole, that she had climbed on to a motorway gantry because the “climate emergency” was not being taken seriously enough.

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