London: Scores of protesters flagrantly flouted social distancing rules as they gathered outside the Indian High Commission in London on Sunday in apparent solidarity with farmers protesting new farming laws enacted in India.
Just days after the British government lifted a national COVID-19 lockdown - which had significantly brought down infection rates, the protesters descended on the heart of Central London, causing massive gridlock and disruption.
According to sources at the Indian High Commission in London, the organizers of the protest had misled the authorities, including the Metropolitan Police in London, that no more than 40 vehicles would participate in a "drive past".
Police had also told the organizers that no more than 30 people would attend, in line with the COVID-19 restrictions currently in place in London.
In one tweet, the Sikh Federation UK, an umbrella organization claiming to represent Sikhs in the UK but is widely seen to be a front and a voice for Khalistan supporters in the UK - described the protest as a "siege" of the Indian High Commission.
Numerous Khalistani flags were seen being waved at the protest while demonstrators shouted anti-India slogans, suggesting a coordinated global effort to discredit the Indian government and further the Khalistan agenda.
Among the demonstrators at the High Commission on Sunday was Paramjeet Singh Pamma, a man wanted in India for his connections to banned terror groups such as Sikhs for Justice (SJF), believed to be funded by the Pakistani intelligence service ISI.