Just Stop FOILED! Cops arrest eco mob assembling for ANOTHER sit-down protest in south London… but are not quick enough to stop rest of rabble blocking road

  • Supporters of protest group Just Stop Oil have blocked traffic on the A4 Cromwell Road, London, this morning
  • Protesters have walked into the carriageway and glued themselves to the road, causing more traffic chaos
  • Images show police appearing to arrest activists outside Gloucester Road tube station before they could start 
  • In recent days eco-zealots have blocked the A4 near the Hammersmith flyover and closed the Dartford Bridge

Police were seen stopping two protesters from going to another eco-mob protest in London this morning, but were not quick enough to stop the rest of the rabble from blocking one of the city’s busiest roads.

Just Stop Oil caused more traffic chaos this morning after stopping vehicles on the A4 Cromwell Road outside the Natural History Museum as the environmental group continues its month of protest.

Around 30 activists walked into the carriageway at the junction with Exhibition Road at 9.40am before gluing themselves to the road surface and using lock-ons.

Images show police appearing to arrest some protesters before the demonstration even began, with two men seen being led into into a police van outside Gloucester Road tube station.

The Met has confirmed it arrested four people on suspicion of having articles to cause criminal damage and two for conspiracy to cause criminal damage.

However, officers from the force were unable to stop the rest of the eco-mob from getting into the road and blocking traffic. 

Video shows multiple officers stood in front of protesters who are sat on the road, with one PC politely asking an activist: ‘Why won’t you move?’

It comes as the protest group gears up for its 19th consecutive day of demonstrations as it calls for the Government to stop giving licences and consents for new oil and gas exploration.

Yesterday supporters of the movement blocked traffic on the A4 in west London in a similar protest that led to angry scenes.

Furious drivers confronted eco-zealots blocking the road outside Baron’s Court tube station near the Hammersmith flyover, with one Londoner damning the ‘lazy b*****ds get a job’.

It also comes a day after two activists were arrested for spending 37 hours in the air after climbing up the Dartford Bridge, forcing police to close the busy road for one-and-a-half days.

Morgan Trowland and Marcus Carambola were taken into custody yesterday afternoon after they scaled the Queen Elizabeth II Bridge and caused hours of delays to thousands of motorists who use the M25 between Essex and Kent. 

Police have made a number of arrests after members of Just Stop Oil blocked traffic in one of central London’s busiest roads this morning

The group blocked vehicles on the A4 Cromwell Road as it continues to call on the government to stop issuing new gas and oil exploration licences and consents

The Met Police says it arrested a number of people before the protest took place. Pictured: Police search two men on Cromwell Road before the demonstration this morning

Just Stop Oil protesters have blocked the A4 Cromwell Road outside the Natural History Museum in central London this morning

Supporters of the protest group sat down in the carriageway and glued themselves to the road surface, while others used lock-ons

Before the demonstration began officers from the Metropolitan Police were seen appearing to question and arrest two would-be protesters

The men were walked away by police after they searched their bags in Cromwell Road, outside Gloucester Road tube station this morning

In a statement released this morning, the protest group said: ’28 supporters of Just Stop Oil have stopped traffic on the A4 Cromwell Road at the junction with Exhibition Road, in central London. They are demanding that the government halts all new oil and gas licences and consents.

‘At 9:40am today, Just Stop Oil supporters walked onto Cromwell Road, near Exhibition Road and disrupted traffic by sitting in the road with banners. Some supporters glued onto the tarmac and others used lock-ons.

‘Just Stop Oil continues to peacefully resist the government’s plans to licence over 100 new oil and gas projects by 2025, and its failure to fulfil its promise to help people with their skyrocketing energy bills. 

‘Policy failures that will force millions into poverty and facing a choice between heating, eating, or providing the basic essentials for themselves and their families.

‘Today’s roadblock follows over two weeks of continuous civil resistance by supporters of Just Stop Oil during which the police have made over 500 arrests.’

Video from the scene shows multiple police officers speaking to protesters, with one trying to convince them to move out of the road. 

The PC can be heard asking ‘Why won’t you move?’, before saying: ‘Obviously I understand you’re going on about oil and such, but these cars are staying here using oil aren’t they?’

Among the group of protesters is Lora Johnson, who went viral after giving an impassioned speech while being carried away by police during a demonstration on Waterloo Bridge on October 2.

Speaking today she said: ‘I’m a mother, a daughter, a sister and I am here today in civil resistance against the Government, trying to get them to say no to new oil licencing.’

Rich Felgate, a filmmaker who has been making a documentary about the group, said he was searched by police on the same road before the protest took place.

‘Just got stopped and searched by police on Cromwell Road whilst on the way to do some filming,’ he tweeted.

A spokesperson for the Met said officers have already made a number of arrests and have worked quickly to reopen one lane of the busy road.

They said: ‘Officers were called at 09:42hrs on Wednesday, 19 October to Cromwell Road, Kensington at the junction with Exhibition Road.

‘Twenty five protesters from Just Stop Oil were causing obstruction and ten had glued themselves to the road.

‘Officers were quickly on scene, arrests have been made and one lane has already been opened.

‘Four people were arrested in the area immediately prior to the demonstration, two for having articles to cause criminal damage and two for conspiracy to cause criminal damage.’

They later confirmed that 17 people were arrested at the protest, as well as four people before, with 21 taken into custody. The force said the road has since completely reopened. 

Yesterday two men who caused traffic chaos on the M25 by climbing up the Dartford Bridge and staying there for 37 hours were finally arrested after they decided to come down.

Morgan Trowland, 39, and Marcus Carambola, 33, both from London, scaled the Queen Elizabeth II Bridge, which spans the River Thames between Kent and Essex, in the early hours of Monday morning.

They then stayed up there until Tuesday afternoon before descending when the authorities sent a ‘super cherry picker’ to try and reach them. They were taken into custody on suspicion of conspiracy to cause public nuisance.

The same day other members of Just Stop Oil blocked the A4 in west London outside Baron’s Court tube station, infuriating motorists.

One angry Londoner confronted members of the group, demanding that the ‘lazy b******s get a job’, while other urged police to arrest them. 

Brought down to earth! Just Stop Oil duo arrested for shutting the Dartford Crossing for two days are identified as a New Zealand-born music teacher who spent 50 days up a tree and a ‘bridge designer’ from London

By Matthew Lodge, Elly Blake, Alastair Lockhart and Jamie Phillips for MailOnline

The pair of eco-zealots who were arrested by police after spending 37 hours on the Dartford Bridge have been identified as a New Zealand-born music teacher who once spent 50 days up a tree and a ‘bridge designer’.

Morgan Trowland and Marcus Carambola caused two days of traffic chaos after climbing up the Queen Elizabeth II Bridge, which links the M25 between Essex and Kent.

The pair of Just Stop Oil supporters, who suspended themselves 275ft above one of the busiest roads in the country on Monday morning, were brought down yesterday afternoon after a ‘super cherry picker’ arrived to pluck them from the girders.

They came down after agreeing to co-operate with officers and descended as the ‘specialised raised platform’ arrived on the bridge. 

They were then arrested, much to the joy of motorists, on suspicion of conspiracy to commit public nuisance and the road over the bridge has now reopened.

In the House of Commons yesterday Home Secretary Suella Braverman attacked ‘tofu-eating wokerati’ for effectively preventing police from arresting Just Stop Oil protesters who have staged 18 consecutive days of demonstrations, hitting out at MPs who voted against tough new measures to strengthen police powers.

Just Stop Oil later hit back on Twitter, saying: ‘You can blame Just Stop Oil’s disruption wholly and entirely on your own Government, for all it would take to get us off the roads is to ban new oil and gas.’

It has now been revealed that both the men responsible for the traffic misery heaped on thousands of motorists in Essex and Kent hail from New Zealand and are veterans of climate and environmental protests in the UK.

Carambola, who lives in London, last year spent more than 50 days living in a 120-year-old tree in a bid to stop it being cut down by the local council in Haringay, north London.

The 33-year-old, who works as a musician and teacher, filmed himself singing redemption song before he was arrested yesterday and has previously said he is ‘privileged’ that his job allows him ‘some flexibility’ to take part in protests.

Meanwhile, Trowland, who describes himself as a civil engineer, has bragged about his contributions to protests held by groups such as Extinction Rebellion (XR).

The 39-year-old, who also lives in the capital, said he was ‘not willing to sit back and watch everything I love burn for the rest of my life’ in a selfie video from on top of the bridge.

Marcus Carambola (pictured), has been named as one of the protesters who climbed up the Dartford Bridge on Monday morning

He and Morgan Trowland (pictured) caused two days of traffic chaos by scaling the girders of one of the busiest bridges in the country

The pair were taken down from the structure and arrested yesterday afternoon after a ‘super cherry picker’ arrived at the scene

Carambola, 33, previously spent more than 50 days living in a tree in Haringay, north London, in protest of plans to chop it down

Trowland took part in a protest in London in May last year, during which he sat in the carriageway and glued his hand to the road on Tower Bridge 

Trowland, who originally hails from New Zealand, is a veteran of climate change protests and has been hauled before the courts multiple times

Protester who threw soup on Van Gogh’s ‘Sunflowers’ admits it was a ‘ridiculous’ action

Phoebe Plummer (left) says there was no damage to the painting

One of the Just Stop Oil activists who threw soup over Vincent Van Gogh’s ‘Sunflowers’ at the National Gallery in London has said it was ‘ridiculous’.

Phoebe Plummer, 21, said the protest was designed to ‘get the conversation going’ and there was no risk to the painting.

Speaking to FreeSeedNews, the activist, who also glued herself to the wall during the demonstration, said: ‘ I would like to make one thing perfectly clear – we did no damage to the painting whatsoever.

She said there had been ‘minimal damage to the frame’ which is ‘repairable and replaceable’.

‘It was behind glass and we never ever would have considered doing it if we didn’t know it was behind glass so that we wouldn’t do any damage,’ she said.

‘We were sat there still glued to the wall, they wiped it off with a bit of kitchen roll. 

‘I recognise that it looks like a slightly ridiculous action. I agree, it is ridiculous. 

‘But, we are not asking the question “should everybody throw soup on paintings?” 

‘What we are doing is getting the conversation going so we can ask the questions that matter. 

‘Questions like “is it ok that Liz Truss is licensing over 100 new fossil fuel licences?”

‘This is the conversation we need to be having now because we don’t have time to waste.’

Plummer and fellow protester Anna Holland prompted global outrage with their protest at the National Gallery in London on Friday.

They were subsequently arrested and have been charged with criminal damage to the frame of the painting. 

They both pleaded not guilty when appearing at Westminster Magistrates’ Court earlier this week, with a trial set for December 13 at City of London Magistrates’ Court.

Police said they ‘worked hard’ with to bring the situation to a safe conclusion and considered a number of options before bringing in an elevated platform which allowed specialist officers to work from height.

That operation was a success and two men have now been arrested, while a specialist team will be investigating and collating evidence for the Crown Prosecution Service.

Carambola, who is originally from Christchurch in New Zealand, is no stranger to spending time in the air – last year he spent more than a month living in a poplar tree in protest at plans to cut it down.

The eco-zealot, along with two other demonstrators, scaled the 100-year-old tree after it was revealed it would be cut down as part of a housing development.

Speaking to MyLondon at the time, he said he was ‘privileged’ that his jobs flexibility allowed him to take part.

‘I mean, if you dedicate your life to protecting a tree, then it has all sorts of implications on your regular routine,’ he told the outlet.

 ‘You have to shift and have other people taking over your regular duties and all that stuff. So that was quite a bit of effort.’

He added that with the introduction of smart phones he was able to do some teaching while up the tree and that he was able to take care of himself while in the air by urinating in a bottle.

He said: ‘You have to just move more carefully. Everything is ideally attached somehow so that, in case it slips, it doesn’t fall, it just hangs on a rope or a line or something.

‘The washing and sleeping and going to the toilet does happen in a similar fashion, but just slower and more mindful. It’s a bit easier as a man.

‘ Everything else we just collect in bags in the bucket that we use and that works fairly well. So you just sort of adapt to the circumstances. It’s not rocket science.’

Meanwhile Trowland, who is said to be a civil engineer who designs bridges, has previously been involved in multiple climate protests including blocking the entrance to one of the UK’s biggest printworks and gluing himself to Tower Bridge.

The 39-year-old, who is also a Kiwi, has previously bragged about designing bamboo structures for Extinction Rebellion protests, with two of his creations being erected outside a Hertfordshire printing press.

Despite being found guilty of breaking the law twice, he has been allowed to continue his activities after walking free from the courts.

In May last year Trowland was among nine XR protester to glue themselves to Tower Bridge, closing the inner-city traffic artery.

Trowland was also one of the ringleaders of the September 2020 blockade of the Hertfordshire newspaper print works.

The XR action stopped three and a half million newspapers – including the Daily Mail, The Times, The Daily Telegraph, The Sun and the Evening Standard – from being distributed across the country.

Trowland was later ordered to pay £334 pounds in fines and costs at St Albans Magistrates’ Court.

In April 2019 he also was one of a number ‘Tree of Life’ protesters who were arrested for public disorder in the City of London.

He was found guilty of the offence at the City of London Magistrates’ Court but given a six-month conditional discharge and ordered to pay £500 costs.

Speaking about his latest protest, he said: ‘As a professional civil engineer, each year as I renew my registration, I commit to acting within our code of ethics, which requires me to safeguard human life and welfare and the environment.

‘Our government has enacted suicidal laws to accelerate oil production: killing human life and destroying our environment.

‘I can’t challenge this madness in my desk job, designing bridges, so I’m taking direct action, occupying the QE2 bridge until the government stops all new oil.’ 

Musician and teacher Marcus Carambola has previously said he is ‘privileged’ to have a job that gives him flexibility to take part in the protests

Two Just Stop Oil protestors who had suspended themselves from Dartford Bridge since early yesterday morning have been brought down and arrested following the arrival of a huge cherry picker

The cherry picker (pictured) arrived to allow specialists to scale the height and engage with the protesters before their arrest

Morgan and Marcus have agreed to come down from the bridge – where they have been suspended up for more than a day and a half

Police have said they are currently ‘considering all options’ to bring the protesters down safely, with emergency services facing a ‘considerable challenge’

The two protesters have been suspended in hammocks on the bridge since yesterday morning, causing travel chaos across the area

Braverman attacks ‘tofu-eating wokerati’ over Just Stop Oil protests

The Home Secretary has attacked the ‘tofu-eating wokerati’ for effectively preventing police from arresting eco-zealots who have caused mayhem and misery during weeks of protest.

Suella Braverman hit out at MPs who voted against tough new measures to strengthen police powers to deal with activists more quickly.

Addressing the Commons as MPs debated the Public Order Bill, Mrs Braverman said: ‘I’m afraid it’s the Labour Party, it’s the Lib Dems, it’s the coalition of chaos, it’s the Guardian-reading, tofu-eating wokerati – dare I say, the anti-growth coalition – that we have to thank for the disruption we are seeing on our roads today.’

Her comments came as police arrested two Just Stop Oil protesters who spent 36 hours suspended from the QEII bridge, closing a major transport link between Kent and Essex due to safety fears.

In response Just Stop Oil laid the blame at the door of the Government, saying it has the power to stop the protests already. 

It wrote on Twitter: ‘You can blame Just Stop Oil’s disruption wholly and entirely on your own Government, for all it would take to get us off the roads is to ban new oil and gas.’

More than 450 Just Stop Oil activists have been arrested since they began disruption in and around London on October 1.

The Public Order Bill cleared the Commons last night and will now have further scrutiny in the Lords.

Parts of the Police, Crime, Sentencing and Courts Bill were defeated this year, meaning criminalising locking-on – when demonstrators attach themselves to each other, landmarks or infrastructure – was removed.

Simon Anslow, Chief Superintendent at Essex Police, said the force ‘cannot tolerate people carrying out activity which puts lives at risk and prevents people from going about their lives’. 

‘I know this has been really frustrating for the public and the disruption has negatively impacted on businesses and meant people have been late for, or missed, appointments,’ he said.

‘Alongside our partners, we worked hard to resolve this complex situation as quickly and safely as possible.’

The pair of protesters boasted of their success and vowed that other members of Just Stop Oil will continue to cause disruption, they tweeted: ‘We successfully disrupted oil supplies to Kent & the South East for 36 hours.

‘We are stepping down now but other supporters of Just Stop Oil will be stepping up day after day, causing disruption and putting their liberty on the line to demand that the government ends new oil and gas.’

It comes as police are probing a video which appears to show fireworks being fired at a pair of Just Stop Oil protesters on Dartford Bridge after they forced police to close it to traffic for more than a day.

The footage, which was purportedly taken last night or in the early hours of this morning, shows a person on the south bank of the Thames shooting explosives in the direction of the Queen Elizabeth II Bridge.

The fireworks can be seen exploding close to the structure, but do not appear to reach the northern end where the two eco-zealots spent last night sleeping in hammocks hanging more than 100ft above the road.

Police have confirmed they are probing the video to determine its authenticity and to see if any crimes have been committed. 

The video, which is circulating on social media, was released the same day one of the protesters revealed they plan to stay in place, potentially causing even more traffic chaos.

Yesterday Just Stop Oil had said the pair wanted to stay for ‘at least 24 hours’.

One of the protesters, Morgan Trowland had said he planned to stay ‘until the Government makes a meaningful statement to cancel all new licences and consents for new oil and gas exploration’.

Motorists faced one-and-a-half days of delays as a result of the protest, which forced police to close one of the busiest roads in the country linking the M25 in Kent and Essex.

Video circulating on social media appears to show fireworks being fired towards two Just Stop Oil activists who have climbed up the Dartford Bridge

Just Stop Oil activists Morgan Trowland and Marcus have been suspended from the bridge (pictured) since Monday morning in a climate protest

The video, which appears to have been taken last night, shows the projectiles being fired in the direction of the Queen Elizabeth II Bridge

Essex Police says it and Kent Police are investigating to determine the authenticity of the video, which has been circulating on social media

The Just Stop Oil activists spent last night sleeping in hammocks suspended more than 100ft above the road and 500ft above the River Thames

The closure of the Queen Elizabeth II has caused huge delays on both sides of the M25 as traffic is diverted through the Dartford Tunnel. Pictured is heavy traffic on the A282 northbound in Kent

The bridge is expected to remain closed to all traffic until the pair of protesters have been coaxed down from the girders after climbing up on Monday 

Downing Street vows to tackle ‘guerrilla tactics’ 

By PA 

Downing Street said new offences and tougher police powers would help tackle the ‘guerrilla tactics’ employed by Just Stop Oil.

The Prime Minister’s official spokesman would not be drawn on the police response to the Dartford Crossing protests.

‘I wouldn’t get into comment on individual operational policing decisions,’ he said. but

He added: ‘I think we have seen in the past, too often, these protesters able to disrupt lives, cause mass misery and stop emergency services going about their work.’

The Police, Crime, Sentencing and Courts Act and the Public Order Bill going through the Commons on Tuesday would beef up the powers available to officers.

‘We are we are ensuring the police have even more powers so they can stop these sorts of guerrilla tactics,’ the spokesman said.

There were dramatic scenes as one Londoner angrily confronted the eco-mob in the middle of the road and demanded the ‘lazy b*****ds get a job’.

Furious motorists called on police to arrest a group of more than 20 eco-zealots after they walked into the road near Hammersmith flyover at 7.30am and sat down with banners before gluing themselves to the tarmac and using lock-ons to avoid being forcibly removed.

Video shows angry motorists confronting the group, while Metropolitan Police officers attempt to remove the eco-zealots from the carriageway.

The Met later confirmed it had arrested 26 people and reopened the road, with the protesters taken into custody at a south London police station

It is the 18th consecutive day of disruption by the eco-mob, which is calling for the Government to stop granting new licences and consents for oil and gas exploration.

The A282 over the Queen Elizabeth II Bridge was shut by police while they try and coax the pair down, creating huge delays for the second day in a row.

Furious drivers already faced delays of around one hour at 6am and there were queues of more than six miles in both directions.

In a statement, issued before the pair were brought down, Kent Police said: ‘Kent Police is aware of a video circulating online which appears to show fireworks being set off in Greenhithe near to the QEII bridge, Dartford.

‘Officers are making enquiries to ascertain the circumstances surrounding the video and to identify any offences which may have been committed.’

The height at which the protesters were located complicated efforts to try and remove the activists, with police saying it will take them time to get them down.

Furious drivers blasted the police’s response, saying they were ‘playing into the hands’ of eco-activists by shutting the bridge.

A spokesman for Just Stop Oil said: ‘Ordinary people are right to be upset, frustrated, irritated, angry – their lives have been disrupted. 

‘Politics is failing us, it has failed on the cost of living crisis with families cold and hungry and it’s failing on the climate crisis, with transport and crops being hit in this country.

‘Our Government can reopen the M25, reopen Dartford Bridge and end this disruption immediately by making a statement to end new oil and gas.’

Police carry a protester off the road during the demonstration on the A4 outside Barons Court station in west London this morning

Members of Just Stop Oil have staged a sit-down protest on the A4 outside Barons Court Underground Station today in what is the 18th consecutive day of protest

The eco-mob have glued themselves to the tarmac and used lock-ons in a bid to avoid being forcibly removed from the normally busy road

Officers from the Metropolitan Police are at the scene of the protest in the A4, where the demonstrators blocked the road

Angry motorists confronted the protesters after they blocked the road, preventing many from getting into work on time this morning

Video from the scene shows police officers trying to calm members of the public while colleagues remove members of the climate protest group

Just Stop Oil has blocked roads in London and Kent and Essex with two separate protests. Its supporters blocked the A4 at Barons Court this morning, while a demonstration has kept the Dartford Bridge closed for a second day running

Dartford Bridge protester says he’s ‘pretty cold’ but vows not to come down until Government action

One of the protesters who has scaled the Dartford Bridge says he won’t come down until the Government takes action on climate change.

Morgan Trowland, a 39-year-old civil engineer, is one of two people who climbed up the bridge yesterday morning, forcing police to close it to traffic.

In a video from the top of the structure this morning, he said he was ‘pretty cold’ and hasn’t slept much.

‘We are up here until the Government makes a meaningful statement to cancel all new licences and consents for new oil and gas exploration,’ he said. 

‘Oil and gas is killing us now and it’s driving millions into poverty this winter. 

‘We have to have an emergency transition to renewable energy, quite a stable and affordable energy, and we’ve got to pay for that transition using the profits of the oil and gas industry and the rich. 

‘So now is the moment for civil resistance, come and do what you can at this pivotal moment in history.’

He added: ‘We will cancel this disruption when the Government cancels all new oil and gas extraction licences.’

The protest on the A4 this morning started at 7.30am when activists walked on to the road during rush hour. Among the eco-zealots involved in the demonstration are students, delivery drivers and mothers. 

There were cries of ‘lock them up’ from furious motorists as police arrived at the scene, with drivers angrily telling the protesters to ‘go and get a job’.

One angry passerby said: ‘What kind of job allows you to just sit there all f***ing day? Because I want to apply you lazy b******s, go and get a job!’ 

The Metropolitan Police has said it is ‘in the process of removing and arresting’ those protesters sat in the road. Footage shows dozens of officers swarming around the activists as they attempt to remove them from the carriageway.

It later confirmed: ‘Met officers have arrested 26 people for wilful obstruction of the highway, at Talgarth Road, Hammersmith. The road is now open in both directions.’

While many people have made alternative plans, those who have to cross the river at the Dartford Crossing this morning for work are still facing long delays.

At 7am there was already five miles of slow-moving congestion in Kent heading towards the bridge and more than six miles in the opposite direction in Essex.

Motorists have hit out at the protesters, saying they are actually forcing drivers to use more petrol and oil. Those looking to avoid the chaos at Dartford face a 30-mile round trip to the Blackwall Tunnel in London, which is the only other road crossing the Thames east of central London.

Some have called for the pair to be ‘shot down’ from the top of the structure they have made their home, while others have said police should reopen the road even if they are still up there.

As protesters climbed the 275ft masts on the structure yesterday, activist Mr Trowland was overcome with emotion as he said he had scaled the Queen Elizabeth II Bridge because he ‘was not willing to sit back and watch everything I love burn for the rest of my life’. 

In a video posted this morning, Mr Trowland said he was ‘pretty cold and didn’t sleep much’ after spending the night in a hammock alongside his fellow protester Marcus, a teacher from London.

Angry motorists have demanded action is taken to allow the Queen Elizabeth II Bridge between Kent and Essex is reopened

Just Stop Oil had said the intention was for the men to stay up there for ‘at least 24 hours’, but last night gave no indication as to when they might come down. 

A spokesman for Just Stop Oil told PA: ‘My understanding is that they are going to stay up there until they’re brought down, that’s my understanding at the moment.

‘I don’t know how they’re going to be brought down, and I’m not sure the police do either at the moment.’

BJ Harrington, Chief Constable of Essex Police, called the pair ‘crazy’ and said the force is doing everything it can to ‘get that road open as soon as possible’. 

Yesterday Essex Police said: ‘We expect the bridge to remain closed this evening and into tomorrow morning’s rush hour. We would advise motorists to avoid the area and plan an alternative route if they possibly can.’

Chief Superintendent Simon Anslow said: ‘We understand how frustrating this situation is for people wanting to use the bridge and go about their business. Let me assure you we are doing all we can to resolve this situation quickly and safely.

‘It is a complex situation due to the height the people on the bridge are at.

‘Our colleagues at National Highways, who have responsibility for the bridge, have made an assessment that it is not currently safe to re-open the road.’

There are already long delays on the M25 and A282 between Kent and Essex this morning at the Queen Elizabeth II Bridge remains closed

There is a diversion in place through the Dartford Tunnel, although this has meant traffic coming in the other direction has also been delayed as the amount of traffic each direction can take has halved

There are already queues stretching for miles in either direction of the Dartford Bridge this morning as the protest enters its second day

In a video from the top of the bridge Morgan Trowland (pictured) said he was ‘not willing to sit back and watch everything I love burn for the rest of my life’. The protesters from Just Stop Oil have vowed not to come down until the Government stops issuing new gas and oil licences

There has been a second day of traffic chaos in Kent and Essex with long delays on the M25 and A282 after the Dartford bridge was closed by the protest

He added: ‘We will take action against anyone who puts life in danger or thinks they can selfishly stop others getting to and from work or just going about their daily lives. The impact is far reaching, especially for the local community.

‘I would again like to re-iterate my thanks to the public for their patience and understanding. I assure them that we continue to work with our partners to bring this dangerous and irresponsible disruption to an end.

‘Our priority is to keep people safe and keep Essex moving.’

Furious drivers demanded police reopen the road even if the pair are still up there, declaring that the protesters ‘knew the risks’ and are stopping people getting to work and hospital appointments. 

The group yesterday also targeted the Department for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy in Westminster by throwing soup at the building’s entrance and demanding a meeting with the Home Secretary.

The environmentalist group has launched demonstrations in London over the last few weeks. 

Protesters sprayed orange paint over an Aston Martin garage in the capital and blocked roads on Sunday as they continue to demand an end to new oil and gas projects.

Two Just Stop Oil supporters have climbed to the top of the Queen Elizabeth II Bridge forcing police to close the bridge to demand that the government halts all new oil and gas licences and consents,’ the group said yesterday.

‘At approximately 5am two climbers ascended the two 84m masts on the north side of the Queen Elizabeth II Bridge forcing the police to stop traffic from entering the bridge. It is expected that the bridge will remain shut for at least 24 hours.’

National Highways reported two-hour long queues yesterday, with some motorists saying they had been stuck for as long as three. 

Mr Trowland said: ‘As a professional civil engineer, each year as I renew my registration, I commit to acting within our code of ethics, which requires me to safeguard human life and welfare and the environment.

‘Our government has enacted suicidal laws to accelerate oil production: killing human life and destroying our environment.

‘I can’t challenge this madness in my desk job, designing bridges, so I’m taking direct action, occupying the QE2 bridge until the government stops all new oil.’ 

Marcus added he felt the current political system in the UK was ‘betraying the people of this country’.

He said: ‘Too many people in this country simply don’t know the scale and intensity of climate breakdown as the scientists describe it.

‘The authorities are criminally failing to get this grim science communicated. During Covid the science was conveyed on a daily basis.

‘Why isn’t the most existential threat that humanity has ever faced on the news every day?

‘Our political system is betraying the people of this country. More fossil fuel licenses means global genocide. Only direct action will now help to reach the social tipping point we so urgently need.’

Essex Police said colleagues at National Highways escorted traffic through the Dartford Tunnel in a bid to alleviate the impact of the road closure.

The road has been closed for more than 24 hours after the pair of Just Stop Oil activists scaled the girders. Since then they have remained in the air and have set up a banner between two of the masts

The protesters unfurled a banner with the words ‘Just Stop Oil’ between two of the masts on the Queen Elizabeth II Bridge

The crossing contains two tunnels and the bridge, with the tunnels taking traffic north from Kent to Essex and the bridge taking vehicles in the other direction. 

Angry motorists accused the protesters of turning the M25 into a ‘car park’ as commuters struggled to get to work yesterday morning.

Others accused the demonstrators of potentially costing lives by stopping ‘hundreds of NHS staff’ from getting to work and preventing people from getting to hospital and doctors appointments.

One video posted on social media shows an ambulance with blue lights flashing stuck in the traffic at Chafford Hundred in Essex on Monday morning. 

Chief Constable Harrington said he thought the pair were ‘crazy’ and was firmly on the side of motorists.

In an interview with BBC Essex yesterday, he said: ‘We want them to come down, but we’ve got to do that safely. Safely for the public, safely for the people who use the bridge and safely for those who operate the bridge. It’s a really dangerous and difficult environment.

‘I think they are crazy. I’m really frustrated and you’ve got every guarantee from me that the officers there at the moment, working with the Dartford Crossing and National Highways, will get that road open as soon as possible.’

He added: ‘We are advising and guiding the road operator. We are there, lets be honest, to arrest them when they come down. I think it’s criminal.

‘My officers are down there and it’s taking them away from other things and it’s stopping Essex and Kent from working and it’s just not acceptable.’

Those stuck in the queue at Dartford Bridge hit out at the eco-zealots, as frustrated motorists honked their horns, revved their engines and shouted out ‘come on’ as the sea of cars slowly edged toward the crossing.

Oliver Tite, a 25-year-old from Dartford who works as a lift engineer, was trying to get to Essex for a job interview.

‘It’s ridiculous and it’s a pain for everyone,’ he said.

‘I’m late for a job interview, I probably won’t make it, but I’ll just have to wait and see. If I don’t make it on time, I’ll have to get it moved, if they let me move it.

‘But it’s completely out of my hands and so frustrating. I don’t know why they don’t keep the bridge going. It’s the protesters’ choice to be up there, so why don’t we make them deal with the consequences?’

Mother-of-two Jo Reading, a 42-year-old personal assistant from Dartford, said: ‘It’s not great, it’s not great at all.

‘It’s frustrating and I hope it doesn’t take too long to get through. It’s got to the point where you almost expect this kind of thing, which isn’t good either.’

Just Stop Oil said on its website yesterday: ‘Today’s actions follow over two weeks of continuous disruption by supporters of Just Stop Oil in which they have experienced over 450 arrests.

‘On Sunday, there were 14 arrests of Just Stop Oil supporters, who blocked Park Lane and sprayed an Aston Martin dealership with orange paint. Since the campaign began on April 1st, Just Stop Oil supporters have been arrested over 1,700 times, with five currently in prison.

‘This is not a one-day event, expect us every day and anywhere. This is an act of resistance against a criminal government and their genocidal death project. 

‘Our supporters will be returning – today, tomorrow and the next day – and the next day after that – and every day until our demand is met: no new oil and gas in the UK.’

According to Rich Felgate, a documentary maker who has been filming the group’s recent protests, two of its supporters climbed up this morning ‘shutting down the entire bridge and blocking oil tankers from oil terminals in Essex traveling south’. 

On Park Lane on Sunday, one furious black cab driver hauled the eco-zealots from the road. 

One motorist bellowed at them: ‘People have got f****** work to go to.’ Another added: ‘People are trying to go to hospital.’

One motorist bellowed at protesters on Park Lane: ‘People have got f****** work to go to’ while another added ‘people are trying to go to hospital’

Members of the public were not amused by the protest group’s activities and removed them from the road themselves

Just Stop Oil sprayed orange paint over the Aston Martin car showroom in an apparent spontaneous act of vandalism

The spray painter somehow found themselves on the floor and appeared to have been arrested by the Metropolitan Police

Among the protesters were a pregnant mother and a musician who all vowed to continue with their deeply divisive campaign.

Chloe Thomas, 19, from Cannock said: ‘I’m 15 weeks pregnant this week. Today, we’re out here on the road together, demanding no new oil. 

‘How do I explain to my daughter in the years to come where the animals went, where the culture went, where the beauty went, why there are no bees and why I can’t put food in her tummy?

‘You know it’s bad, don’t you? As citizens, as humans, as parents and children we have a responsibility and a right under British law to protect ourselves and those we love.’

David Kearns, 45, a musician from Birmingham, added: ‘I cannot stand by and allow this government to continue destroying everything we love for the sake of nothing but profit.

‘The climate crisis is a product of greed, just as the cost of living crisis is a product of greed and I will not comply with a system that puts profits before the people and the planet. ‘

It came just hours after Home Secretary Suella Braverman slammed the activists as ‘thugs’ and told the Metropolitan Police to ‘do a better job’.

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