Teenager, 18, charged with defacing Winston Churchill’s Westminster statue

Teenager, 18, is charged with defacing Winston Churchill’s Westminster statue branding the wartime leader ‘a racist’

  • Benjamin Clark, 18, will appear at Westminster Magistrates’ Court on  October 9
  • He was arrested after Churchill’s plinth was yesterday daubed with yellow paint 
  • A slogan branding the wartime leader ‘a racist’ was sprayed on the stone plinth 
  • Scotland Yard confirmed 680 people were arrested during the 10-day protest 

A teenager has been charged with criminal damage after the statue of Sir Winston Churchill in Parliament Square was daubed with graffiti.

Benjamin Clark, 18, from Hertford, is due to appear at Westminster Magistrates’ Court on October 9, the Metropolitan Police said.

He was arrested after the plinth of the monument to the former prime minister was defaced on Thursday with yellow graffiti including the words ‘is a racist’.

Benjamin Clark, 18, has been accused of defacing Winston Churchill’s statue in Parliament Square during this week’s Extinction Rebellion protest. The teenager is due to appear before Westminster Magistrates’ Court on October 9

Met Police commander Jane Connors described the protests as 'a significant challenge'

Met Police commander Jane Connors described the protests as ‘a significant challenge’ 

Clark was one of at least 680 people arrested in connection with 10 days of Extinction Rebellion protests in London.

Others have been held on suspicion of obstructing the highway and breaching conditions of protest set under the Public Order Act since the actions began on September 1.

Commander Jane Connors described the protests as a ‘significant challenge’ during a ‘public health crisis’.

‘The public have a right to protest, but they do not have a right to cause disruption to the communities and businesses across London. That is why we took swift action to make a number of arrests,’ she said.

‘This has been a large policing operation and we will continue to investigate those who we suspect to have committed offences, so the number of arrests is likely to rise.’