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London Police Deploy Facial Recognition at Protest for First Time
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Tomorrow, the Metropolitan Police will turn biometric surveillance cameras on people attending a political demonstration in London.
Live facial recognition will scan the faces of those heading to the “Unite the Kingdom, Unite the West” rally in the borough of Camden, marking the first time the technology has been authorized for use at a protest in the UK. The rally was organized by activist Tommy Robinson who says the rally is for “national unity, free speech and Christian values.”
Drones will fly overhead, scanning for suspects from above.
More: “Nothing to Fear” Is Back: The UK High Court Clears Way for Police Facial Recognition
Deputy Assistant Commissioner James Harman said Live Facial Recognition (LFR) “will be deployed in the London borough of Camden in an area likely to be used by those attending the Unite the Kingdom event,” but a pro-Palestinian march marking Nakba Day, happening in London on the same day with an estimated 30,000 attendees, will not face the same biometric surveillance.
Biometric identification has jumped from high streets to political assembly and, once that barrier falls, the question is never whether it will be used more broadly. It’s when.
Reform UK leader Nigel Farage responded to the deployment. “The Unite the Kingdom rally on Saturday should be treated no differently to the pro-Palestinian march on the same day,” Farage said. “The fact that two-tier justice is being applied against patriotic Britons is disgraceful.”
The Met justified its decision by citing “intelligence which indicates that there is likely to be a threat to public safety from some who might be in attendance.” It turns an entire protest into a surveillance zone based on the expected behavior of an unspecified portion of attendees. Everyone walking through Camden tomorrow afternoon gets their face compared against a watchlist, whether they’re a suspected criminal or someone who just showed up with a flag.
This deployment at a protest doesn’t exist in isolation. Two days before announcing LFR at the rally, the Met published results from a six-month pilot in Croydon that signals where facial recognition in Britain is heading.
For the first time, the Met mounted live facial recognition cameras on lampposts and existing street furniture rather than using dedicated police vans.
Static cameras, monitored remotely, watched over Croydon’s high street from October 2025 to March 2026.
The move from van-based deployments to cameras bolted onto public infrastructure is a big deal. Vans are visible, temporary, and require a physical police presence. Lamppost cameras blend into the built environment and can be activated whenever officers decide they’re needed.
The Met’s numbers tell one story. The privacy cost tells another.
Over six months, the system scanned more than 470,000 faces. It produced 173 arrests across 24 separate operations. The Met presented this as one arrest every 35 minutes and claimed a 10.5% drop in local crime, including a 21% reduction in violence against women and girls.
Lindsey Chiswick, the national and Met lead for live facial recognition, said, “These results show why live facial recognition is such a powerful tool when it’s used carefully, openly and in the right places.”
She added, “We will continue using static cameras in Croydon as part of our regular live facial recognition deployments which play a vital part in keeping London safe.”
Run those numbers differently and they look less triumphant. Of the 470,000 people whose biometric data was captured and processed, 99.96% had nothing to do with any crime.
Approximately 2,717 people had to have their faces scanned and compared against police watchlists for every single arrest. The Met subjected an entire community to rolling biometric surveillance to catch people it could not find through real policing and it now plans to make that arrangement permanent.
Parliament has never voted on live facial recognition. No legislation explicitly regulates its use. Police forces write their own policies governing when and how they deploy it and the Met is now expanding from mobile vans to permanent cameras on public infrastructure with no democratic mandate for the change. The technology was introduced, tested, and normalized entirely outside parliamentary oversight.
Tomorrow’s deployment in Camden crosses another line. Facial recognition at a protest creates a biometric record of political participation, even if the data is supposedly deleted moments later.
People who might attend a lawful demonstration now know their faces will be captured and compared against police databases. Some will stay home. That is surveillance shaping who shows up to exercise democratic rights and the Met has decided it gets to choose which demonstrations trigger that effect.
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