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The city where St George’s flags ‘are everywhere’ | UK | News

A city England St George saw that the flags of “everywhere” flew, some challenges said they could not prevent them from raising the British flag. People in villages, towns and cities continue to fly flags from the lamps despite some authorities and continue to paint red lines in white road signs, but local claims Derby “One of the best” in the country.

62 -year -old Alan Southall said that it is great to see the city embrace the culture of the city, and that those involved were a loan to Derby. He said: “It was increasingly cropped during last week. Now we must be one of the best areas in the country.”

Flags flying from street poles and the cross furniture, Bolavs and the crosses on the garbage boxes. divided view Between the British. Some greet them as a demonstration of patriotism, while others say it is a front for extreme right activists to spread racism and anti -immigrant emotions.

Mr. Southall defended the campaign known as the operation. He said Derby Telegraph: “Embraces our country – the current thousand years and our way of life.

“People say that the flag is racist or aggressive, which shows that there is a problem in itself. They cannot prevent us from flying our flag. I have already seen a few of them, but they miraculously appear overnight.”

Derby businessman, 38 -year -old Hassan Ali, came to work to find a flying Union Jack on his facilities.

He said to the same broadcast: “You probably expect me to be uncomfortable, but far from him. I’m a Muslim, but I am British. I love this country and it is nice to see people representing our flag.

“I don’t care if the flags fly to stop migration. If that’s what people want, that’s what people want.

“But the problem is a few distinguished people who take him too far. England is a multicultural country for decades, so there is nothing new there, and if you think that Britain should be a completely white place where everyone is Christian, it will not be just.

“These are the people we need to worry about, Supremacists – not the people who are against mass migration, this is normal.”

Another local Victoria Matthews said he didn’t take the campaign very seriously. He said: “People are worried about this and this migration, but I think it’s all just a great excitement. People wrap each other online and some people have been uncomfortable and tried to move out.

“Everything is quite funny for me, they’re all a little laugh. [when] In fact, we are faced with serious problems. Then who knows what to do? “

Charlotte Hill, a member of the Council of Transport, the Council of Transportation of Derbyshire, said that the flags connected to lampposts will only be removed when they create danger.

He said: “The Council’s policy of highways reveals a risk -based approach to manage such problems, including flags connected to street lights, so that we can be sure that our roads and sidewalks are safe for everyone to use it.

He said: “If we are aware that the flags are connected to the lamp poles, we will see if they create a danger for the public and we will remove only if they create a danger. It is unlikely that most of the flags are possible. If the flags are painted on intersections, we will take the same approach.”

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