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Rage against anti-motorist schemes spreads across UK as ULEZ camera cables snipped by ‘Blade Runners’

RAGE at anti-motorist schemes is spreading, with London’s Ulez cameras vandalised and removed, and other cities’ low-traffic neighbourhoods sabotaged.

A group dubbed the Blade Runners claims to have snipped cables to Ulez “spies” in the capital and taken them as trophies.

Anti-ULEZ campaigners have been branded 'heroes' by critics of the emission zone after images appearing to show them posing with dismantled cameras surfaced on social media., , Uploaded to the Facebook group 'Action Against Unfair ULEZ CAZ & LTN', images show two balaclava clad vigilantes grasping four dismantled cameras - one held aloft in each hand., , The first in the series of images shows the two figures standing in the rain
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A group dubbed the Blade Runners claims to have snip cables to Ulez 'spies' in the capital and taken them as trophiesCredit: Supplied
Hyde News & Pictures Ltd. 26/11/2022 ***Video sent to video desks**** Vandals in Oxford have been caught on camera setting fire to a bollard in a low traffic neighbourhood which restricts traffic to motorists. 20 of the hated bollards have been destroyed by drivers over less than three weeks, with vans and cars driving over the barriers, one vandal ripping a bollard out of the ground and walking it off with it. See copy HNPboll
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New cameras, bollards, and planters, aimed at spying on traffic and redirecting it, have been destroyed and vandalisedCredit: Hyde News & Pictures

One vandal boasted of removing 34 and said of Mayor Sadiq Khan’s scheme: “We don’t want this. It restricts our movements.”

Two men have been charged with smashing cameras but the Blade Runners have vowed to ­continue their campaign.

Elsewhere, the introduction of LTNs has caused upset and been met with protests and damage.

New cameras, bollards and planters, aimed at spying on traffic and redirecting it, have been destroyed and vandalised.

READ MORE ON ULEZ

A camera post was sliced in two with the message “No LTN” daubed on a wall in Edinburgh.

Thousands of people protested in Oxford over LTNs in the city and barriers were torched.

The local authority is one of several — mostly Labour — supporting the so-called 15-minute city plan, including Bristol, Birmingham, Canterbury, Ipswich and Sheffield.

More than 40 business owners in Hammersmith and Fulham in West London opposed plans to introduce LTN controls.

The council relented and axed the scheme. Thousands of people marched in protest at a similar scheme in Ealing, West London.

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