Tens of thousands attend anti-austerity protest in London

Thousands demand resignation of Prime Minister David Cameron during anti-austerity protest in London

Protesters gathered in Trafalgar Square to call for David Cameron's resignation.
TRT World and Agencies

Protesters gathered in Trafalgar Square to call for David Cameron's resignation.

Tens of thousands of people marched through London on Saturday in protest against government spending cuts, with some activists demanding Prime Minister David Cameron's resignation over his family's offshore finances.

Demonstrators converged on Trafalgar Square calling for more investment in the health service, housing, education and public sector pay, while some held up banners saying "Ditch Dodgy Dave" and "Cameron Must Go -- Tories Out!"

The protest, which also included demands to protect Britain's troubled steel industry, was planned long before Cameron's admission last week that he once held shares in his late father's offshore investment fund.

But The People's Assembly, which helped organise the trade union-backed march, said the revelations sparked by the so-called Panama Papers "prove that this is a government for the privileged few."

TRT World and Agencies

A protester with writing on her face that reads "Stop Cuts" against government cuts attends a demonstration organised by the People's Assembly Against Austerity, during a march and rally in central London on April 16, 2016.

Cameron took the unprecedented step of releasing a summary of his tax returns for the past six years, but a new poll published late Saturday found 52 percent of voters believe he has not been "honest and open" about his finances.

A further 44 percent said his handling of his financial affairs was "morally repugnant," according to the ComRes survey for the Independent and the Sunday Mirror newspaper.

"For somebody in that position, you have a duty of care to the people of the country to be very open, very transparent," demonstrator Sarah Henney told AFP.

"Just because something is legal doesn't always make it right."

AFP

Protesters let off smoke outside the gates of Downing Street during a demonstration organised by the Peopl's Assembly Against Austerity in central London on April 16, 2016.[AFP]

Opposition Labour finance spokesman John McDonnell was among a number of political figures who addressed the protesters, and he called for an end to the spending cuts introduced after the global financial crisis.

He later told the Press Association news agency: "I think Cameron should go, but I think he should take his party with him.

"His government is now bankrupt in terms of political ideas, and bankrupt in terms of what they have done with the economy as well."

Cameron, who was re-elected last year with a parliamentary majority, said he sold his shares in his late father's offshore investment fund before taking office, and denied the fund had been established to avoid tax.

But the row put the premier under pressure at a difficult time, as he seeks to manage an increasingly bitter fight within his Conservative party over the upcoming referendum on EU membership.

Some 128 of the 330 Conservative lawmakers in parliament and several of Cameron's own ministers are campaigning against him in favour of leaving the European Union ahead of the June 23 vote.

Veteran Tory MP Ken Clarke warned Saturday that if Cameron loses the referendum, he will be forced out of office.

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