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Joy & sorrow: Brexit celebrations take over London as pro-EU crowd grieves in Scotland (VIDEOS)

31-1-2020 < RT 9 423 words
 

With the UK finalizing its divorce with the EU on Friday night, thousands have taken to the streets across the UK and elsewhere to either rejoice at Brexit or mourn the departure. The mood was poles apart in London and Edinburgh.


Thousands of avid Brexiteers flocked to London’s Parliament Square hours before the clock struck 11 pm, the moment when Britain formally withdrew from the EU following over three years of intense legal and political wrangling.



The jubilant crowd rang bells, banged on drums and waved Union Jacks, while a cart featuring a cardboard cutout of a ‘Little Ben’ clock – along with such slogans as “Brexited,”“Democracy & Liberty” and “Save Our Sovereignty” scrawled across – led the procession.



The gathering cheered as one of Brexit’s long-time champions, former UKIP head and Brexit Party leader Nigel Farage, turned out at the bash, speaking to thunderous applause as he congratulated the supporters of the Brexit cause.



The huge crowd also assembled outside UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s residence at 10 Downing Street, temporarily embellished with a giant countdown clock that was projected onto its facade as one hour was left to go ‘till Brexit became a reality.



Johnson himself called Brexit an “astonishing moment of hope” for the UK, while vowing to “bring this country together.”


Sentiments were much more somber in Scotland, however, where scores of people swarmed the square in front of the Scottish Parliament in Edinburgh to hold a vigil.




With many waving Scottish as well as EU flags and holding candles to set the mood, the crowd then broke into a rendition of a traditional Scottish song – Auld Lang Syne, typically used to mark sad farewells – accompanied by bagpipes.



At one point a symbolic ‘funeral’ wreath with a candle in the center was placed in a pond outside the parliament building, overlooked by a blue EU flag that continued to fly at its entrance.



Scotland’s First Minister Nicola Sturgeon shared in the mood of many of her compatriots, who overwhelmingly rejected Brexit, voting to stay in the EU in the 2016 referendum. Sturgeon, who called Brexit “an affront to democracy,” thanked the EU for its support, posting a photo of the EU Commission building sporting an X-shaped message: “Europe loves Scotland.”



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