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Some critics have pointed out the injunction application is coinciding with the World Cup, when more people want to put up England flags. Photograph: Christopher Thomond/The Guardian View image in fullscreen Some critics have pointed out the injunction application is coinciding with the World Cup, when more people want to put up England flags. Photograph: Christopher Thomond/The Guardian Oxfordshire council seeks injunction over flags tied to lamp-posts across county Council says it has so far spent £15,000 removing flags put up under campaign linked to anti-immigration protests Oxfordshire county council is seeking an injunction against the Raise the Colours campaign group after England flags were tied to lamp-posts across the county. The campaign has been putting up flags across the country since August last year, and there is a particular proliferation of them in and around Oxford. Though the campaign has said it is motivated by pride and patriotism, the flag raising has been linked to anti-immigration protests. The county has so far spent £15,000 to remove more than 300 union and St George’s cross flags from lampposts. Cross purposes: how the England flag got caught in a tug-of-war between rightwing nationalists and football fans Read more The leader of the flag group, the Birmingham-based Ryan Bridge, was arrested in April on suspicion of causing religiously and racially aggravated harassment. This happened shortly after he and his group filmed themselves raising flags around Oxfordshire Residents have complained online about the flags, saying they look “awful”, particularly at Headington roundabout on the outskirts of Oxford. Some locals have been putting up flags of other countries, including Ireland and Jamaica, alongside the England flags, in protest. Oxfordshire county council in April issued a legal notice banning the group from putting up flags, arguing it was an “act of intimidation and division”. But the flag raising has continued, so the council is seeking an injunction at the high court, which will be heard on 23 June. The council says the flag incidents have included “trespass, obstruction of the highway, and incidents where council teams, contractors and residents have faced confrontation or harassment”. It added that council teams had also been subject to abuse and harassment when removing flags. If the council is granted the injunction, it could prohibit further flag raising on or near the highway and allow the authority to take enforcement action if the order is breached. There are named individuals in the court filing who are associated with Raise the Colours. The unauthorised placement of flags on highway infrastructure is already a criminal offence. The council said flag raising “has created clear road safety and public safety risks and caused distress in local communities”. The council leader, Tim Bearder, said: “This application is about protecting our residents, our workforce and the values we stand for as a county.” He
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