A Pride group in Forest Gate has reacted after murals were vandalised in a spate of homophobic hate crimes.
The Metropolitan Police are investigating the incidents after three pride and progress flags were painted and graffitied over outside Forest Gate Station.
The first mural vandalised was reported on the morning of June 23, when a member of public noticed the pride flag was completely covered in red paint.
Just a few days later on June 26, a second report was filed alerting the police to two other vandal attacks.
This is not the first occasion that the permanent flags, installed by Forest Gayte Pride, have been defaced.
Over the past two years, all three flags outside the station have been defaced.
In March this year, one flag was vandalised, appearing to suggest that people who identify as part of the LGBTQI community should drink toilet water.
Caron Harrison, co-founder of Forest Gayte Pride, said: "Sadly, it is not the first incident.
"The progress flag was completely painted out in red paint. It was very neat work, wasn't splashes anywhere and it just obliterated the whole flag.
"By Tuesday morning, the other two flags had got red paint all over them as well."
The community is said to be feeling a mixture of emotions in the wake of the incidents that the Met are treating as homophobically motivated.
Caron added: "Some people are feeling intimidated, and some people are appalled and really angry. People come to our pride knowing it's a safe place.
"You can paint out our flags but you can't paint out our pride. We're really fighting against it."
The shocking vandalisms have sparked response from Newham Mayor Rokhsana Fiaz in the days leading up to London Pride (June 29).
🧵🏳️⚧️🏳️🌈 This morning, residents alerted us to a hate crime as someone had defaced our Progress Rainbow flag outside Forest Gate Station, which is a celebration of our diversity.
— Rokhsana Fiaz OBE (@rokhsanafiaz) June 23, 2024
We are reporting it to @MPSNewham police & we’ll repaint the flag with pride and in solidarity.✊🏾 https://t.co/bzktzzrOMZ pic.twitter.com/SjKoAgPR8w
There have been no arrests made so far, but it is believed that the Met are reviewing CCTV footage from the area on the dates the flags were defaced.
RELATED: Pride flags vandalised with red paint outside train station
Andrew Driver, a resident in Forest Gate, spoke with this paper about how he believes the incidents have strengthened the community.
He said: "It has galvanised and really brought people together. It's sort of supercharged actually the Pride movement in Forest Gate.
"Although it's shocking and I'm pretty sure we will find the culprit, I think it's been bizarrely quite a positive experience."
Anyone with information can contact police by calling 101 or visiting, quoting reference 2433/23Jun.
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