Tax protesters close main Topshop

Demonstration in central London

Topshop’s flagship Oxford Street store was targeted by the protesters

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Campaigners protesting against tax avoidance by big business have taken over Topshop’s flagship branch and forced it to close temporarily.

Activists targeted the Oxford Street store in London and other UK branches, including Glasgow and Birmingham.

The London protest started at 1100 GMT when protesters started blowing whistles and chanting.

Topshop boss Sir Philip Green has been criticised because his wife, the firm’s direct owner, lives in a tax haven.

No-one from Topshop’s parent company Arcadia was available for comment.

Protest organisers UK Uncut have been providing updates on Twitter and they claim more stores have been forced to shut.

Many campaigners were forcibly removed from the Oxford Street branch by private security guards and police.

Topshop owner Sir Philip is one of the UK’s most successful retailers.

With a personal fortune of more than £4bn, he owns the Arcadia Group, whose fashion chains include Topshop, Burton, Dorothy Perkins, Evans and Miss Selfridge.

His wife Tina is the direct owner of Arcadia, and she is officially a resident of Monaco. This enabled her to gain a tax-free £1.2bn dividend in 2005.

This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

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