Campaigners have urged the government to step in to protect the future of Notting Hill Carnival as they mark Windrush Day.
The west London carnival is in jeopardy, its chairman Ian Comfort said in a letter leaked to the BBC on Wednesday, in which he asked Culture Secretary Lisa Nandy to provide “urgent funding” for public safety measures.
While the government acknowledged the significance of the event, it stopped short of offering financial backing and urged organisers to work with local authorities and the police.
Jacqueline McKenzie, a campaigner and human rights lawyer who helped victims of the Windrush scandal, said the carnival held “huge national and international significance”.