Around 300 people have taken to the streets in south London as a mark of solidarity with the Black Lives Matter movement.
Some roads in Brixton were brought to a standstill for over six hours as a crowd staged a sit-down protest and chanted "black lives matter" and "hands up, don't shoot" on Saturday.
It followed a protest in central London on Friday, after US police officers killed Alton Sterling, 37, in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, and Philando Castile, 32, in St Paul, Minnesota.
Those deaths were followed by the reprisal shooting of five officers in Dallas, Texas, on Friday.
On several occasions cars attempted to squeeze through the throng of demonstrators but quickly became surrounded by the crowds who demanded they stop.
Police attempted to separate the vehicles and the crowd, causing some confrontations but the protest remained largely peaceful.
One man, Vincent Lee, 37, and his partner Jessica Osibona came to the march as a mark of solidarity of the events in the US over the past week.
Mr Lee said: "It is a mess. Predominantly it is happening in America with their gun laws but we came down to show we are united with them."
Ms Osibona said she felt "compelled" to join the protest having followed the Black Lives Matter movement over the past year.
She said: "I was looking for some kind of inspiration as to what we can do collectively."
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