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Journalist at centre of media and police row over ‘racist’ tweet

Police were sent to Telegraph columnist Allison Pearson’s home on Remembrance Sunday over a “non-crime hate incident”. Officers said it involved a social media post written a year ago.

They told Ms Pearson a complaint had been made to police in relation to a post on X, formerly Twitter, and she was invited to a voluntary interview.

Writing in the Telegraph on Wednesday, Ms Pearson said officers were unable to explain the nature of the allegedly offending post or provide the identity of the complainant.

She claims to have told them, “How am I supposed to defend myself, then?

“The two policemen exchanged glances. Clearly, the Kafkaesque situation made no sense to them, either. This is supposed to be 2024, not 1984, yet the police officers seemed to be operating according to the George Orwell operational manual.”

Today, the Guardian published a piece claiming to have found the original post.

It is supposedly a retweet by Pearson of a photograph posted several months ago amid heightened tensions over the policing of Gaza protests. It shows a group of people of colour posing with a flag on a British street in Manchester, surrounded by three police officers.

Pearson condemned the Met police, writing, “How dare they. Invited to pose for a photo with lovely peaceful British Friends of Israel on Saturday police refused. Look at this lot smiling with the Jew haters.”

However, the officers pictured are from Greater Manchester police and not the London Met.

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