
Seven men arrested after two people injured at protest outside Iranian Embassy
Metropolitan Police officers responded to reports of an altercation in Princes Gate in Knightsbridge, west London, shortly after 9.50am on Friday, a force spokesperson said.
Two men were treated for injuries at the scene by the London Ambulance Service (LAS) before one was taken to a major trauma centre and the other to hospital.
The incident is thought to have involved protesters from 'the pro and anti-Iranian regime', the Met said.
Their injuries are not thought to be life-threatening.
The seven arrested men, whose ages have not yet been given, currently remain in police custody.
Officers remain at the scene and the area has been cordoned off while initial investigations take place.
Police have imposed conditions to stop protestors from gathering in the area until 1pm on Sunday.
One man was arrested and taken into custody on suspicion of breaching the conditions.
An LAS spokesperson said: 'We were called at 9.56am today (June 20) to reports of an assault in Princes Gate, SW7.
'We sent a number of resources to the scene including ambulance crews, paramedics in fast response cars and our Tactical Response Unit.
'We treated two patients at the scene and took one to hospital and one to a major trauma centre.'
Footage shared on social media appeared to show two men lying on the ground in a fenced-off section of the road.
One man, who was shirtless, had blood covering his nose and mouth, while the other man lay motionless clutching his left leg and ankle, with police officers attending both individuals.
A number of national embassies are located on or near Prince's Gate, including the Embassy of The Islamic Republic of Iran.

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I've since learned that the CCTV outside Waterstones hasn't been operating for a year because of works on the building, so there will be no record of my assault. Did the gang know that? Thinking back, I wonder if I was targeted after one of the gang watched me pay for the books I'd bought in Waterstones. When I returned to Yorkshire on Friday morning, I passed through King's Cross station and there were big notices and announcements on a regular basis saying, 'Please take care, thieves are operating', and assuring travellers they were working closely with the police. What police? Where? It was galling. The truth is that London is not the city I used to know. Crimes like mine have rocketed more than 23 per cent in a year. It reminds me of lawless New York in the 1990s when I worked for CBS television. Times Square was so crime-ridden it was a no-go area. Yet the first priority of the Mayor of London should be to protect the public from lawlessness and keep police stations open in crime hotspots. Sir Sadiq Khan has instead overseen their wholesale closure. He would do well to learn from Michael Bloomberg who, when he became New York's mayor in 2002, said there would be zero tolerance of violence and robberies on the street. He launched a public safety initiative and dramatically increased 'stop and frisk' searches. The city became a place where you felt safe once more. Thankfully, although I'm licking my wounds from the attack, I am strong and fit from working every day on the fields and woodlands at my home. What chance do the frail and the weak have in London when confronted by the same thing? Certainly I'd advise anyone not to carry anything that might make them a target; be it a bag, a watch or jewellery. I will have, for some time, a visible reminder of the day I was mugged in London. What weapon my attackers had used to cause the bruise behind my knee, I don't know but at least it wasn't a knife. My bruise will pass but the mental scar will linger. Unless crimes like these are tackled, however, others may not be so fortunate.