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Why did protesters release insects into London hamburger restaurants?

On Friday, protesters threw locusts, crickets, and cockroaches into two Byron burger restaurants in London in protest against immigration raids.

The Home Office said Wednesday that 35 people from various countries including Albania, Brazil, Nepal, and Egypt were arrested for alleged immigration offenses at a number of restaurants in the burger restaurant chain across London.

Yui Mok/PA/AP

August 1, 2016

Release hundreds, even thousands, of live insects into a restaurant, and you will close it down. That is what happened in two London branches of the Byron burger restaurant last Friday, in an act of protest against Byron鈥檚 cooperation with Britain's Home Office in an immigration raid of its workers.

Thirty-five Byron workers from Albania, Brazil, Nepal, and Egypt were arrested at a number of restaurants across London, the Home Office said, adding that the burger business conducted the proper 鈥渞ight to work鈥 checks on staff members, but had been shown counterfeit documentation.

Many are outraged by the protocol Byon followed. "Some of these people worked here for four or five years and they weren鈥檛 even given a ," a worker told The Guardian. Others, however, say Byron was justified, even respectable in turning its employees in.

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"When you buy fake papers, you know you're breaking the law. So to then somehow be held accountable to that law is ," James O鈥橞rien, a presenter on Leading Britain鈥檚 Conversation, said after Twitter users started posting #BoycottByron.

Staff members were asked to attend a health and safety meeting, but met immigration officials instead, a senior worker in one of the branches alleged. A spokesman for the Home Office, however, that an event was set up to lure workers to one place, according to The Telegraph.

An article published in the London-based, Spanish-language newspaper El Ib茅rico instigated the fury. A witness told the paper that 50 workers, most of whom are Latin American, were arrested and deported, while 150 others are hiding after evading capture.

"I think that boycotts are an important part of our democracy," Amelia Womack, deputy leader of the Green Party, told The Telegraph. "And I think the trickery involved in this case is what people are outraged at."

"Many thousands of live cockroaches, locusts and crickets [have been released] into these restaurants," a statement published by the London Black Revs and Malcolm X Movement, two social revolutionary groups, on Facebook said. "We apologise to customers and staff for any irritation, however, we had to act as forced deportations such as this and others are unacceptable, we must and their families from such dehumanised treatment."

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For many protestors, the choice to deploy cockroaches was particularly meaningful.

"People often refer to migrants in disgusting terms," . "[Tabloid columnist] Katie Hopkins in an article just a few months ago. We want to show these people what cockroaches really look like, and we鈥檒l unleash them on places like this if they don鈥檛 change their ways."

Byron confirmed that the Home Office had visited its restaurants, and management had "acted throughout the course of the investigations 鈥 and will continue to do so."

"These visits resulted in the removal of members of staff who are suspected by the Home Office of not having the right to work in the UK, and of possessing fraudulent personal and right to work documentation that is in breach of immigration and employment regulation," the restaurant wrote.