A British court postponed a decision on the eviction.
The government of the City says that the protest causes problems.
The outraged argue however, that his camp does not prevent the continuation of religious activity in the Cathedral of St. Paul.
The ‘angry’ London still encamped at the foot of St. Paul’s Cathedral until at least January 2012, after a British court reserved its decision on the petition to vacate. More than a hundred tents are installed in the financial center of London from the 15th of October, and the authorities of the City have filed to try to evict them, while the judicial process is long adventure. At the end of a trial since last Monday, Judge Keith Lindblom, the High Court of London, said it will not take a decision on the request for eviction until January 11 next, according to public broadcaster BBC. The authority of the municipal business district of London, the City of London Corporation, accusing the protesters of London Occupy group having ignored an order to withdraw from their tents street and to be causing problems in a tourist area. The government of The City argues that the anti-capitalist protest blocking the passage to pedestrians and difficult for tourists to take pictures of the cathedral, built in the seventeenth century and located near the London Stock Exchange. According to the corporation, the college scheduled visits to the monument have been halved since the start of the protest to and local businesses have seen their activity up to 35%. The angry argue however, that his camp does not preclude continued religious activity in the Cathedral of St. Paul and that courts must safeguard freedom of expression. City officials went to court after negotiations failed to Occupy London members abandon their protest after the New Year. In addition to the camp before the temple, the movement also occupied the central square of Finsbury Square, a building empty office owned Swiss financial institution UBS and a court disused east London.