A police officer has been suspended after a video circulated online of a man being kicked and stamped on the head at Manchester Airport.
Greater Manchester Police confirmed an officer had been removed from all duties after a “thorough review of further information” of the incident, which took place on Tuesday.
The footage showed a uniformed male officer holding a Taser over the man who was lying on the ground at Terminal 2 before striking him twice.
Mayor of Greater Manchester Andy Burnham has appealed for calm after the footage sparked a protest outside Rochdale police station.
Crowds could be heard chanting “shame on you” at the demonstration where hundreds of people had gathered on Wednesday night.
Greater Manchester Police said it understood the “deep concerns” that had been “widely raised”.
In the build up to the incident shown in the clip, a police spokesman said that firearms officers had been punched to the ground after trying to make an arrest following a fight in the airport.
There was a “clear risk” their weapons could be taken from them, the police spokesman said, adding all three had been taken to hospital, one with a broken nose.
Four men were arrested on suspicion of assault and affray.
Amar Minhas from Leeds was travelling through the terminal with his family when he saw officers approach the man to arrest him.
“They pinned him up against a wall”, he told the BBC, before another man tried to intervene and a fight broke out, with the pinned man throwing punches until he was Tasered to the floor, when the officer kicked him.
Mr Burnham told BBC Radio Manchester the video was “very disturbing” and the suspension of an officer was the “right action”.
However, he said he had since seen “the full footage” that showed a “fast-moving and complicated situation in a challenging location – it’s not clear cut”.
“Time has been taken to get a clearer picture of what has happened,” he said, adding that an investigation needed to proceed now “in a thorough and measured way”.
The force said in its latest statement that it would “continue to meet” with Greater Manchester residents and elected representatives to discuss concerns raised about the footage.
It said it had referred itself to the Independent Office for Police Conduct over the incident.
Former chief superintendent of the Met Police, Dal Babu, told BBC Radio 4 the police actions were “appalling and unnecessary” and in his opinion racism played a part in the incident.
He said the men were arrested for affray and assault, not offences at the “serious end” like attempted murder, gross bodily harm, or malicious wounding.
“I think racism played a significant part in this,” he said, adding GMP had been “slow out of the block in understanding the seriousness” of the incident at a time when trust in police was “so low”.
The MP of the man who was filmed being kicked told the House of Commons the video was “truly shocking and disturbing”.
Paul Waugh, the new Labour MP for Rochdale, said he was meeting the man’s family later today.
He said police faced a difficult job but that they had to expect the highest standards of conduct in their duties.
The Leader of the House, Lucy Powell, MP for Manchester Central, also said the footage was “incredibly disturbing and there’s understandably a lot of concern”.
Youth football teams and grassroots clubs across the country have held a minute’s silence at the start of their games to commemorate a 10-year-old girl who di
10-year-old Poppy Atkinson was killed when she was struck by a car during a training session at Kendal Rugby Club in Cumbria. Clubs from Leeds to London
The high court, sitting in Liverpool, heard Uefa had relied upon the principle that English courts will not inquire into the legality of actions by foreign gove
Caption: Alan Shearer?s Premier League predictions credit: Getty / Metro After some impressive results for English sides in Europe the focus is