Yes it god damned right well is. He was told by a cop that his demonstration was illegal. He was not being 'asked' to leave; he was told he was in defiance of law.
You're proving my point for me. Even if you were right about his belligerence
after the fact (which relies on a rather absurd definition of "belligerence"), you have conceded that the mere act of silent prayer itself, absent any belligerence, was still illegal. He was acting illegally
before the cop told him to leave.
No it isn't. That's entirely imaginary. There is no UK law against silent prayer in public.
You just conceded that there was. You make it illegal by labelling it a "demonstration", but all the demonstration consisted of was silent prayer. Silent prayer in certain places is illegal in the UK. And you
just said that it is.
No, it would not. The law is very clear that there's no difference between 10 meters and 149 meters. Anything within 150 meters counts, and counts the same. And there is no difference between public property and private property either. You seem to be unaware of your own laws. Residents living near abortion clinics have been specifically informed that being on private property doesn't make them immune from prosecution for violating the law.
It was not. He was free to pray anywhere that didn't constitute a demonstration against women, as he declared his demonstration to be.
A demonstration
against women? He made no such declaration.
And what exactly did that "demonstration" consist of? Nothing but silent prayer, or in other words, thoughts.
You can call it a demonstration if you want, but the UK still outlawed silent prayer in certain locations. That's still what happened. The "demonstration" in question consisted of nothing but thoughts. He was charged and convicted for
thoughts. Not even speech, just thoughts. That's what happened.