THIS is the moment Donald Trump claimed London is now a city where “people are being stabbed in the ass or worse”, as he tore into Sadiq Khan and Britain’s capital.
The US President said Europe is “not the same place” as mass migration continues to “sweep the continent”.
In an interview with GB news, he added: “I’m saddened to see what happened in Europe with the immigration.
“I think above all else, the immigration, but the bad taxing policies.
“When you look at, you know, Europe is not the same place.
“I can’t say every place, but pretty much almost every place. There are a couple of places.”
Speaking about London, Trump tore into Sadiq Khan, telling presenter Bev Turner: “Sadiq Khan is a terrible mayor. He’s a disaster.
“Look at the crime you have in London. My mother loved London, she loved that city.
“She’d always talk about how that was a different London than what you have today.
“Today you have people being stabbed in the ass or worse.”
It comes as Trump confirmed he WILL sue the BBC after the broadcaster doctored a speech he delivered for an episode of Panorama.
Don said he plans to sue the corporation for a sum between $1 billion and $5billion in damages.
The BBC has been facing mounting pressure following its formal apology to President Trump for a misleading edit of his 6 January speech.
The row has intensified questions around the broadcaster’s editorial controls and has triggered a deeper examination of how political footage is handled during high-stakes coverage.
Meanwhile, Trump’s tariff reversal continues to ripple through Washington, after he scrapped duties on a wide swath of agricultural imports — from beef and coffee to tropical fruits — in a bid to blunt fast-rising consumer prices.
The move marks one of his most significant economic pivots since returning to office and has prompted fresh scrutiny over how the administration plans to tackle inflation heading into winter.
The interview also comes amid renewed attention on Jeffrey Epstein’s network of contacts, after newly surfaced communications from his estate prompted political blowback in Washington.
The White House has dismissed the material outright, but its emergence adds another layer of noise around Trump’s public appearances.


