This is the jaw-dropping moment two women brawl on the street in front of horrified onlookers at Notting Hill Carnival’s family and children’s day.
In a clip uploaded to TikTok, two young revellers trade furious blows in the middle of the packed street.
The brawling pair can be seen grappling, pulling each other by the hair and throwing punches as onlookers shout, ‘Where is security?’
Friends can be seen trying to break up the fight as carnival music blares in the background.
The shocking brawl comes as a total of 140 people were arrested on the first day of the west London festival as of 8pm yesterday by Met Police officers.
Yesterday was the children’s day parade, where family friendly activities and events are accompanied by street dancing.
Arrest figures were 40 percent higher than the number of arrests on the opening day of the world-famous street party last year, when 104 were detained.

The brawling pair can be seen grappling one another, throwing punch after punch, quickly trying to dodge each others hits as onlookers are left aghast

The carnival attendee in green then pulls at her rivals hair dragging her further down the Chepstow Road, in west London
Some 105 arrests took place at the carnival itself, while 35 were made on the approach to the event.
Of the 35 arrests outside the carnival, 13 were the result of live facial recognition – a new technology being deployed by the force which captures people’s faces in real-time CCTV cameras.
Meanwhile, more than half a dozen police officers were seen carrying one man who was seemingly resisting arrest near Portobello Road yesterday afternoon.
Shortly beforehand, police appeared to be carrying out a stop and search on a young man who had been placed in handcuffs nearby.
On Sunday, a Met Police spokesperson said: ‘The policing operation for the first full day of Notting Hill Carnival has moved into the dispersal phase as crowds head home from the event.
‘A significant number of officers remain in the area to deal with any incidents.’
The Daily Mail has approached the Metropolitan Police for comment, regarding the video of the two women.
Dating back to 1966, Notting Hill carnival takes over the west London district for one weekend a year, transforming it into a colourful celebration of Caribbean culture.
The festival began at 6am, with festival-goers gathering for J’Ouvert celebrations, which means ‘daybreak’ in French Creole, as they paraded through the streets and sprayed brightly coloured paints and powders to get into the carnival spirit.
Three men splattered in paint were even spotted dancing on top of a bus stop outside Ladbroke Grove station, near Portobello Road market, as celebrations got off to a very early start.

Notting Hill Carnival, the largest street party in Europe, officially begun on Sunday morning with dancers in bright costumes parading along the streets

Dating back to 1966, Notting Hill carnival takes over the west London district for one weekend a year, transforming it into a colourful celebration of Caribbean culture

Hundreds gathered under a bridge where they danced and launched paint into the air as Europe’s biggest street party, yesterday
Hundreds gathered under a bridge where they danced and launched paint into the air as Europe’s biggest street party got underway in flamboyant style yesterday.
Some were dressed in blue overalls to protect their clothes from the paint, while others wore their most colourful outfits or took part in a tradition from Grenada in the West Indies called Jab-Jab.
This is where they cover their bodies in black oil, tar, mud or paint, wear horns and drag chains in a satirical celebration to recognise the detrimental impact of UK colonialism and the slave trade upon Caribbean nations.
Police have said they anticipate over a million people will descend on the plush London area ‘for what is one of the most significant weekends in the capital’s cultural calendar’.
The main carnival parade route stretches across three miles of west London streets, passing by Ladbroke Grove, Great Western Road, and Westbourne Park, with party-goers enjoying dazzling parades boasting flags from across the Caribbean.
Yesterday a 72-second silence was held in remembrance of the Grenfell Tower fire victims, which will be repeated again at 3pm in their honour.