Eleven people have been arrested after a day of protest in London saw anti-capitalists from the Occupy movement pitch tents outside the Bank of England. Anti-capitalism protesters from the Occupy movement began a new protest in the City of London on Saturday. The new protest move comes more than six months after members of campaign group Occupy London were prevented from occupying the square in heart of the City of London. Instead, activists set up camp outside St Paul's Cathedral just yards away from the Stock Exchange and remained there for four and a half months. A spokesman for the movement said they had set up around 10 tents outside the Bank of England and were deciding whether to defy police orders to leave the site. Several hundred people gathered outside St Paul's Cathedral for a rally before "visiting the 1%", in an attempt to walk to the offices of some of the largest banking institutions. These included the offices of some of the largest firms in the financial heart of the capital, such as Goldman Sachs, Merrill Lynch, RBS and Santander. Occupy London supporter David Lincoln said: "The Bank of England stands right at the intersection of finance and government. "In the light of Bank governor Mervyn King's recent comments about 'vested interests' standing in the way of reform of the financial sector, it is clear that that balance in the UK is fundamentally skewed. "Hundreds of people gathering by the Bank of England is a powerful symbol of how things have to change." A police spokesman said the protesters had been given a deadline by which they had to leave the area outside the Bank of England. Occupy said they have planned another protest for this Tuesday, which will target the British Bankers' Association.