Thursday 30 April 2009

Five paid £85,000 three years after police snatched them from demonstration

The Guardian reported on 30th April:

Five protesters who were assaulted by officers and kept in police custody for two nights have been paid tens of thousands of pounds in an out-of-court settlement.
The five have received £85,000 in compensation plus costs, together totalling more than £100,000, in a settlement recorded at the high court this week. Their detention after a demonstration in London three years ago was "unlawful" and a restriction of their "democratic right to peaceful protest", the Metropolitan police accepted in a statement released this week.
The admission follows criticism of police behaviour at the G20 summit this month and campaigners say the payout will reinforce concerns about the Met's handling of public order events and may encourage others to seek compensation.
The peaceful rally outside the Mexican embassy in October 2006 was attended by about 20 activists calling for action over the murder of an American filmmaker, Bradley Roland Will, during a teachers' strike in the city of Oaxaca. The shooting was blamed on local state officials.
The vigil was part of a worldwide day of protest outside Mexican embassies. Eight people were arrested in London. All eventually had the charges against them dropped or were found not guilty of public order offences.
Yesterday Tony Murphy, the solicitor at Bhatt Murphy who brought the claim, said: "This case shows that policing protest unlawfully carries a high cost. This includes the severe human cost to protestors, but also the cost to the public purse and more worryingly to public confidence in the police. The implications for those I am advising in relation to G20 are clear."
David Howarth, a Lib Dem MP who has been following the case, said: "Given that the Met has admitted liability, the question now is why the officers concerned are not being investigated for criminal offences. This underlines the urgent need for an independent review of the police's attitude towards peaceful protest."
The formal apology sent to the protesters by Detective Chief Inspector Alex Gibbs, of the Met's directorate of professional standards, stated: "It is accepted that your arrest was unlawful and that any force used on you during your arrest was therefore an assault and battery.
"... I am in no doubt about the significant effect that this matter has had on you and on your democratic right to peaceful protest ... I unreservedly regret the upset and distress that this must have caused.
"The policing of public order events and demonstrations ... requires a careful balance of the rights and freedoms of often conflicting interests and necessitates officers making difficult decisions under notable pressure. In this case it is clear that balance was not achieved ... Lessons have been learned."
James Welch, from the civil rights organisation Liberty, said: "It's always good to see the police recognise the right to peaceful dissent, even if it is after an embarrassment and under pain of litigation.

Thursday 12 March 2009

'Kilo Five' Gate, Climate Camp 2008: Police lashing out against peaceful protesters

At sunrise on Monday 4th August 2008 police attempted to tow away a red van from the western gate of the Climate Camp, 'Kilo Five'. They were thwarted by non-violent protesters who placed their bodies in they way. As you can see in these two videos, filmed minutes apart, they used pepper spray and club-blows in their frustration.

Video 1 shows use of pepper spray (the spray was then snatched by one of the protesters and put beyond use.)

Video 2, shot a few minutes later, shows police striking out repeatedly with clubs; at at least one point (1'03") an officer is seen to punch a young woman in the face. At 2'30" another threatens activist medics with a raised club as they try to move to assist a casualty.

Several protesters needed hospital treatment after this incident; as has been documented elsewhere, not one police officer was harmed by the protesters during the entire camp.

Monday 9 March 2009

Police blanket surveilling protesters and journalists as criminals


"The ­Metropolitan police, which has ­pioneered surveillance at demonstrations and advises other forces on the tactic, stores details of protesters on Crimint, the general database used daily by all police staff to catalogue criminal intelligence."


Guardian 6th March 2009 (includes police surveillance footage from Climate Camp 2008)

Thursday 5 March 2009

Manchester man arrested for alleged sewer-grate photography, held as a terrorist

Still think that if you're innocent, you have nothing to fear from surveillance and control laws? Have a look at this news-video about Stephen Clarke, a man who was accused to taking pictures of sewer-gratings in Manchester and arrested. Though the police couldn't find any photos of sewer-gratings on his phone (and even though "what a sewer grating looks like" isn't a piece of specialized terrorist intelligence), he was held on suspicion of planning an act of terror, imprisoned for two days while the police searched his home, his phone and his computer. When they couldn't find anything suspicious, they released him, but kept his DNA on file, as the biometric of someone who had been accused of plotting a terrorist act. Video here.

Tuesday 3 March 2009

Police perjured to wrongly convict men of sex-worker murder

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/wales/7921265.stm

More on Asad Saeed

Police played 'spot the black officer in the dark', tribunal hears (Guardian, 2 March 2009)

Belgravia officers:
  • had apartheid system of 'black' and 'white' vans
  • boasted of BNP links
  • kicked homeless people in stomach as they slept