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a bystander's view

peejo | 03.05.2001 22:17

a few views/feelings from an uninvolved bystander

right. i don't pretend to really hold any serious political views, i'm sorry if that appears....well, lazy apart from anything else, but i do happen to live on tottenham court road and so i was in a pretty interesting position come may 1st at about 9pm.

we didn't become too aware of any noise or commotion, we being my parents, both in their 60s, my brother 21 and me 17, until we heard breezeblocks and cobblestones, that camden council had left lying around on the pavement while they're building a bicycle lane partition, flying through the window of the Abbey National on the corner of the street. After that i spent the following hour or so hanging out of the window watching what was going on.

after the initial brick-throwing fellas ran off, a group of people who seemed to be my age or younger ran over and decided to finish off what the others had started. now....call this a bit stereotypical, but i'm certain that this group of people weren't demonstrating against anything, purely from the way they were dressed. i'd have called them 'rudeboys', but that might not mean anything to the rest of the world....adidas tracksuit bottoms, nike hoodies and caps, that about sums 'em up. this lot half heartedly threw some of the bricks through the window, and then ran off laughing down our street (away from tottenham court road). about twenty seconds or less later, like a scene from star wars the police stormtroopers...sorry, riot police, turned up and started smacking a few people, who had been standing around watching events, with their truncheons. to say the least, this seemed a bit unfair. then the horses arrived, and the mounted police were even more vicious than the ones on foot - at one point it looked like they were trying to start a game of polo with one of the poor fella's heads.

now.....i don't really agree with the whole brick-through-a-window thing. it doesn't really seem to prove or solve much, except the presence of a window, and was almost 'asking for it' when y'consider that there was half the country's police force running up the road behind them. i also don't agree with one thing i saw, when the original throwers were running off - a photographer, one of the thirty or so who turned up to take pictures of the abbey national, grabbed one of them and got them to, i shit you not, throw ANOTHER brick through the window. however, i agree even less with the use of a person's head as a target for batting practice with a big fuck-off truncheon, especially if you didn't do anything.

oh, and smashing the windows of that camera shop was out of order as well, because we know them quite well and they've never done anything to hurt anybody. one shop and about six employees, hardly a huge multinational corporation.

peejo
- e-mail: pkellyuk@yahoo.com

Comments

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Damn Straight!

03.05.2001 22:44

I just hope the police ARE reading this.

I turned up for Mayday, for two reasons only. One, because I felt that the right to demonstrate (which I've never exercised before) was being eroded, and two, because the level of contempt shown by the press for its readers intelligence was insulting (samurai swords, Puh-leeeze!)

And, yeah, I saw some something. I saw a group of 15/16 year kids in tracksuits and trainers - and if they were protestors, then I'm a fish - shouting 'kill the police'. They then proceeded to pick up anything that was lying on the ground and lob it in the general area of the police and protestors, following which they legged it.

Did anyone else see the same thing? Well then, tell us!

Another bystander.


Smash the State

03.05.2001 23:33

Well big deal, just about every youth in the World wears trainers and track suits...it's the only clothing left that the multinationals will permit. And how do you know these youngsters weren't aware of the cause, they can see Africa being loaded with land-mines instead of food or development.
You don't need to be an adult to see Globalisation stinks...and they are the one's who will inherit a New World Order with all their human rights eroded. Protest while you still can, whatever your generation. Christ, kids are on the frontline in Palestine!

peasant


peasant

04.05.2001 08:52

Take off your rose tinted specs. It's clear that whenever you organise these 'protests' every thug, scally or nut job turns up for the aggro. Well done on promoting peace and love across the world hippies. Plus why would your protesters be wearing Nike and Addidas. Bit hypocritical. ps do you have a bank acct? Or a mortgage? pandering to the capitalists a bit isn't it??

all for earning dosh