Police intimidation continues
Democracy my arse | 10.09.2001 12:52
A meeting was being held over the Disarm DSEI protests the other day and a police van pulled up as people, (yes we are citizens) were having a cup of tea. They stayed there for most of the duration and were joined by a super-intendant. They then continously circled the block and made sure we knew they were there. A right to freedom of peaqcful assembly(article 11), the right to receive and impart information and ideas WITHOUT INTERFERENCE BY PUBLIC AUTHORITY (Police) Article 10. This is in the European Convention of Human Rights and it is continously broken by the upholders of the law. Please be aware that it goes on and the action in itself is intimidating and non-democratic.
Democracy my arse
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A tale of an African refugee in the UK
10.09.2001 20:43
She fled to the UK with her boy and sought refuge. I met her on the train from London with her son and she said how lonely and afraid she felt. But things got worse. She faced racist taunts in the pub social services had put her in - the pub supplied B&B accommodation, but was frequented by soldiers of the Royal Engineers regiment from the local barracks who are, to say the least, a bunch of fascist thugs.
However, she still felt grateful for the material support she gained and, as a committed Christian, joined the local Methodist Church to get friends and worship. But after going through two of Africa's most violent and obscene wars, she was mentally disturbed and needed care which people like me or church-goers couldn't give her.
The British 'aid worker' started a custody battle for her son, the only thing that sustained her through all the crap she went through. Social services declared that she was unfit to care for the child and she lost her case.
She then fell apart completely and I lost touch with her. I talked to a policeman a few months ago and he said they were trying to get her help (the police actually took her side), because she had become a prostitute and had gone berserk on several occasions in the super-market. By that time, the court imposed an injunction on her that barred her from seeing her son because she was simply too unstable.
I bumped into her last week and was really shocked. She hadn't been eating and looked very ill. She wasn't making much sense and I could tell by her eyes that all hope had left her. I've seen desperate people living on the streets of London, but I have never seen someone in this state and it shocked me.
Her country endured war fuelled by the trade in diamonds and arms, helped by the UK. She tried to find sanctuary in the UK and all she got was pain, grief and torment.
For the sake of refugees like her, the arms trade bazaar should be stopped by any means necessary. For her sake, we've got to close down the factories that make these arms and put money into helping the victims of war.
Daniel Brett
e-mail: dan@danielbrett.co.uk
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10.09.2001 21:54
AnOk
Indeed
10.09.2001 23:33
Andy M
Terrible
11.09.2001 00:15
Democracy my arse
Culpability
11.09.2001 09:36
M.O.D.
RE: Stop whingeing about how the police are..
11.09.2001 11:10
The very fact that the police are pre-emptively intimidating those very people of conscience who would try and close down an arms fair strikes me as the ultimate in oxymorons. They really are acting illegally here, in direct contravention to the ECHR.
You might find it instructive to study the court case against the Philadelphia police for what they did to puppet makers before the Republican National Convention last year - it seems their pre-emptive arrests have been declared totally illegal and they're now being effectively squeezed by Civil Rights lawyers for million$$.
Whatever the whinge, ~politically motivated~ action on the part of our police probably contravenes their own regulations. Brit civil rights lawyers will no doubt have a field day with this, IF they can get past the CPS!
mango
Homepage: http://www.environment.org.uk/activist/