Skip to content or view screen version

Free party clampdown?

steve | 19.06.2003 20:30 | Free Spaces | Sheffield

A free outdoor party, featuring sound systems from Manchester and Sheffield was stopped before it started by the, a few miles north of Glossop, early on with an order forbidding the party to take place. Were they tipped off?

free party
free party


A free outdoor party, featuring sound systems from Manchester and Sheffield was stopped before it started by the police a couple of weeks ago. The police arrived at the site of the party, a few miles north of Glossop, early on with an order forbidding the party to take place. The police claimed that this order had been written that afternoon.

Since the location was named on the order it appears that police may have somehow got inside information about the site of the party. The directions to the site were not made public until around 10pm in the evening when information was put on answerphones.

Many free outdoor parties have taken place over the past few years with the police showing very little interest. Sites are usually carefully picked so they won't disturb anyone and people and organisers are generally pretty good at getting sites cleared up in the morning. Many of those attending have a higher level of environmental awareness than more mainstream society. There is almost never any violence at such events.

So its unusual for the police to take this step where not only police vehicles but a police helicopter was used. Allocating these kinds of resources to stop a few people dancing in the woods may seem completely bonkers compared to any sane perspective of reality, especially when one considers all the other kinds of real crime taking place in the cities of Manchester and Sheffield on a booze fueled Saturday night.

But this is an increasingly repressive society. It's a society that is making singing in public a criminal act and where you can be branded a terrorist and arrested for simply wearing the wrong T-shirt.

But despite Plod's best efforts and very expensive flying machine the party did finally get going at around 4am in a squatted building. Police still attempted to turn the music off and it was only after they were barricaded out of the building that the heinous crime of dancing with other people could take place.

It remains to be seen if this was part of a wider clampdown on free parties or perhaps, more likely, it was just the police responding to some overzealous party advertising around Manchester. With more free parties planned in the summer only time will tell.


steve

Comments

Hide the following 2 comments

Its a fact of life

22.06.2003 17:37

Every now and again the state needs to prove it's the boss. As long as no kit was confiscated and there we no busts its not a problem. Find a new site and carry on as usual .. next weekend

boneidol


Agreement

11.08.2004 23:09

I understand that free parties are illegal but surely the police must have better things to worry about at 3 in the morning?....(like people glassing their best mates on West st. after 10 pints of stella). My boyfriend and i have been attending free parties for about 6 months now and we are constantly amazed by how smoothly they are run and then taken away. There is an atmosphere unlike anywhere else I've been before-everyone is friendly, the parties are always away from residential areas and the location is always spotless when we leave.

Let us have our free parties in peace!

Clare
mail e-mail: ega02cw@shef.ac.uk