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Freedom to Protest?

Editor 4 | 11.10.2005 13:53 | Repression | Social Struggles

Recently, on 23 September, swift thinking by Bristol’s No2ID campaign enabled them to catch-out Home Office Minister Andrew Burnham MP (see  http://bristol.indymedia.org/newswire.php?story_id=24255). Elsewhere, other campaigners against ID cards were less fortunate. In Newcastle on 8 September 6 campaigners driving to picket the EU Justice Ministers meeting were stopped by police on their way, and held for many hours in order ‘to prevent violent disorder’. One woman’s mother’s house was later searched! They were in fact going to hold a theatrical picket, dressed in orange boiler suits with barcodes painted on their foreheads, holding a 4 metre No2ID banner (see  http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/2005/09/322769.html).

Just do it!
Just do it!


Elsewhere, protests, potential protests, and even indications of dissent are being jumped on by Neo-Labour and their growing police state. Bristol’s anti-G8 protest on 6 July was robustly policed. Anti-G8 protests in Scotland, and anti-arms trade protests (against DSEi) in London, where met by thousands of uniformed, riot, and plain clothed officers. Hunting may have been banned but it is hunt sabs and animal rights protesters who find themselves arrested and subject to injunctions. Peace campaigners and solidarity campaigners find themselves similarly harassed, and of course if you are not white the situation is much worse – arrest, detention without trial, deportation, even death by armed police under a new ‘shoot to kill’ policy, may be your fate. Quite ludicrously, in London, at the end of September, the Met Police’s CO11 Public Order Branch decided to leaflet cyclists on the monthly critical mass ride. After eleven and a half years of such monthly rides, suddenly the police had decided that future ride details had to be given to them 6 days in advance, for them to decide if the ride could go ahead. Failure to do so could result in arrest (see  http://criticalmasslondon.org.uk), even if the police seem very undecided about exactly which law is being broken – see  http://www.spy.org.uk/parliamentprotest/archives/2005/10/criical_mass_mo.html.

A feature of these and many other incidents has been the abuse by the state & police (and indeed local authorities such as Bristol) of existing legislation – such as the Public Order Act 1986, the Criminal Justice Act 1994, the Protection from Harassment Act 1997, the various Anti-Social behaviour type acts (ie 2003), the Terrorism Act 2000, the Anti-Terrorism, Crime & Security Act 2001, and the recently passed Serious Organised Crime & Police Act, with yet another anti-terror bill about to be introduced. The Geneva convention on refugees, the European Convention on Human Rights, even the EU Human Rights Act, are proving to be worthless pieces of paper, as our freedoms of speech, expression, assembly, and even thought are attacked.

History has shown us that where there are demands for greater rights, or protests against injustice and oppression, the ruling elite and the state will crack down hard, often using the pretext of unrelated issues (currently the ‘war on terror’). Issue 18 of Bristle, published last January, was titled ‘Welcome to the police state’. In issue 19 we admitted we were wrong, the new police state would be Europe-wide, not just in the UK. Since then attacks on our rights, or freedom to protest, have increased. Fortunately history also shows us that when the ruling elite and the state behave in such a way, resistance has tended to increase. Bristle mag has been pleased to report and comment on such acts of resistance & defiance since 1997, and it is great to see Bristol Indymedia, and the Bristolian, doing the same in their own unique ways.

It will come as no surprise then that Bristle is supporting the Freedom To Protest Conference, in London on 23 October (same venue as the Anarchist Bookfair on 22 October – see  http://www.anarchistbookfair.org). Going under the slogan of ‘We will not be silenced’, the conference will bring together people to share experiences, promote mutual aid & co-operation, and develop effective strategies for standing up against injustice & oppression.

Any oppressive laws can be rendered unworkable through protest, non-co-operation and defiance. History has taught us that. Relying on the Tories, the Lib Dems, the peers, the legal system, the mainstream media, or celebrity spokespersons (see Monbiot below) is not going to work. The only people we can rely on are ourselves.

You can get leaflets for the event from here  http://www.freedomtoprotest.org.uk/FTPleaflet2colour.pdf
You can get links to legal resources & useful contacts here  http://www.freedomtoprotest.org.uk/links.htm
See also George Monbiot here  http://www.monbiot.com/archives/2005/10/04/protesters-are-criminals/

Supporting groups include:
Aldermaston Womens Peace camp; Birmingham Guatanamo Campaign; Brighton Peace & Environment Centre; Campaign Against Criminalising Communities; Campaign Against the Arms Trade; Campaign for the Accountability of American Bases; Campaign to Close Campsfield; Cardiff World Development Movement; Corporate Watch; Defend the M&S Picket Campaign (Manchester); FreeBeagles; Friends of Maldives; Genetic Engineering Network; George Fox 6; Haringey Against ID Cards; Haringey Solidarity Group; Haringey Trades Union Council; Legal Action for Women; Legal Defence and Monitoring Group; London Anarchist Federation; London Rising Tide; Matlock Peacerights; McLibel Support Campaign; Milton Keynes NO2ID; Muslim Parliament; Newham Monitoring Project; Oxford Action Resource Centre; Parliament Sq Peace Campaign and Brian Haw Supporters; Peace News; Penzance Peace Moves Coalition; Privacy International; Rhythms of Resistance; Sante Refugee Mental Health Access Project; Smash EDO Campaign; Speak Campaign; Veggies Catering Campaign; Wimbledon Disarmament Coalition / CND; Worthing Eco-Action; 56a Infoshop.

Editor 4
- e-mail: editors@bristle.org.uk
- Homepage: http://www.bristle.org.uk