Skip to content or view screen version

Blood on the streets as Bush enters via Brown's back passage.

mini mouse | 15.06.2008 22:06 | Repression | Terror War | London | World

As demonstrators clashed on the barricades to Whitehall today, George W Bush snuck into Downing Street via the St James Park entrance. Riot police blocked the road from Parliament Square to the park, but few realised what had happened anyway.

St James Park blocked off by riot cops
St James Park blocked off by riot cops

Token march begins
Token march begins

Cops in control
Cops in control

Barriers get lifted
Barriers get lifted

Barriers chucked
Barriers chucked

Out come the batons
Out come the batons

Crowd gets frisky
Crowd gets frisky

Sticks and banners fly
Sticks and banners fly

Police respond with some aggression...
Police respond with some aggression...

..which just gets worse.
..which just gets worse.


5pm and the usual tedium we'd associate with a StW event began. Less than a thousand filled the square, all but a few flogging Socialist Worker or carrying the party's begging buckets.

As the predictable speeches poured out of the pa one 'Socialist Party' stand even had a stab at flogging silkscreens of Che Guevara at a fiver a pop. Knocked out no doubt in some south asian sweatshop for pennies this surely wins a coconut for global capitalism.

No matter. At 6.45 celebs led a pre-arranged token march the fifty yards to the Whitehall barricade. Constables smirked, Stop the War having briefed them of their limited intent.

Others turned out to have different ideas. As placards and sticks flew, a determined mass pushed at the centre. Police jumped to secure the barriers but to no avail. Soon they were in the air flying over the police line's heads.

Cops responded with vicious baton blows. Fingers and heads bled, stabs were made to the stomachs, people fell to the floor but the crowd pushed on. A senior officer ran the line shouting "No Arrests, No Arrests, orders from the top".

Stop the War stewards now pushed to the front to try and calm matters. Ill briefed cops, not realising they were on the same side walloped them with sticks.

As dusk fell the TSG riot cops took the front line. The crowd responded with a sit down, punctuated with the odd punch up and, relative calm having being restored, the introduction of the usual snatch squads.

Bush came, Bush went, Brown probably got bitch slapped - hell, who knows how the Queen managed at tea.

The only thing we can positively relish it that it's the farewell tour and if we're lucky enough he'll stay alive 'till the end and we won't get 'Old Dick' Cheney in charge.






mini mouse
- e-mail: mini_mouse@riseup.net

Additions

Bush did come down Whitehall

16.06.2008 12:53

Checker was correct. Along with 5 others I left the main demo and walked round the back streets to the Trafalgar Square end of Whitehall. It was lined with Bush-supporters - tourists and ex-pats. There was a flurry of activity just after 7 and then a motorcade came through at speed - Laura Bush could be seen wearing her weird Stepford-wife grin and waving like the Queen. Despite attempts by the police to stop us, we raised our placards and blew our whistles. Shame that more protesters didn't do it.

Seahorse


film

16.06.2008 14:52

 http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/2008/06/401258.html

as can be clearly seen on the film, it was the samba band that drew people towards the barriers with their sound, not any 'defiance' by the stwc. in fact after a while, the stwc stewards moved to the very front of the crowd and their members were asking people to move away.

it is a shame (or more design by organisers?) that ALL approaches to downing street weren't sites for demonstration. the fences and road blocks from the mall and round down whitehall were all carefully prepared for bush's triumphal entrance, while the stwc had arranged the protesters were busy down at the other end of whitehall. was this the 'negotiation' that went on? we've certainly seen it before.

i don't really want to further the never-ending debate about such allegations and observations, so i think it's just another lesson that people shouldn't rely on stwc protests and should self-organise genuine and workable alternatives on these occasions. it is indeed a shame there weren't more than a handful of people with banners as the cars went past.

rikki


Couple of extra pictures

16.06.2008 16:14



Above, not here

Smash the War


official met press release

18.06.2008 13:10

press release from met police 16/0608

 http://cms.met.police.uk/news/major_operational_announcements/bush_visit_officers_praised


Bush visit officers praised

Following the visit of United States President George Bush to London, the senior officer in charge of the operation has praised the efforts of the officers involved in dealing with attempts to breach security cordons which saw missiles thrown at police resulting in a number of officers being injured.

Deputy Assistant Commissioner Chris Allison, MPS Central Operations said:

"We are seriously disappointed by the irresponsible and criminal action of those who have challenged police, physically ripping apart security barriers with the sole aim of breaching security in Whitehall.

"The acts that we witnessed yesterday were deplorable and cannot be described as lawful demonstration.

"This visit demanded the very highest of security. It was a team effort from across the Met. Officers diligence undoubtedly significantly contributed to making the President of the United States' farewell visit to London pass off smoothly.

"I would particularly like to commend the efforts of those officers who maintained the cordons in Parliament Square during the Stop the War Coalition demonstration.

"What started as a peaceful protest turned as hundreds of demonstrators made concerted efforts to breach police lines and security measures. I could not have asked for a better response as those officers held their line in the face of sustained and unprovoked attack. Facing missiles and extreme provocation your response was measured and professional.

"Thanks to everyone involved in this operation for a job well done."

25 people were arrested for a variety of offences including assaulting police and at least ten officers suffered minor injuries during disorder.

A 21-year-old man and a 26-year-old man were arrested and have subsequently been charged with obstructing police and a 60-year-old woman was arrested and subsequently charged with indecent exposure.

Seven others have been bailed pending further investigation and three were given words of advice. One 20-year-old man, arrested on suspicion of a public order offence was released with no further action. 11 people remain in custody.
Bulletin 0000000890 16 June 2008

x


Comments

Hide the following 17 comments

great headline you should work for the Son !

15.06.2008 23:09

thanks for making me smile with this report MM

NMLA


Heartening...

16.06.2008 08:14

To see people break away a bit from the monotony of a STWC march and become a bit more frisky, not suprised that STWC stewards tried to stop any confrontation, Like the fact a sit down protest took place, like also the fact that from the photo's you can see it's not "expert" activists*. This seems to have come about because the Met wanted to ban the original STWC march as it was planned. So if this shows a break away from the conformist tactics of STWC, perhaps we could build for something slightly more radical at the next STWC march demo, what with frustrations rising about a possible attack on Iran, and it would seem within the ranks of STWC over their failed attempts to have an effect, it seems ripe for some anarchist organising:

A proposal:

If there is one thing amonst all the active anarchist groups in the uk that we can agree on, it is that we don't want war, and would like to see a militant movement against it. There are plenty of groups with resources, that if pooled, we could build a strong militant movement against the war. Specifically I am thinking of a militant version of STWC, without the hirachy, or underlying recruitment agenda.

off the top of my head i can think of quite a few networks, groups, and organisations who could contribute to this(I am not a member of any of these): EF!, SolFed, Anarchist Federation, IWW, and maybe even some single issue campaigns might want to get on board, like Smash EDO, and Shut Down HK. (sorry for anyone i missed, I am writing this whilst thinking it).

whatya think?

Quick point about the photos, might have been worth blurring the faces of the protesters.

*No dig at activists here, I am one, It's just often we are easily singled out as the trouble makers on demos such as this, and can be spotted easily, that doesn't seem to be the case from the photo's.

fly Posters


You really should!

16.06.2008 08:23

I'm glad that homophobia is just as rife on indymedia as it was on the demonstration yesterday. "Stop sucking each others cocks, bati men"

Third Camp


Was great

16.06.2008 10:15

To hear STWC protestors shouting '1 2, 1 2 3, how many pigs in the bnp', 'abolish the police', 'no justice, no peace, fuck the police', 'who didn't get a pay rise' etc.

Made me smile anyway.

hiho


Solidarity

16.06.2008 10:57

I send my solidarity to the 25 arrested.

J


Junk reporting

16.06.2008 11:46

Great photos but the report is inaccurate from start to finish. It's a shame that anarchists feel the need to distort the truth to uphold their 'party line'.

For one thing, you've outdone the BBC in understating the number on the demo - they said 2500 in Parliament Square ( http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/london/7456241.stm). Conversely you have vastly inflated the ranks of the SWP - and none of them were "carrying the party's begging buckets". The only collection buckets I saw were for Stop the War Coalition.

For another there is the claim that Stop the War Coalition had "briefed [police] of their limited intent." So how do you explain Stop the War Coalition's promise on the front page of their website? "The ban against us marching from Parliament Square to Downing Street continues. We intend to defy this ban." ( http://www.stopwar.org.uk)

Can we believe anything we read on Indymedia?

anarchist


Well done!

16.06.2008 11:48

It looks like it was a very lively demo. Solidarity and reagrds from Edinburgh, Paul.
 http://indymedia.org.uk/en/2008/06/401141.html

Paul
mail e-mail: o_hanlon@hotmail.com


?

16.06.2008 11:58

Can you send solidarity?

General Degenerate


Bush entered through the front entrance

16.06.2008 12:34

> As demonstrators clashed on the barricades to Whitehall today,
> George W Bush snuck into Downing Street via the St James
> Park entrance.

No he didn't, his motorcade went up the Mall, through Admiralty Arch then down Whitehall.

checker


recognize some peps

16.06.2008 12:45

some of the guys and gals in the photos are STW activists.

benji


No violence

16.06.2008 13:21

To the person who is talking about a more militant approach it's quite obvious that violence will only generate MORE violence and if that's what you're after i suggest you join the police force.

"I object to violence because when it appears to do good, the good is only temporary; the evil it does is permanent"

Gandhi

G


ask

16.06.2008 23:21

"To the person who is talking about a more militant approach it's quite obvious that violence will only generate MORE violence and if that's what you're after i suggest you join the police force."

I suggest you should ask what I am after, instead of jumping to concusions, and insulting me by suggesting I should join the police force (did Gandhi alow insults?)

Fly Posters


Apologies

17.06.2008 08:32

Apologies for endorsing headline if it cause LGBT offence and thanks for drawing attention to it Third Camp. So maybe we all need to rethink our reactionary attitudes to all body parts, using cock, cunt, wanker, arsehole etc as terms of abuse, even those of us who think we are so 'right on'. To my mind we could start by reclaiming Gay from its present use as a term of abuse, while showing solidarity with LGBT movement, original meaning of Gay being spiritual joy. Any cynics out there ready to attack that as a wider aim?

NMLA


pacifism = pacified

17.06.2008 12:12

If a movement is not a threat, it cannot change a system that is based on centralized coercion and violence.

 http://www.utne.com/2007-05-01/ArmsandtheMovement.aspx

slow down Gandhi, you're killing them


Violence won't win the masses, we need a programme 1st and foremost

17.06.2008 18:40

We just need a Europe wide party / union / movement with a simple, radical democratic programme. Something that everyone can understand, at its heart.

Violence should only be used selectively, if at all. Otherwise it's just a NO, it means nothing more than NO.

But if it's in support of said programme, which elsewhere is being applied in a peaceful way ie when violence is applied to get the actual message of a programme, and to illustrate the depth of feeling felt. Well that is a different matter. And also, by way of exception rather than rule - then that is a different matter because that allows for people to understand what the violence is clamouring for, rather than it just being seen as 'against' , a big against but without any positive agenda.

IMO even then it (violence) should only be applied when other routes of widespread mobilisation are not possible.

And in the EU I do not think that that will turn out to be the case, I think we are beyond that now.

No, pacifist does not mean pacified.

And violence won't win the masses, all it will do is increase the clampdown and alienate the people. Gandhi lives, and he moves slowly not fast.

Programme


What violence?

21.06.2008 17:01

I don't see any violence against the police here, regardless of what I think about it in the abstract. How is pushing through police lines violence? It seems like some people think that if you don't just stand around doing what you're told then you're being violent. Get a grip.

normantebbit