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Ronnie Easterbrook – “Britain's oldest political prisoner” - on Death Fast

Brighton ABC | 19.12.2008 12:28 | Social Struggles

Ronnie Easterbrook is a 78year old career criminal, who is serving a 'whole life' tariff sentence after a failed armed robbery in 1987. Following his recent transferred to Gartree prison in Leicestershire, he has decided to try one last hunger strike to highlight his claims for a retrail.

Ronnie, from south London, was convicted in 1988 of the attempted murder of a policeman during an armed robbery that was set up by the police and in which the only person who died was his fellow would-be robber who was shot dead by the police. Through information from an informant, Police had lain in wait, with a TV camera crew in-tow and ambushed the gang. The man shot dead by the Police, Tony Ash, was unarmed and already surrendering to them.

Ronnie has campaigned relentlessly since then for his conviction to be overturned, refusing to become involved in applications for parole or early release. He had wanted to mount a political defence at his trial, arguing that the infamous 'shoot to kill' policy adopted by the British state in Northern Ireland had now been taken up by the Met. Police in pursuit of criminal gangs. However his barrister at the time refused to follow his instructions and Ronnie himself refused a prosecution deal, so he was forced to defend himself in court, without legal representation.

Handed down a Life sentence (originally with a whole-life tariff, itself highly unusual given the circumstances of his case), Ronnie held one of the longest dirty protests in the British prison system and undertook a 60 day hunger strike 10 years ago to try to force the authorities to review his case. Now at 78 years old this hunger strike, after 20 years fighting the system, is likely to be his final act of resistance to the unfair trial and unjust treatment he has received. Physically weakened by previous protests and in ill health (he only has one lung), Ronnie has made an advance directive/living will to refuse any medical intervention in this hunger strike. He writes:

"Many will say: ' Well he is only a criminal.' True but if the protective aspects of the law do not apply to me, it follows that there is no law. Hitler started by excluding sections of the German populations from protection of the law. State evil can always find 'reasons' disguised as righteousness. "After 20 years inside, I have been held a political prisoner, or a prisoner of politics. I refuse to go through a parole process. Why should I when the authorities, Home Office and Judiciary, know they are holding me illegally?"
It's vital that all efforts are made to get the authorities to re-open Ronnie's case so the callous indifference shown by the powerful to one of the powerless is reversed.

Write to him at;
Ronnie Easterbrook (B58459)
HMP Gartree
Gallow Field Road
Market Harborough
Leicestershire
LE16 7RP

Jacqui Smith, MP
Secretary of State for the Home Office
3rd Floor, Peel Buildings
2 Marsham Street
London
SW1P 4DF
Fax: 020 8760 3132
e-mail:  smithjj@parliament.uk

Also to local MP for Market Harborough:
Edward Garnier QC MP
House of Commons
London
SW1A 0AA
e-mail:  garniere@parliament.uk

Tel:
020 7219 4034 or
020 7219 6524
Fax:
020 7219 2875

Brighton ABC
- e-mail: brightonabc@yahoo.co.uk
- Homepage: http://www.brightonabc.org.uk

Comments

Hide the following 8 comments

Social Prisoners

19.12.2008 12:47

It's good to see Anarchos supporting 'social prisoners', although I'm sure we'll hear some whining from those self-righteous idiots at lib.com (an acronym for liberal comedians in case you didn't know) given their pathetic response to the John Bowden case.

Ronnie may have been an armed robber but he's as much a victim of Capital ("Capital Is Theft" after all) as everyone else.

Fire To The Prisons


prisoner

19.12.2008 12:55

I think to call himself a political prisoner is an a bit of an insult to genuine political prisoners around the world. I assume he is guilty of attempted murder. Sorry to be blunt but he does have rights - to go through the parole process like all other prisoners.

calahan


Uninformed

19.12.2008 13:36

Calahan you clearly either have not read the post or you haven't got the first idea about UK sentencing policy. Ronnie evidently has a whole life tariff (something that the Yorkshire Ripper for one hasn't got) which means he's going to die in prison either way. Yes he can apply for parole but he wouldn't have a snowball's chance in hell of persuading them to release him given his stance up till now.

Fire To The Prison


Clarification

19.12.2008 14:13

Ronnie no longer has a whole life tariff. I forget how exactly many years it was reduced to but is now a finite number. If he had a whole life tariff he would not be able to apply for parole. With any other kind of tariff he can apply once the tariff period has expired. I think he probably has passed whatever the period is by now.

Ronnie has until recently been Category A (high security) and is now Cat B. The number of lifers who the Parole Board have released from anything other than Category D (open prison) can be counted on one hand - although it does include the only two British soldiers ever convicted of murdering civilians in the north of Ireland.

Nicki


Ronnie's tariff

19.12.2008 14:32

Was reduced twice, from whole life to 16 years and from 16 to 12 and a half years. As he went to prison in 1988 his tariff expired in 2000.

Ronnie refuses to participate in the parole process, saying like many other prisoners who consider they are wrongfully convicted, that he is only prepared to leave prison by the front door.

Nicki


To calahan

20.12.2008 12:22

That's a specious thing to say.

Who gets to decide who is or isn't a political prisoner?

You? [Essentially anonymous comfortable keyboard warrior].



Calahan is daily mail journo


It's his own fault

20.12.2008 12:31

It's his own fault - if he hadn't got involved with someone planning a robbery, participated in the act itself, carried a gun, and fired at the police (in self-defence!), he would not be in jail in the first place. Although the latter part of the sentence is highly debateable as he was a career criminal and would have been caught at some time.

Plod


Free Ronnie

20.12.2008 14:43

He is 78 and has served his enough time by anyone's sensible standards, that the government won't let him out is only because they refuse to be seen as a soft touch on those who won't toe the line. He is an old man and deserves to go home to spend his last years with his family, also like Ronnie Biggs should too.

The government are pieces of shit.

Fuck off Plod