Right to protest under attack from state and racists over Luton anti-war protest
no police state | 11.03.2009 12:30 | Anti-militarism | Other Press | Terror War
Media hysteria is reaching extreme heights over an anti-war protest at a soldiers' parade in Luton. It is being widely suggested that raising slogans such as that soldiers are murderers or violate human rights is somehow illegitimate and beyond the bounds of freedom. This is a concerted attack on basic liberties, trying to turn hostility to war crimes into a speech- or thought-crime and to legitimate locking people up simply for expressing the "wrong" beliefs.
The idea that people have the right to protest is once again under attack as the tabloids launch hysteria and moral panics over an anti-war protest in Luton.
Protesters did not do anything particularly extreme. They simply criticised the army for alleged war crimes, calling them things like "baby killers", "murderers", "terrorists" - slogans which have been seen on dozens of anti-war demos. But because they were viewed as radical Muslims, they have been singled out in such a way as to suggest that their views are illegitimate and that they shouldn't have been allowed to protest. Labour and Tory spokespeople are among those joining the tirade.
It has been suggested that "all decent people" will "condemn" the protest, that it is "sickening", provocative, should not have been allowed by police, should have been "moved along" (banned), that violent attacks on protesters by bystanders should have been permitted... in short, that anything but a right to protest should have prevailed.
A minister says that "whatever their views" they should not have been allowed to do it - ignoring the fact that they had in fact done nothing but express their views.
Nowhere has it been asked if the army has in fact committed human rights violations in Iraq. In fact, such violations are well-documented. But the truth or falsity of the accusations has little bearing on their unacceptability to bigots and crackdown freaks.
There has been an outpouring of hatred from the tabloids, with the Daily Star branding the protesters "the enemy within", the Sun leading with "Hate for Heroes" and referring to "vile abuse", and the Express calling it "sickening".
Many of the papers have effectively supported racist thugs who tried to attack the protesters, leading to arrests.
In contrast, the international coverage has given a more accurate picture of the state of hysteria in Britain. See for instance the following:
http://www.3news.co.nz/News/InternationalNews/Anti-war-protestors-demonised-for-demonstration-as-English-troops-come-home/tabid/417/articleID/94860/cat/61/Default.aspx
from a mainstream New Zealand newspaper.
On the other hand, violence by pro-militarist counter-protesters has been widely condoned in the tabloids. This has not led to any threats of action against them for clearly inciting violence.
One bigot got up on a roof to throw bacon at the protesters in a deliberate gesture of incitement and hatred.
Bizarrely, the condemnation has also come from Muslim leaders such as the head of the local mosque, a Muslim Council of Britain leader and a leading Muslim MP. While it is doubtless true that the protesters are not "representative" of Muslims, this does not affect their right to protest. It is the responsibility of these "representatives" to make sure the other side gets put in the media - for instance, that many Muslims are angry at deaths in Iraq, that (say) extreme Christian protests do not get this kind of media hysteria, that protesters were simply exercising their basic rights, and that there are serious accusations of human rights abuses in Iraq and Afghanistan which should be fully exposed and investigated. Instead they jump on the bandwagon, perhaps angry that their power as "representatives" has been challenged.
It is possible that some ridiculous backdoor way will be found to prosecute the protesters - whether another abuse of harassment laws, some kind of terrorism charge (such as belonging to al-Muhajiroun), public order laws, or something else the police will concoct on the spot. Plans to ban slogans such as calling people murderers were mooted by police some time back, and more recently, attempts were made to bring in laws to ban protests targeting soldiers (not sure if they're passed yet). The last time radical Muslims were charged over a visible public protest, they received 5-year sentences simply for the slogans they shouted.
Britain is a police state, and the hysterical demonisation of people who exercise basic rights in ways not in accord with the whims of the dominant majority provides a public cover for the corrosion of basic liberties. The likes of the Express will support the corrosion of basic rights and then complain when such state repression comes home to roost on their own constituency. Britain is fighting unjust and immoral wars using murderous tactics, and attempts are being made to silence dissent against these wars. Against state fascism and its populist hangers-on, there is an urgent need to stand up for the right to demonstrate, the right to offend the bigots, the right to tell what one sees as unpalatable truths.
With basic rights under attack, what one thinks of the protesters' views or tactics is a secondary matter. It is possible that they were provoking the racists and militarists to get media coverage, but more likely that they were deliberately defying thought-crime taboos to express a deeply held, conscientious anger. Personally I think a blockade of the parade route would have been a great idea, though likely the media would be less interested. In the current climate, even a militant confrontation might have been safer (5 years for shouting a slogan is above the usual sentences for fighting police on protests, though below some of the more absurd sentences for the Bradford revolt). In any case, protests of this kind had a role in the end of the Vietnam War and other past wars - soldiers who know they face condemnation will become less enthusiastic to commit abuses under orders than those who expect nothing but stage-managed praise.
If people are charged over this protest, the anti-war and civil liberties movements should mobilise to protest at the trials, and cause disruption in the event of convictions.
Protesters did not do anything particularly extreme. They simply criticised the army for alleged war crimes, calling them things like "baby killers", "murderers", "terrorists" - slogans which have been seen on dozens of anti-war demos. But because they were viewed as radical Muslims, they have been singled out in such a way as to suggest that their views are illegitimate and that they shouldn't have been allowed to protest. Labour and Tory spokespeople are among those joining the tirade.
It has been suggested that "all decent people" will "condemn" the protest, that it is "sickening", provocative, should not have been allowed by police, should have been "moved along" (banned), that violent attacks on protesters by bystanders should have been permitted... in short, that anything but a right to protest should have prevailed.
A minister says that "whatever their views" they should not have been allowed to do it - ignoring the fact that they had in fact done nothing but express their views.
Nowhere has it been asked if the army has in fact committed human rights violations in Iraq. In fact, such violations are well-documented. But the truth or falsity of the accusations has little bearing on their unacceptability to bigots and crackdown freaks.
There has been an outpouring of hatred from the tabloids, with the Daily Star branding the protesters "the enemy within", the Sun leading with "Hate for Heroes" and referring to "vile abuse", and the Express calling it "sickening".
Many of the papers have effectively supported racist thugs who tried to attack the protesters, leading to arrests.
In contrast, the international coverage has given a more accurate picture of the state of hysteria in Britain. See for instance the following:
http://www.3news.co.nz/News/InternationalNews/Anti-war-protestors-demonised-for-demonstration-as-English-troops-come-home/tabid/417/articleID/94860/cat/61/Default.aspx
from a mainstream New Zealand newspaper.
On the other hand, violence by pro-militarist counter-protesters has been widely condoned in the tabloids. This has not led to any threats of action against them for clearly inciting violence.
One bigot got up on a roof to throw bacon at the protesters in a deliberate gesture of incitement and hatred.
Bizarrely, the condemnation has also come from Muslim leaders such as the head of the local mosque, a Muslim Council of Britain leader and a leading Muslim MP. While it is doubtless true that the protesters are not "representative" of Muslims, this does not affect their right to protest. It is the responsibility of these "representatives" to make sure the other side gets put in the media - for instance, that many Muslims are angry at deaths in Iraq, that (say) extreme Christian protests do not get this kind of media hysteria, that protesters were simply exercising their basic rights, and that there are serious accusations of human rights abuses in Iraq and Afghanistan which should be fully exposed and investigated. Instead they jump on the bandwagon, perhaps angry that their power as "representatives" has been challenged.
It is possible that some ridiculous backdoor way will be found to prosecute the protesters - whether another abuse of harassment laws, some kind of terrorism charge (such as belonging to al-Muhajiroun), public order laws, or something else the police will concoct on the spot. Plans to ban slogans such as calling people murderers were mooted by police some time back, and more recently, attempts were made to bring in laws to ban protests targeting soldiers (not sure if they're passed yet). The last time radical Muslims were charged over a visible public protest, they received 5-year sentences simply for the slogans they shouted.
Britain is a police state, and the hysterical demonisation of people who exercise basic rights in ways not in accord with the whims of the dominant majority provides a public cover for the corrosion of basic liberties. The likes of the Express will support the corrosion of basic rights and then complain when such state repression comes home to roost on their own constituency. Britain is fighting unjust and immoral wars using murderous tactics, and attempts are being made to silence dissent against these wars. Against state fascism and its populist hangers-on, there is an urgent need to stand up for the right to demonstrate, the right to offend the bigots, the right to tell what one sees as unpalatable truths.
With basic rights under attack, what one thinks of the protesters' views or tactics is a secondary matter. It is possible that they were provoking the racists and militarists to get media coverage, but more likely that they were deliberately defying thought-crime taboos to express a deeply held, conscientious anger. Personally I think a blockade of the parade route would have been a great idea, though likely the media would be less interested. In the current climate, even a militant confrontation might have been safer (5 years for shouting a slogan is above the usual sentences for fighting police on protests, though below some of the more absurd sentences for the Bradford revolt). In any case, protests of this kind had a role in the end of the Vietnam War and other past wars - soldiers who know they face condemnation will become less enthusiastic to commit abuses under orders than those who expect nothing but stage-managed praise.
If people are charged over this protest, the anti-war and civil liberties movements should mobilise to protest at the trials, and cause disruption in the event of convictions.
no police state
Comments
Hide the following 11 comments
Statistical
11.03.2009 13:05
Analysis
Quite Right!
11.03.2009 13:08
The protestors - who were non-violent and peaceful, although noisy, have every right in a so-called democracy to get up and say what they like about this illegal war. After all isn't that what the soldiers went out there to defend - our liberty and freedoms (sic)!?
I saw the biased Anglia News broadcast yesterday lunchtime (10th March 2009) and there were people waving Union Jacks and making Nazi salutes towards the protestors. I would like to see those people arrested for inciting hatred.
But hatred of course is what is behind all this fuss about protests - for sure the British public have to have their dalily dose of HATRED to keep alive the myth that there are some people in this country who do not deserves rights and in particular the right to protest.
Anyone in Luton interested in organising a demonstration to defend the right to protest?
Peace With Justice
Luton For Peace
e-mail: kittyplant@btinternet.com
Observing the extremists.
11.03.2009 13:36
There was one scene where a 'brave' member of the public was filmed throwing a muslim man up against a shop front.
The following reports have been mostly trying to suggest that 'reasonable' people would not stand for this kind of behaviour and that the army have a right to 'bravely' march through the streets without being reminded of what they have been doing in Afghanistan.
In reality, the government, the media, the warmongers and even large sections of the military itself do not support the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq. This kind of propaganda needs to be seen in that context. The reports the BBC have been putting out are flagrantly false and misleading. It is nothing more than desperate misdirection and frankly is embarrasing to watch.
Today the BBC is reporting the 'peace rallies' taking place in Northern Ireland. Just a few hundred people have turned up in Belfast yet this story takes a prime time slot. Any peace rally that takes place in protest at war in Afghanistan or Iraq is simply ignored by the BBC. There simply is no objectivity at the BBC. The BBC is a device, its purpose is misdirection. Its editorial decision making terribly and habitually flawed.
It is now time to bring heavy pressure to bear on the BBC. Its covert and biased organised propaganda should be checked, with force if necessary, as it clearly is attempting to create public opinion rather than report it. The BBC should now be seen as pro-war and a device that is used to justify and maintain the war on terror.
The BBC IS the War on Terror.
Watcher
Bugsssss
11.03.2009 15:13
There is a funny propaganda piece featured where some school children are seen to stamp on 'cochroaches' to be seen to play their part in the greater war against the insect hordes...
Reminded me of this footage.
Staged
difficult one
11.03.2009 15:25
Attacking soliders isn't going to stop wars or prevent them, i'm pretty sure non of the soldiers will be won over to the anti-war cause by telling them to "go to hell". They carry out a job for the government and it's the government that should be under attack not the troops. If people start justifying abusing troops then next we'll be abusing admin staff in the banks for repossessing peoples houses or people working at the insolvency service for making people bankrupt.
The event may well have been manipulated by the BBC, it'll certainly be used by the likes of the BNP, the media have used it to tarnish the anti-war movement by calling this event "anti-war" when i don't think it was that neutral. But i'm not going to defend them calling for soldiers to "go to hell" and screaming abuse at them when they've just returned from a war most of them probably don't want to be in.
BruisedShins
you are so
11.03.2009 16:52
don't start blaming the bbc again, it wasn't a setup against the Islamic group, it was arranged by them for camera crews to be there. They wanted the publicity.
the cops moved them out and stopped the protest not because it's a police state, but because the protesters were under threat from dozens of military and their families and their security could not be guaranteed.
if we can't bring ourselves to criticise political Islam ever, we have no relevance at all.
predictable
peaceful protest - offensive to bigots
11.03.2009 21:03
I don't see at all why soldiers are not a fair target for protest or why targeting them is particularly "tactless". Granted it's not all their fault that they're being sent to do this stuff, but they still do it rather than refuse. What I'm hearing is, they're viewed as above being protested either because they're viewed as entirely innocent (which is false), or because they're viewed as "brave", "heroes" etc (i.e. because others disagree with the opinions of the protesters), or because they're a "respected institution" revered by the British people (which amounts to fascism).
What's happening here is that the state is saying that social insiders must not be insulted or called names which might offend them (regardless of the truth or accuracy of these names).
PS. Yes there's a point where I'd "stand up" to political Islam, but it comes when they kill innocent people or enforce oppressive laws - NOT when they protest.
PPS. The condemnation from Muslim leaders is mostly coming from people plugged into the multiculturalist patronage system, who don't like their "representative" status being usurped or ignored. To be sure, the protesters don't represent all/most Muslims - but how many protesters actually do "represent" anyone? If you're a Christian and you hold a placard saying "this war is wrong", do you expect the next day for the Archbishop of Canterbury to appear in the press condemning you because you're not a designated representative of the church?
nazikicker
neofash on counter-demo
12.03.2009 01:49
The threat at the mo is that they'll be charged with belonging to al-Muhajiroun, which is banned as a terrorist group despite never carrying out a terrorist act. Someone from Luton racial equality forum (see on Youtube) thinks that they aren't all from al-Muhajiroun, some of them are from the local anti-war group (the organisers had leafleted in advance for the demo). Just wait for the legal manoeuvres if they try this - they would have to argue that participation in a demonstration makes someone a member of the organisation which called the demonstration, as well as that the organisation which called the demonstration can be inferred indirectly from the former allegiances of those who make it up. If they get away with this (as well they might given some of the miscarriages of justice we've seen already), it will be another big problem for activists - I can see it being used in animal rights cases for instance, claiming that everyone who goes on a Shac demo is a member of Shac and liable for whatever it's alleged to have done, or that everyone at Climate Camp is a member of Plane Stupid or everyone on the G20 demo a member of some shady anarchist group as yet unnamed.
5 years is not the norm for shouting a slogan - 0 years is the norm for shouting a slogan, it's legal most of the time (even if the slogan is provocative, offensive to some, etc), but unfortunately, shouting a slogan taken to "glorify terrorism" or "solicit murder" carries sentences of 5 years (probably more at maximum), whereas the MAXIMUM sentence for "violent disorder" (used for self-defence against police) is 5 years and usual sentences are a lot less. In addition, police will now have video footage of all 15 or 20 men (none of the 15 burqa-clad women) and could charge the lot if they feel like it (though probably they'll pick a few instead), whereas if they were properly masked up the police would only catch the ones they could arrest or identify. Ah well, so it goes.
I've seen some footage btw, the protesters seem rather inoffensive really, whereas the counter-demonstrators who rallied against them look like BNP and were being very aggressive - shouting things like THIS IS OUR COUNTRY NOT YOURS and chanting "Eng-er-land" over and over. I do wonder if the BNP (or NF, C18, whoever) were alerted in advance to the demo - rather supporting the provocation/set-up angle. Then again, if they have people in Luton they'd probably be out for the parade anyway.
What's really shocking is how these very nasty counter-protesters seem to be glorified and praised across the right-wing media, from the Times to the Sun. It's come to something if neofash hooligans have come to stand for the entire "nation".
fashbasher
@ Fashbasher
12.03.2009 17:18
If you look on many public forums at the moment you'll that there are many more people than usual coming out with nationalist platitudes like "this is our country, you'll live by our rules". Putting aside the political inaccuracy and the absence of class analsyis associated with these comments, the sentiment in them is pretty clear. Now some of these people may be racist, but most aren't and i fear that more and more people will be persuaded to join far-right parties and take up nationalist causes if ill thought out demo's like this continue.
Obviously the troops don't have to be fighting in Iraq or Afghanistan, they could be packing shelves in Tesco's or sat in an office job earning similar money, but they've chosen to fight for the army. Most don't want to be in Iraq, killing and seeing their mates getting killed and while imploring them to quit may be brilliant it's highly unlikely to persuade anyone during the current assault on the working class which means that jobs and money are scarce. Barracking them on return from Iraq, with placards telling them to "go to hell" from people who don't use that phrase as a figure of speech, is tactless at best and is completely counter productive. Yes confront army recruitment drives, leaflet against recruiters in schools and cities, sure target weapons productions plants and the government, but attacking soldiers themselves isn't going to help, it's not as if after being what they've been through in Iraq they're going to change their mind about the army based on someone telling them to "go to hell".
We all know it's neither brave nor honourable to die for your government, but dealing with troops in the way seen the other day isn't going to convince the troops of that, nor help to stop these wars. I appreciate that the response to the protests by the media has been jingoistic but what's new? We know the media are always going to push the nationalist line.
If we want to curb the rise of this nationalist spirit and the rise of the far right that this entails then i think we have to be prepared to combat small, misguided and marginalised groups like al-mujaroun and Hizb ut-Tahrir as well. We don't support the BNP's "right" to stir up racial tension, divide communities and spread their fascist crap so why should we leap to the defence of groups that are homophobic, mysoginst and draconian in the interpretation of their religion?
BruisedShins
because they didn't do anything wrong!
15.03.2009 22:31
TBH I can't understand why this is taken as particularly tasteless, tactless, provocative, still less racially inciting. There have been protests at military parades, pageants, career fairs, etc, for decades. This kind of thing was common during the Vietnam War. Protesters would insist soldiers should have dodged the draft, called them murderers etc (which a lot of them weren't, they avoided active engagements), this kind of thing helped end the war as it took away the aura of heroism. There were similar placards and slogans on all the Palestine demos, the Bush visit demos, the DSEi demos, the Farnborough air show demos. I've seen people in "grim reaper" costumes at university career fairs, targeting army and arms trade firms. Protesters spraying blood at army recruitment offices.
The slogans etc are not racist or even xenophobic FFS, it didn't say "white people are all murderers" or "the British are all terrorists", it targeted a specific military unit with a history of abuse (the Basra prison is notorious), and raised political slogans.
It all seemed rather restrained and inoffensive really.
It might be upsetting for the soldiers and their families, who are perhaps not the "main" problem, but the same can be said for all the protests which operate directly, e.g. at careers fairs, at sites such as EDO, at vivisection labs, at seal hunters etc. If the new rule is "you're only allowed to protest politicians who make laws, and not people who act within these laws" then most protests would be covered by this taboo.
I'm not keen on the politics of the group which staged the protest (if it WAS them - so far it's all media speculation), but I'm also not keen on the politics of HMV, the Jerry Springer Show, the American Immigration Service or pro-Israeli Jewish groups - I'd defend any or all of them against the Nazis however (they're all recent targets btw).
The state and the Nazis are collaborating to set a "new normal" - "you aren't allowed to protest against the army". Which will hit the ENTIRE peace movement. Whether it was a fringe Islamist group which organised the protest is really beside the point once this is realised. The answer might well be to do something bigger next time - same slogans, broader constituency.
nazikicker
Protest against the BNP in Herts Saturday 22nd March
18.03.2009 21:32
My friends and I will be staging a peaceful protest against this guy's views and (mostly covert) cowardly activities.
This guy is a real peice of work and he needs to be reminded that there is no place in this society for racist and facist views and these under cover activities.
Please join us at the priory to let your voice be heard.
isobel