Divide and Rule: Lib Dems Love Affair with Climate Camp
Sam Rest | 03.04.2009 11:55 | Analysis | Climate Chaos | Repression
The very recent apparent sympathy of Lib Dems towards Climate Campers smacks of electoral opportunism and it is not really doing any favours to the movement.
Today there is an article in the Guardian criticising the violent final eviction of climate campers by riot police. You can find it at:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2009/apr/03/g20-protests-police-tactics
It is an objective article, exposing the clear contradictions between the police statements and what actually happened at Climate Camp and the Bank of England. However, what caught my attention was the final quotation by David Howarth, the Liberal Democrat justice spokesman:
"How did the police end up in a situation where they used the same degree of force on the most peaceful demonstration as they did for a violent protest at the Bank of England? They seem to only have one trick."
Mr. Howarth seems to imply that the people at the Bank of England deserved being kettled and then attacked, because they were ‘violent protesters’. However, most witnesses’ account and video footage, including some from the mainstream press, clearly contradict this assumption. This very article, written by Sandra Laville and Duncan Campbell, explains that people they spoke to at the Bank of England were not violent: ‘The Guardian saw and spoke to many people who were clearly not agitators, but who were refused permission to leave’. There is also some interesting footage from Aljazeera and a good witness account here:
http://www.the-latest.com/eyewitness-brutal-police-put-us-in-a-mouse-trap .
The smashing of RBS windows happened after the crowd had been imprisoned within a police pen with not good reason whatsoever and without food or water. It was a completely natural reaction by a group of very angry people. And attacks on the police lines were mainly acts of self-defence after the police started charging with batons and pushing people around. Why is it that Mr. Howarth is so eager to make this clear distinction between those protesting at Bishopsgate and those at the Bank of England? Sure it is nothing to do with them trying to cash in climate camp’s more recent popularity among mainly middle-class young people (and some upper class too) who tend to vote in mass? Knowing they do not stand a chance of actually winning the elections, they tend to take on ‘lost but honourable causes’ like this one, increasing their chances of getting more sits in Parliament. As they will never win any elections anyway, not pressure to fulfill their own electoral promises. However, in order for this to happen, there needs to be a clear distinction between ‘peaceful’ climate campers and those ‘violent’ anarchists. As we know, that distinction is not so clear-cut as yet. The only thing that will put an end to the irreversible destruction of our environment is the radical transformation of the current economic and social system. I don’t think this objective is very high up on the Lib Dems’ list of priorities. On the contrary, together with labours and tories, they'll do their best for this not to happen.

It is an objective article, exposing the clear contradictions between the police statements and what actually happened at Climate Camp and the Bank of England. However, what caught my attention was the final quotation by David Howarth, the Liberal Democrat justice spokesman:
"How did the police end up in a situation where they used the same degree of force on the most peaceful demonstration as they did for a violent protest at the Bank of England? They seem to only have one trick."
Mr. Howarth seems to imply that the people at the Bank of England deserved being kettled and then attacked, because they were ‘violent protesters’. However, most witnesses’ account and video footage, including some from the mainstream press, clearly contradict this assumption. This very article, written by Sandra Laville and Duncan Campbell, explains that people they spoke to at the Bank of England were not violent: ‘The Guardian saw and spoke to many people who were clearly not agitators, but who were refused permission to leave’. There is also some interesting footage from Aljazeera and a good witness account here:

The smashing of RBS windows happened after the crowd had been imprisoned within a police pen with not good reason whatsoever and without food or water. It was a completely natural reaction by a group of very angry people. And attacks on the police lines were mainly acts of self-defence after the police started charging with batons and pushing people around. Why is it that Mr. Howarth is so eager to make this clear distinction between those protesting at Bishopsgate and those at the Bank of England? Sure it is nothing to do with them trying to cash in climate camp’s more recent popularity among mainly middle-class young people (and some upper class too) who tend to vote in mass? Knowing they do not stand a chance of actually winning the elections, they tend to take on ‘lost but honourable causes’ like this one, increasing their chances of getting more sits in Parliament. As they will never win any elections anyway, not pressure to fulfill their own electoral promises. However, in order for this to happen, there needs to be a clear distinction between ‘peaceful’ climate campers and those ‘violent’ anarchists. As we know, that distinction is not so clear-cut as yet. The only thing that will put an end to the irreversible destruction of our environment is the radical transformation of the current economic and social system. I don’t think this objective is very high up on the Lib Dems’ list of priorities. On the contrary, together with labours and tories, they'll do their best for this not to happen.
Sam Rest
Comments
Hide the following 8 comments
anti terrorism strategy
03.04.2009 12:10
so if any of your views are extreme in any way watch out
jock
How Dare they!
03.04.2009 13:00
Outraged
@outraged
03.04.2009 13:45
Like the comment above says, this is UK.gov strategy when dealing with "extreme" movements, in which the crowd around Indymedia and the G20 protests presumably falls.
CH
Thanks CH
03.04.2009 14:33
Sam Rest
Will climate camp show any solidarity?
03.04.2009 15:58
whose side, our side?
Movement building without compromise
03.04.2009 22:44
black horse
So do you want to change anything or not?
04.04.2009 15:52
David Howarth's quote was brilliantly incisive. "Outraged" put it brilliantly, but it seems her/his irony was lost on a few.
G20CC attendee
dont encourage what you dont want to happen...
05.04.2009 16:49
There is a bit of an attempt to split the climate camp on April 1 from the G20 meltdown protest at the Bank of England. Climate camp media and legal teams have been explicit in *not* condemning anything that happened at the Bank of England, nor getting into the 'good protester'/ 'bad protester' dichotomy. Post like this - analysing a quote from a politician in an article in a national newspaper, both of which climate camp have no control over - help reinforce an idea of representing the two events as separate. We should be very wary of this. Both events were not separate and we should be posting why they worked together (e.g. the threat from Meltdown helped with the camps trouble-free set up as two places kicking off would have been a police nightmare).
Climate camp is writing a solidarity statement to deal with media/politician attempts to portray the camp and totally separate from the meltdown. Also, on solidarity, the Climate Camp legal team (including help from some Lib Dems) is helping try to get to the truth about the death and the BoE protest (and derail the IPCC cover-up).
Of course any work with the Lib Dems (as we did in terms of using then to launch the Climate Camp report into the policing of the Kingsnorth Camp) is fraught with potential problems. It would be naive to think otherwise. This goes with any form of alliance. Certain people in Meltdown were pretty unhelpful in the leadup to April 1, several journalists have betrayed climate camp trust before, we've been screwed over by some NGO's, helped enormously by others. We can't really do much more than assess each of our needs and offers of assistance (or assistance we can call on) on their merits at the given time and place, with eyes open to potential problems. The alternative is... isolation.
On the meeting with the police before the climate camp, it was one person from legal and on from media and two cops (Bob Broadhurst and one other). Campers tried to get agreement on three issues. (1) That all police officers' numbers are visible at all times, (2) Legal observers are not part of the direct action and should not be interfered with, (3) We consider it not proportionate policing to injure people to clear a highway. They agreed to the first and second items but not the third.
The meeting was an attempt to protect people on the action, and make the policing of the event more complex for the police.
Camper.
camper