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Correcting the media narrative of the G20 protests on April 1, 2009

J | 07.04.2009 22:27 | G20 London Summit | Other Press | Repression | World

The media coverage of the G20 protests has been systematically biased, writes Musab Younis - ignoring the violent policing, the tactic of open-air imprisonment of demonstrators, and the real chronology of events. “It has taken remarkable obedience by the press,” writes Musab, “to refuse to ask some simple and obvious questions.”

 http://ceasefiremagazine.co.uk/2009/04/correcting-the-media-narrative-of-the-g20-protests-on-april-1-2009/

Correcting the media narrative of the G20 protests on April 1, 2009

Musab Younis
April 6, 2009

#1 – The reversal of events

“Anti-capitalist protesters embarked upon a wrecking spree within a City branch of the Royal Bank of Scotland today,” shrieked The Times on April 1, “and engaged in running battles with police as G20 demonstrations turned violent. Police were forced to use dogs, horses and truncheons to control a crowd of up to 5,000 people who marched on the Bank of England, in Threadneedle Street, on the eve of the London summit.”

This narrative of events is entirely typical. Under the headline “Police clash with G20 protestors”, the BBC reported that “protesters stormed a London office of the Royal Bank of Scotland”, later adding tha: “officers later used ‘containment’ then ‘controlled dispersal’” (BBC, April 1). The Guardian reported: “The G20 protests in central London turned violent today ahead of tomorrow's summit, with a band of demonstrators close to the Bank of England storming a Royal Bank of Scotland branch ... [S]ome bloody skirmishes broke out as police tried to keep thousands of people in containment pens” (The Guardian, April 1).

What is interesting about this narrative is that it precisely reverses the events of the day.

Eyewitness accounts of the day agree that the police began the now-infamous tactic of ‘kettling’ protestors – refusing to allow anyone in or out of a confined space held by police lines – as soon as the four marches had converged on the Bank of England, at around midday. An article in The Times a day earlier by a former Assistant Commissioner of the Metropolitan Police, Andy Hayman, suggested that the police had planned to use this tactic well in advance: “Tactics to herd the crowd into a pen, known as ‘the kettle’, have been criticised heavily before, yet the police will not want groups splintering away from the main crowd. This would stretch their resources” (The Times, March 31).

Note that the “violent outburst” (Telegraph) of window-breaking took place hours after the police had decided to “herd the crowd” of at least 5,000 people “into a pen” without access to food, water or toilet facilities – and without allowing them to leave.

The press was surely aware of this. The Guardian’s live blog from the day noted at 11.57 a.m. that “the barriers designed to fence in the protesters are not big enough”, an hour later it confirms that there is “a ‘kettle’ at the Bank of England”: half an hour later they report “clashes” and finally, at 1.30 p.m., “a window has been smashed.” An objective observer of the sequence of events here might ask whether the police ‘kettle’ had in fact been responsible for the “clashes”, “violence” and smashed window.

But this idea – that the kettle might have provoked the “clashes”, and that the police might therefore be responsible for the “violence” – is remarkably absent from virtually all of the reams of press coverage of the protests. We do, of course, have a spectrum of opinion: whereas the right-wing Daily Mail sees the protestors as “a fearsome group of thugs”, a “bizarre group of misfits” fuelled by “Dutch courage” and a “willingness to use violence” (April 1), for the left-wing Guardian only “a minority of demonstrators seemed determined to cause damage” whilst “much of the protesting” was “peaceful” (April 1).

Again, the notion that there was not a “violent” core of demonstrators at all, but that people were provoked into “clashes” with the police due to police tactics, is absent. Even the article which is by far most critical of the police actions – a piece by Duncan Campbell in The Guardian titled ‘Did police containment cause more trouble than it prevented?’ – only goes as far as to say: “As for the violent clashes that led to cracked heads and limbs, how much was inevitable and how much avoidable?”. Campbell concedes that “some demonstrators were bent on aggro” but adds: “so were some of the officers.” He also criticises the conditions inside the kettle and suggests that it will make people think twice before embarking on a demonstration in future. Thus Campbell suggests the “clashes” were avoidable, but does not indicate that the kettles actually led to the “clashes” – though, to give credit where it is due, his is the only piece in the press which dares to suggest that the police were themselves violent.


#2 – Justifications

Well before the protests, the press had been reporting with glee the “violence” predicted as “London went into lockdown” and “protestors issued a call to arms” with “police fears” of protestors “intent on violence” (The London Paper, 31 March).

The BBC posted a sympathetic article titled ‘The challenge of policing the G20’ (30 March) which pointed out that: “police officers spend their professional lives trying to play down the public order implications of demonstrations - it's in their interests to keep things calm.”

“The security strategy of the day,” they reported breathlessly, “resembles a three-dimensional ever-changing puzzle” where “the unknowable factor is the demonstrator bent on violence”. The article ended with a quote from Commander O’Brien: “If anyone wants to come to London to engage in crime or disorder, they will be met with a swift and efficient policing response.”

This flurry of media coverage predicting “violence” from “anarchists” was clearly initiated by the police, who released a barrage of press statements before the protests which served to pre-emptively quell criticism of their actions on the day – actions which had, of course, been planned well in advance. The G20 policing was to be “one of the largest, one of the most challenging, and one of the most complicated operations” ever “delivered” by the Metropolitan Police, according to Commander Simon O’Brien, who hit the press circuit with gusto in the days preceding the G20.

The press obediently played their part by reporting police “fears” word for word, with complete sympathy, and with no question on asking those who planned to protest whether they thought the police reaction might be overly violent. After all, “the police have had to prepare for every possibility” on April 1, noted the Times: “from terrorism to riots” (The Times, March 31).

With ample opportunity to question an unusually talkative police force, barely a single sentence in the press asked whether the police preparation for the protests might be heavy-handed or that a violent reaction by the police to the protests might lead to serious injury or death. The protestors, of course, were to be “violent” “mobs” (based on police “intelligence” gleaned from “social networking sites”), but the police were to be calm, measured and undertake only necessary measures.

The effect of this press coverage was to justify in advance all police actions whilst de-legitimising any actions by protestors. Endless predictions of “violent protestors” meant that all the day’s “clashes” were sure to be blamed on the “minority” of “intent on violence” – even if evidence suggested that “clashes” were actually instigated by police, and that violence was in the main inflicted by the police on protestors. Within the press narrative, the police are merely reactive; forced to respond to a “violent” situation and “keep things calm”; the notion that they could have actively encouraged and provoked “clashes” seems patently absurd.

#3 – So what’s missing?

There are a number of important questions which simply didn’t appear in the press.

a) Did the police intend to ‘kettle’ demonstrators in a confined space regardless of whether there was any violence or not?

All the evidence, including past cases of the police using this tactic, suggests this was the case. (At the Climate Camp protest at Bishopsgate on the same day, the police beat protestors back into a kettle despite them holding up their hands and chanting ‘this is not a riot’, as can clearly be seen on the Indymedia video ‘Riot police attack peaceful protestors at G20 climate camp’).
Is there a possibility that the police were not in fact “forced to use dogs, hoses and truncheons” due to “violent” protestors, but that they inflicted violence on peaceful protestors?

b) Was there really “violence” from the protestors?

The Metropolitan Police state that “small groups of protestors intent on violence, mixed with the crowds of lawful demonstrators” (Met Police, 2 April) and The Guardian quotes Commander Simon O’Brien as claiming there were “small pockets of criminals” within the crowd who attended a memorial for Ian Tomlinson on April 2. Again, eyewitness accounts of both days state that virtually all of the violence came from police. Despite hours of kettling and media reports of “missiles” being thrown at police (translation: plastic bottles), the only tangible evidence of protestor violence at either of the two main protest sites seems to have been some smashed windows, which of course is damage to property and not “violence”.

The Guardian reports that a small group of demonstrators were “seeking confrontation as they surged towards police lines.” Of course you’re expected to sit quietly when you are being held against your will behind police lines and periodically beaten with batons. But is it conceivable that those who “charged” police lines simply wanted to leave? And why is it confrontational to “charge police lines” without using any weapons, but not confrontational to hold thousands of people in an area, keeping them there with kicks and batons? That the protestors could have actually showed remarkable restraint when being provoked in an unbearable situation is laughable according to all the press. Yet this is what eyewitness accounts point to. Only the Letters page in the Guardian gives any credence to this: one person writes that “the few scuffles we did witness were caused precisely at the frustration of people not being allowed to come and go as they pleased”; another states that: “an ugly mood developed after those who had come to exercise their democratic right to protest were detained against their will” (Guardian, April 3).

c) Were the police tactics responsible for the “violence” of the day?

Because the press has been admirably obedient in reversing the course of events, this is an impossible question – according to the media first there was “violence” from “anarchist” protestors, then the kettle began. Yet once we establish a more accurate chronology, and take into account police prior planning, it seems that it had always been intended to shut thousands of people into an enclosed space without being able to leave.

d) Was the ‘kettling’ tactic intended to make people think twice about demonstrating in future?

The most critical piece in the press, by Duncan Campbell in the Guardian, states that those “people thinking about embarking on demonstrations in the future may have to decide whether they want to be effectively locked up for eight hours without food or water and, when leaving, to be photographed and identified.” Yet it does not suggest that this may have been the initial intention of the police in adopting this tactic, even though it is absurd to suggest the police might have planned to use this tactic without imagining it would lead to anger and frustration on the part of those trapped in the kettle. In conjunction with the extensive restrictions to freedom of protest under the New Labour government, amply documented elsewhere, it might be reasonable to suggest that the police tactics were in part, at least, designed to deter protestors.

e) Were the police violent and should any officers face charges?

Remarkably, this question is absent from virtually all the press coverage – despite hundreds of injuries to protestors, the death of someone apparently trapped in a kettle, and video footage showing baton charges directed towards crowds of people with their hands in the air, the use of riot shields as an offensive weapon, and the beating with batons of protestors sat on the ground (see, for example, ‘Riot police attack peaceful protestors at G20 climate camp’ on Indymedia). The ample groundwork laid by the police suggesting there would be protestors “intent on violence” happily accounts for all the violence of the day and makes easy to ignore eyewitness accounts that state that peaceful protestors being kettled, charged, beaten and provoked by the police. Given the number of witnesses and video evidence, it has taken remarkable obedience by the press to refuse to ask this question – and for a media so obsessed with violence, it seems strange that the overwhelming violence of the day, that inflicted by the police on protestors, barely merits a mention.

J

Comments

Hide the following 14 comments

Not to mention who authorised the attack on the RBS

07.04.2009 23:05

...because at least three young people face jail for falling into what to me was an obvious trap set by the police  http://400words.wordpress.com/2009/04/03/rbs-rant/.

richwill
mail e-mail: rwillmsen@gmail.com
- Homepage: http://400words.wordpress.com/


RBS - good point

08.04.2009 00:04

We know the police had access to RBS because there is footage of them inside the building filming out of the window shortly after the window had been smashed.

If this is the case one would suspect there were officers in the building prior to the smashed window. Added to the fact that one of the 'kettle lines' was placed right at RBS, and that RBS was the only building around without its windows covered, the window-smashing looks like clear police provocation.

M


..

08.04.2009 00:29

on 3c "according to the media first there was “violence” from “anarchist” protestors, then the kettle began." i was there when they broke out the kettle had already began they just were not yet hiding behind their shields yet

ballz


Well argued article

08.04.2009 10:04

Thanks Musab for pointing out the media's bias and naivete in reporting last week's events. Why aren't the dozens of mainstream journalists who witnessed the police's behaviour writing about their shock at the casual violence of the police that day?

The media's complete reliance on the police version of Ian Tomlinson's death until the weekend when they were bombarded with pictures and accounts makes me very depressed. Isn't it obvious the police might have had a vested interest in presenting this poor man's death as due to "natural causes". Thank God for Indymedia.

keith


If we demand the truth, then we must be honest ourselves

08.04.2009 11:52

The above article makes some great, valid points, but for me falls into the same trap as the mainstream media in that it is not objective - simply reflecting events with an activist bias. The truth is probably somewhere in between. Yes, the police were violent and intent on provoking violence, but to pretend that all the protesters were happy, peaceful, groovy cats who were just out for a walk through central London is as laughable as the Daily Mail.Insurrectionary anarchists were present, whose violence arises from an ideological belief in direct action against the state(I'm not saying this is wrong, just stating a fact)plus the usual small element who relish a brawl with coppers.
One thing that is starting to be really offensive in terms of media spin is activist's portrayal of Ian Tomlinson - the poor bloke was just trying to walk home, and whatever the cause of his death, he is not a martyr for your causes.

bob


Another fit-up by police and media

08.04.2009 12:30

At Gleneagles during the march against the G8, the crowd were herded around the corner from the main gates, and there was a 3 foot high, 3 wired fence with a token police resistance, a few cops 'trying' to stop hundreds of people going over this easily fence to get to the main security fence. Behind the crowd as they entered were several mainstream media cameras on top of huge cranes brought in specially for the purpose. These cranes take a long time to maneouvre and set up. The police had clearly told the media earlier, 'here are your pictures of the 'riot'', to justify the huge police presence.

People dutifully went into the field, the security fence being too obvious a target, and the protesters fell into the police-media trap by entering the field. Cue the Chinook military helicopters flying overhead to disgorge hundreds of tooled-up riot police (who just happened to be nearby) who then violently cleared the field of protesters, and the media went apeshit with the super riot porn pictures provided by the cops.

Any difference between that and the cops kettling people right in front of RBS unprotected windows? The coverage I saw was of a media frenzy of photographers outnumbering the few who broke windows.

But of course, the mainstream media needs its sensationalist pictures of 'violence', the police dupe a few protesters into breaking an obvious target, and the Met gets its budget increased as they tell the public how they can sleep safely in their beds now they have dealt with the 'troublemakers' they have been gearing up for.

The cops are happy (except for some non-media person filming them attacking Ian Tomlinson)
the media are happy with their riot porn, and the many thousands of demonstrators are tarred with the brush of 'violent extremists'. The pictures of a few windows getting smashed are already being used by the mainstream media as THE archive pictures of the G20 protests.

I don't have easy answers to how we stop falling into obvious police traps like these, just be aware of them. Though of course the easy answer is for the media to do their job properly and not just lazily rely on the cops to supply them with the 'riot-porn' they expect.

protester


RBS trap

08.04.2009 14:02

I definately thinkt here is a valid arguement for the police allowing RBS windows to be smashed. Along with the pojnts already made: Initially the riot police stood by as the glass doors at the entrance were smashed. After this had occured the police slipped between the already broken doors and the protesters with little resistance. The police could have easily continued to line up infront of the other windows. The crowd was loosely packed at this point due to people not wanting to get hit by broken glass, and most of the crowd was press. The breaking of windows was deliberately allowed to criminalize the protestors.

Peat


bob - the article is correct

08.04.2009 17:07

Bob - you say "we must be honest ourselves" and admit that there was "the usual small element" of protestors "who relish a brawl with coppers."

I was at the front line of numerous kettles during the day and the people I saw who were arguing with coppers and trying to rush police lines weren't hardened anarchists - they just wanted to leave. Some of them weren't even part of the demonstration. Yes, there was the usual crowd who use violent rhetoric, but that doesn't mean they actually were "violent" on the day. If they were, where are all the injured police officers?

Bear in mind that the police use the rhetoric of peace and stability, and they were fearsome brutes on the day. I bet if you had kettled them, you would have seen plenty more deaths.

I think the article is accurate - the protestors were resilient and peaceful in the face of massive provocation. Don't buy into the media/police distortion.

crewcut


oh come on...

08.04.2009 20:04

Of course we were there to cause trouble, as much trouble as we could to the banks and the financial system that has let the rich get mega-rich while the rest of us struggle. You really think we would have achieved anything other than half a paragraph in the Standard if we had all stood politely around with placards?

And for commenters to suggest that the police 'authorised' the smashing of RBS windows as some sort of 'trap' to criminalise protesters is palpably absurd. The trashing of RBS was 'our' little reminder that we oppose capitalism and the shit it brings. It was done by some very courageous protesters and anarchists and we should do more of it. Do not take our victories away by claiming that it was the work of 'agent provocateurs' or authorised by the police.

The police did not enter RBS until some time after the windows had been smashed, and after a lot of damage had been done to the inside of the bank. Once they realised what was going on they moved TSG in the back door to take control of the bank and to stop people doing any more damage. Then they moved riot police and horses in to control the area.

The attack on RBS was finally brought to a halt by some bright spark who suggested that people should sit down on the floor in front of the riot police. This stopped the crowd moving forward to challenge the police lines, for fear of hurting our own. I didnt see it, but I heard reports that many of those who sat on the floor were arrested as police lines moved forward. If there was plain clothes police active in the area, it was the little squirt who said, 'lets all sit down and be non-violent'...

Fighting FIt


good article

08.04.2009 20:42

Good article.

'Fighting FIT' says "The trashing of RBS was 'our' little reminder that we oppose capitalism and the shit it brings."

This is just clichéd machismo rhetoric. Do you really think even burning down the Bank of England, Treasury, RBS etc. would have achieved anything except alienate the vast majority of the population? For one thing, all these institutions are nationalised and WE pay for any damage.

To quote Chomksy in 1967: "The argument that resistance to the war should remain strictly nonviolent seems to me overwhelming. As a tactic, violence is absurd. No one can compete with the Government in violence, and the resort to violence, which will surely fail, will simply frighten and alienate some who can be reached, and will further encourage the ideologists and administrators of forceful repression. What is more, one hopes that participants in nonviolent resistance will themselves become human beings of a more admirable sort."

Note that those of us advocating non-violence are not usually pacifists -- we just recognise that the state has the virtual monopoly on use of force, and our power lies elsewhere.

james


Response to James and others

09.04.2009 12:15

Firstly, yes I do think that burning down the Bank of England, Treasury, RBS etc would have been highly effective. It would have sent a clear message - a message in tune with the rest of the country.

This is not machismo rhetoric - and I find it deeply disturbing that those who promote confrontational politics - many of whom including myself are women - are labelled with these heavily laden masculine terms. Showing we are willing and able to confront both the institutions who have created this so much suffering, and that we are willing to stand up to the police who protect them is not machismo.

There have been many reports stating that the fact there was not violence was a testament to the demonstrators. I disagree. And whilst, everyone who confronted the police, whether violently or not, were very brave people, it is both and wrong and playing directly playing into media stereotypes to label these people as violent drunk nutters.

If I saw someone being attacked in the street, I would act to try and stop it. My first attempt would be stop it happening non violently. However, if the person was still being battered, I would use whatever force necessary to stop that attack from taking place. I do not think it is a testament to non violence to witness people being indiscriminately battered without any reaction other than liberal indignation. It doesn't make a difference to me whether or not the attacker is wearing a uniform.

Having said this, it is important not to cause divisions between different groups of protesters, this is a job for the police. There should be room for a diversity of tactics, and we should be supportive of each others efforts. However, when, as usual, so many cliches are thrown at people who fight back, without any effort to engage in a proper debate, it is important the people behind the masks also have a voice.

Fitwatch
mail e-mail: defycops@yahoo.co.uk
- Homepage: http://www.fitwatch.blogspot.com


Hmm

09.04.2009 15:04

"And for commenters to suggest that the police 'authorised' the smashing of RBS windows as some sort of 'trap' to criminalise protesters is palpably absurd. The trashing of RBS was 'our' little reminder that we oppose capitalism and the shit it brings. It was done by some very courageous protesters and anarchists and we should do more of it. Do not take our victories away by claiming that it was the work of 'agent provocateurs' or authorised by the police"



No doubt the people who did it meant it, and many of us wanted it. This doesn't mean that the police didn't allow it to happen...

Zarg


Response to Fitwatch

09.04.2009 20:11

First off, let me say that I have great admiration for FITwatch. And that I wholheartedly agree with your point that we shouldn't "cause divisions between different groups of protesters".

In my opinion you have mixed two different issues. The first is defensive confrontation (with police, for example) against an ongoing attack -- such as happened during the G20 protests. This is clearly admirable and courageous and this is exactly what the article is talking about when it says that the majority of violence came from the police. To me, self-defence, even against someone in a uniform, is not violence.

The second issue is destruction of property with a political purpose. This is not the same thing at all. It would perhaps "make a point", but in my view it has three main effects: a) Make it easier for the state (& private power) to enact much greater repression, using the destruction as an excuse; b) Alienate a very large sector of the population of the country; and c) Distracts from the real issues at hand.

james


reply to bob

10.04.2009 10:00

bob: "One thing that is starting to be really offensive in terms of media spin is activist's portrayal of Ian Tomlinson - the poor bloke was just trying to walk home, and whatever the cause of his death, he is not a martyr for your causes."

I don't think anyone knows one way or the other what his plans were. Maybe we never will know. He may have just been trying to get home, he may have though fuck those greedy bankers, I'll hang around and show them what I think of them. He may have just stayed around to see what was going on with all the excitement.

He was a Millwall fan after all - they are hardly known for their shy, retiring and cop-loving nature.

Either way though, it is still important to protesters aside from the fact that anyone's death is a tragedy (well, except for police, politicians and bankers!), because it could have happened to anyone there on that day.

Just as we are all up in arms at Charles de Menenez' death even though he wasn't really a terrorist.

anon