London 'Die-In' calls for Troops out of Afghanistan
Peter Marshall | 26.11.2009 12:44 | Terror War
Demonstrators, mainly students, stopped traffic in Parliament Square, London yesterday, Wednesday 25 November 2009, when they staged a 'die-in' on the road in front of the Houses of Parliament. They called for an end to the war in Afghanistan and for British troops to be brought home now.
he demonstration was a part of the Afghanistan day of action called by Stop the War, and comes at a time of increasing public concern over the war, with a recent opinion poll showing over 70% of the UK population in support of a phased withdrawal of troops within a year.
Around 50 people with placards moved onto the roadway where they lay down, chanting slogans against the war for more than ten minutes, while police stood and watched from a distance, stopping traffic from bearing down on them. The protesters then got up and marched around the square, where one or two impatient drivers actually drove into some of the protesters and the media covering the event, but fortunately there were no casualties.
The protesters then marched up Whitehall to the gates of Downing Street, now protected by a small fence a little in front of them. There was a further noisy demonstration there, with several short speeches, as police looked on, forming a line to protect the fence, which lasted around five minutes.
As the protest finished, a police inspector came to warn the students that their peaceful protest was breaking the SOCPA law, which prohibits protests on the pavement in front of the gates to Downing St, as well as the use of megaphones in the whole Westminster area and unauthorised protests in general.
More pictures on Demotix:
http://www.demotix.com/news/afghanistan-die
and later on My London Diary:
http://mylondondiary.co.uk
Around 50 people with placards moved onto the roadway where they lay down, chanting slogans against the war for more than ten minutes, while police stood and watched from a distance, stopping traffic from bearing down on them. The protesters then got up and marched around the square, where one or two impatient drivers actually drove into some of the protesters and the media covering the event, but fortunately there were no casualties.
The protesters then marched up Whitehall to the gates of Downing Street, now protected by a small fence a little in front of them. There was a further noisy demonstration there, with several short speeches, as police looked on, forming a line to protect the fence, which lasted around five minutes.
As the protest finished, a police inspector came to warn the students that their peaceful protest was breaking the SOCPA law, which prohibits protests on the pavement in front of the gates to Downing St, as well as the use of megaphones in the whole Westminster area and unauthorised protests in general.
More pictures on Demotix:
http://www.demotix.com/news/afghanistan-die
and later on My London Diary:
http://mylondondiary.co.uk
Peter Marshall
e-mail:
petermarshall@cix.co.uk
Homepage:
http://mylondondiary.co.uk
Comments
Hide the following 2 comments
SOCPA is half dead
26.11.2009 13:16
The State is your Enemy!
Well done, plus clarification regarding SOCPA
26.11.2009 14:26
On SOCPA s.132-138: there is no "ban" on demonstrations near Parliament. The legislation requires prior notification and police authorisation (which must be granted) for static demos within the designated area (up to 1km from Parliament).
Similarly, there is no specific ban on demonstrating immediately outside Downing Street, but the police can and do impose conditions (e.g. on spurious and generally unsubstantiated grounds of "security risk" or "risk of disorder" ) which specify where the demonstration can take place. The use of megaphones in the designated area is, however, contrary to the legislation.
If the police are not enforcing the legislation, then that is all well and good; but until the offending sections are repealed, it will remain on the statute books. If/when they are finally repealed, they may well be replaced with something else.
dv
e-mail: vd2012-imc [at] yahoo.co.uk