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Boat Race Protestor Jailed for Six Months

Michael Dickinson | 22.10.2012 19:06 | Public sector cuts

"Britain, particularly England, is a brutal, deeply divided class-ridden place. Let there be no mistake, there has long been a deficit of democracy. Today it is at breaking point. It is time for a revolution.” Trenton Oldfield.

ROCK THE BOATS!

Michael Dickinson


On April 7th 2012, half-way through the 158th annual boat race between Oxford and Cambridge universities on the River Thames, 42 year old Sir Matthew Pinsent, a direct descendent of William the Conqueror, who was on a launch behind the boats, spied what he thought was a balloon floating on the surface of the water ahead. As they got closer he realized it was a swimming man’s head, and he was aiming directly into the pathway of the boats.

“The risk for the swimmer was great,” said Pinsent. “If he had been hit by an oar or boat he could have cracked his skull, his neck, fallen unconscious and drowned. The incident caused me alarm, as one of my primary roles is the safety of the competitors and public at large.”

The race was halted and a 36-year old Australian man in a wetsuit was fished from the water into a barge, and arrested by police on the bank side. His name was Trenton Oldfield, and he freely admitted swimming into the path of the crews. He had no regrets about his actions and rejected the idea he could have been hurt by the boats, insisting that having grown up in Australia he was well used to avoiding surfboards, boats, rocks and coral while swimming.

So why, in the words of prosecution barrister Louis Mably, whose client base includes blue chip companies, banks and leaders in a range of corporate sectors, had Trenton “spoiled the race for hundreds of thousands of spectators watching from the banks of the river or live on BBC TV, not to mention the two university rowing teams”?

Oldfield said he had chosen to interrupt the Oxford and Cambridge Boat Race because it is a sym¬bol of class, privilege and elitism in Britain, and that an astonishing 70% of the cabinet in the currrent government (which is planning to privatize the National Health Service and introduce the Communications Data Bill to legalize surveillance of all digital communications) are Oxford or Cambridge graduates.

“It was a symbolic gesture to these kind of issues," he said. “London today is the most unequal society in the Western world. This poverty and inequality is entirely unnecessary and has been severely exacerbated by coalition spending cuts and reductions in civil liberties. It’s kind of worse than in Dickens' time".

Although a minor delay of 25 minutes was experienced by his protest stunt, and not a single complaint was received from the public by either the Metropolitan police or the BBC, at his trial on October 19th Oldfield was found guilty of “public nuisance” and sentenced to six months imprisonment, plus costs of 750 pounds by the judge, Her Honorable Anne Molyneux, who also accused him of being ‘prejudiced’. She told Oldfield that every individual and group of society (including the upper-class elite) was entitled to respect.

"You made your decision to sabotage the race based on the membership or perceived membership of its participants of a group to which you took exception," she said.

"That is prejudice. No good ever comes from prejudice. It is a necessary part of a liberal and tolerant society that no one should be targeted because of a characteristic with which another takes issue. Prejudice in any form is wrong.'

After being found guilty, Oldfield, who has worked and volunteered for a decade in jobs and projects aimed at increasing better prospects for people in impoverished areas, made a brief statement outside the court.

“As inequality increases across Britain and much of the world, so does the criminalization of protest,” he said. “My solidarity is with everyone working towards more equitable societies everywhere.”

Deepa Naik, Trenton Oldfield’s long-term partner, said: 'Great Britain has convinced many it is the home of democracy and the gauge of civilization. Anyone living here today knows Britain is a brutal, deeply divided, class-driven place.

'Trenton has spent his adult life working on these issues and his direct action protest was a natural extension of his everyday work. Trenton's protest was a reaction to an increasingly brutal business, media and political elite.”

Free Trenton Oldfield!

Defeat the Elite!

Michael Dickinson
- e-mail: michaelyabanji@gmail.com
- Homepage: http://yabanji.tripod.com/id11.html