police acted lawfully when officers blocked their bid to attend an anti-war
demonstration.
returned to London with a huge police escort when they attempted to reach the
demonstration against the war in Iraq at RAF Fairford air base,
Gloucestershire, in March last year.
The High Court ruled recently that the police had acted unlawfully and
breached their human rights by detaining them in the coaches on the journey back to
the capital.
But the court also ruled that it was not unlawful for the police to turn the
passengers away from the demonstration.
The protesters say the ruling threatens civil rights as it means that any
group of people could be turned away from a demonstration based solely on the
view of a senior police officer as to whether they were likely to become involved
in a breach of the peace.
Helen Wickham, one of the passengers, said: "To be sure of reaching a
demonstration, I would have to be psychic and know what's going on in the mind of a
senior police officer."
Lawyers for the passengers will argue in the Court of Appeal that the police
actions in turning them away were contrary to the common law and violated
their freedom of expression and assembly under the Human Rights Act.
The case is being supported by Amnesty International and Liberty.
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