London Indymedia

Anti-war arrests outside Parliament - pictures and comment

Giulia | 26.11.2005 13:49 | Anti-militarism | Repression | London

Two women arrested outside Parliament for remembering the dead of the Iraq war

Two women remembering the dead
Two women remembering the dead

Wow, such a big demo....
Wow, such a big demo....

....requiring the full force
....requiring the full force

of the law....
of the law....


Two women were arrested on Friday 25th November while holding a bell-ringing ceremony outside Parliament to remember the estimated 100,000 people who had died since the beginning of the war in Iraq.

The women were arrested for being 'participants in an unauthorised demonstration'. The police were very reluctant to arrest and briefly authorised the protest but then banned it again when the women refused to give their details on the grounds that if the demonstration was now 'authorised' they should not be obliged to give their names.

The police also helpfully suggested that the two women join Brian Haw on the opposite pavement as he is the only person exempt from the laws ironically introduced to prevent his permanent anti-war display. However, as Brian's side of the pavement is now practically devoid of passers-by, this option was also turned down.

One policeman was heard saying 'I wish I could join you. I wish I could do what you're doing. This is filthy. This is very hard for all of us'.

The women were taken to Charing Cross police station but later released without charges. As well as being reluctant to arrest, the Police also seemed concerned at the possibility of two more people challenging the new laws.

19 people are currently facing charges under the Serious Organised Crime and Police Act (2005) which outlaws protests without police permission within 1km of Parliament. Let's hope that more will challenge this absurd and immoral law.

For more information please contact Giulia on 02380550159 or Anna-Linnéa on 07788503761

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Notes:

1. The ceremony was a response to a call from Voices for Creative Nonviolence (US) and Justice Not Vengeance (UK). See www.iraqmortality.org The organisers are hoping for one hundred communities to each ring a bell 100 or 1000 times amounting to 100,000 rings.
2. In April 2004, 52 former senior British Diplomats wrote that "it is a disgrace that the coalition forces themselves appear to have no estimate of the Iraqi deaths due to the invasion and occupation. In contrast, lives lost by US and coalition soldiers are carefully recorded and mourned"
3. On 25th October Milan Rai and Maya Evans of Justice Not Vengeance were arrested for holding a similar ceremony outside Downing Street. The two womens' action that took place outside Parliament on 25th November was undertaken in solidarity with Milan, Maya and all the other protesters arrested under the new legislation preventing demonstrations within 1 km of Parliament.

Giulia

Comments

Hide the following 4 comments

number facing charges actually greater

26.11.2005 16:52

according to police who compile the figures, at the time of milan rai's arrest a couple of weeks ago (for a similar remembrance protest outside downing street), the number of those facing charges under the soca law was already 27.

milan's arrest may have been the first as 'organiser' of an illegal demonstration, although he is still waiting to hear whether this greater charge (with a penalty of up to 51 weeks imprisonment) is going to be brought.

meanwhile milan is currently in prison after refusing to pay for damage to the foreign office building arising from a graffiti and fake blood protest just before the assault on fallujah. see other indymedia articles about how to help support him in prison.

rikki


Thank You Both

26.11.2005 19:31

Giulia and Anna-Linnea ~ You make my heart sing!!!

How short life is. How few the opportunities to make a difference...

You've made me think....

Thanks! And all good wishes to you both.

Karuna xxx

Karuna
mail e-mail: DreamingDharma@yahoo.co.uk


There were no protests by the left when Saddam was in power!

28.11.2005 09:47

It is strange how the left totally ignored Saddam Husseins war crimes. There were no protests by the left outside the Iraqi embassy when Iraq attacked Iran in 1980, or when Iraq invaded Kuwait in 1990, or when Saddam gassed 5,000 Kurds at Halabja in 1988. You should realise that the real enemy was Saddam Hussein, not the democratically elected leaders like George Bush and Tony Blair who decided to liberate Iraq from Saddam's tyranny.

Concerned


Ummm.. yes there were

28.11.2005 13:06

A number of people I know took part in them.

You really enjoy making yourself look stupid don't you realist? Sorry, rockwell, i mean, voice of reason. Dammit! I just can't keep up with your fiendish disguises.

Sim1


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