Back in August another young black man died here in unclear circumstances. Paul Coker died on the floor of a cell in Plumstead nick. His mother and sister are at the demo and address the crowd, which are several hundred people. They are experiencing the same unaccountable wall of silence that the de Menezes family are so angry about. The family of Nuur Saeed have all this to come. Right now they are still coming to terms with the death of a loved one. His friends and the local community are furious.
Several hundred people join the demo over the course of the afternoon. Dozens more who are not prepared to stand in a pen hang out in the vicinity. The Police have clearly been told to be on their best behavior. They keep their distance politely negotiating with the organizers throughout the event. At one point local youths block the road, which is one of the main routes into London. Five van loads of TSG (goon squad) cops show up and are seen jogging into the back of the station with their kit bags of riot gear. In the end they don’t get deployed as the demonstrators unblock the road voluntarily as the demo draws to a close.
I get talking to some of the demonstrators about the general situation. Many of them were on the regents park demo the day before. They are angry and insulted by the Danish cartoons. However they are equally unhappy that the media gave all the attention on that demo to a tiny group of extremists from Al-Majihiroune. Today the media are again camped out at the embassy waiting for the Jihadists to provide them with some easy scaremonger headlines. The death of Nuur is ignored, sending a clear signal that Muslim lives are just not important. Hardly surprising that these kids feel angry and alienated?
Comments
Hide the following 2 comments
nice piece
12.02.2006 06:23
thanks for that
neil
Megaphones
19.03.2006 00:52
Megaphones are a way of ensuring a message is put across where it might otherwise be incapable of being heard. I refer to the last photo in this piece "making sure they get the message". No matter how emotional the user of a megaphone, or charged the cause, if I was on duty and someone put a megaphone in my face like that, I would be forced to block my ears with either fingers or ear defenders. This means important radio communications - including those relating to crowd management, the health and safety of those attending, other road users etc - would not be able to get through. This cannot be a sensible way to proceed.
Yes, use noise to bring attention to your cause. But please have consideration for those whose job it is to ensure that these events pass off without physical harm. And that includes physical harm to my eardrums! I would consider arrest for assault in the case of the steward in your photo. That she was not I believe shows remarkable forbearance by the officer pictured.
And in case you were wondering, yes I am a copper but not one who has been on public order duty or had to police any event where public order has become an issue. Thank goodness. I do not mean to sound unconcerned about deaths in custody which I believe is a separate debate and look forward to your readers comments on the specific point I make about megaphones.
keyworker