London Indymedia

Tibet Vigil at Chinese Embassy, 17 March 2008

Peter Marshall | 18.03.2008 17:50 | Repression | London | World

Tibetans and supporters held a vigil to show solidarity with the protesters in Lhasa to coincide with the Chinese government’s midnight deadline for them to surrender.
Pictures © Peter Marshall, 2008, all rights reserved.

China, China, China, Out, Out, Out!
China, China, China, Out, Out, Out!

On the steps of the RIBA building
On the steps of the RIBA building

Tibet flag at the main door of the Chinese Embassy
Tibet flag at the main door of the Chinese Embassy

Others try to follow
Others try to follow

leading to a rather confused situation
leading to a rather confused situation

Police push protesters back
Police push protesters back

Protesters on the central island
Protesters on the central island


According to the Chinese Authorities, they exercised restraint in dealing with the Lhasa protests, using only non-lethal weapons and only killing 13 innocent civilians. Monday afternoon’s demonstration in Portland Place opposite the Chinese Embassy was timed to coincide with the midnight deadline in Lhasa for protesters to surrender.

For the hour or so I was in Portland Place, the Met put on a rather more convincing display of restraint, with the help of the 'Free Tibet' stewards, causing – so far as I saw - nothing worse than a few minor bruises. The British police at least sometimes live up to their reputation although perhaps a double row of barriers would have been a sensible precaution.

I arrived at Portland Place around 4.30, when around 200 demonstrators were penned behind a single row of barriers along the edge of the road in front of the RIBA building. Three policemen stood in front of the demonstrators who were shouting slogans towards the Chinese embassy across the road. The media were refused access to photograph from the empty area in front of these barriers, although a row of press here would probably have aided security, but were allowed into the island – also surrounded by barriers – in the centre of the road. Of course this didn’t provide much of a view and I started by photographing among the protesters.

Later I was just crossing the road around 5pm when a demonstrator jumped the line and ran across towards the embassy waving a Tibetan flag - where the four officers on duty immediately grabbed him. Other demonstrators pushed the barriers down and followed him.

The next few minutes reminded me of one of those traditional village football matches, or those games of 'British Bulldog' we used to play before such things were banned, as police and stewards grappled with demonstrators. Finally the stewards took over and pushed and persuaded them across the roadway to the central island where they sat down. I saw no instances of excessive violence being used by police, and those of us reporting the incident all appeared to be well treated despite a fairly confusing situation.

The demonstrators continued to shout at the Chinese Embassy from the central island for around ten minutes. A police officer then read something out to them, which I'm doubt they could hear any more clearly than I could above the noise. I suspect they were being threatened with arrest if they stayed where they were, but I couldn’t hear well enough to tell under which Act. With the help of the stewards they were then all escorted back across the road to join the other demonstrators who had stayed in place.

More pictures shortly at  http://myldondondiary.co.uk/2008/03/mar’htm#embassy

Peter Marshall
- e-mail: petermarshall@cix.co.uk
- Homepage: http://mylondondiary.co.uk

Additions

Incorrect Link

18.03.2008 21:27

Sorry, more pictures now on line, but at:

 http://mylondondiary.co.uk/2008/03/mar.htm#embassy

As you can see they did try to attack the embassy, but that was probably even more pointless, though may have increased the publicity the event gained.

Peter

Peter Marshall
mail e-mail: petermarshall@cix.co.uk
- Homepage: http://mylondondiary.co.uk


Comments

Hide the following 4 comments

pointless

18.03.2008 19:19

vigils. pointless.
attack the embassy.

oi oi


blockade it, cooperative alliance pull out

19.03.2008 07:10

blockade it, cooperative alliance pull out

Johnny


blockade it, cooperative alliance & corporations need to pull out

19.03.2008 07:20

blockade it, cooperative alliance need to pull out investment, embargoes look necessary. How long before the whole of china & the whole world rebels if this kind of thing continues. We dont want blood!
Dont buy chinese goods if you can, China does not make everything.
Does the lama want the people of Tibet to commit suicide rather than defend themselves? Hopefully not,
CCP need to be very careful, the world is watching!

Johnny


Attempting to show solidarity with ignored Tibetan People

19.03.2008 17:53

i'm not sure where Peter Marshall is coming from,but that didn't look like an attack on the Chinese Embassy to me.Nevertheless if he could have got such an article into the National paper then i'm sure it would have been news that inspired others.As it was i didn't see any coverage at all.(but hopefully there was).i hadn't been to the embassy so was very pleased to see the Tibetans organising everything.i was also pleased to see some Tibetans doing the "trying to cross the road and bang on the door " routine which we regularly used to do a decade and less ago.Mind you there seemed to be several views on most things".Boycott the Olympics games " some were shouting,while others were saying "don't",and as Peter notes while some Tibetans (& small number non-Tibetans)were crossing the road other Tibetans(& slightly more non-Tibetans) were trying to stop them.Personally i'd have thought the demonstrators could be left to demonstrate and the police to police.(but i agree what do i know having been out of the loop some time).This might have led to the interesting situation of a proper sit-in in the middle of the road.A few arrests for that would have done the cause at this juncture no harm at all.But that being said the police were policing well & actually they probably would have been loath to arrest sit-inners,preferring to wait for us to disperse on our own accord.Ah well such unity of purpose wasn't there.i expect police instructions were to avoud arrests unless completely unavoidable with an eye on Europe-wide effects.

Well Peter Marshall thanks for the photos .If you'd come at 3.30pm when it began you would have found that the police were allowing photographers in the space in front of the barriers for the first hour.i looked at your London Diary but there's no more photos of the event there that i couls see?

Thanks

simon
mail e-mail: simongouldd@yahoo.co.uk


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