February 2009


Originally published at Tilting at Windmills
16 February 2009

This is not the piece I wanted to write! I wanted to write something short and sharp. This piece is neither of those.
I wanted to write a simple piece about the new powers the police have today been given. This piece isn’t that either.

For there were simply too many elements; too much of a scattered jigsaw that had to be assembled for the larger picture to become clear.
I wouldn’t blame you if your attention wandered halfway through, but I hope you’ll find it worthwhile to keep at it to the very end; although I have to forewarn you, this is a long article!
And I think I’m more disturbed now, having written it, than I was when I started.

- mike langridge
16 February 2009

Suggest to the ordinary “man in the street” the notion that this country’s well along the path to becoming a police state and likely as not he’ll laugh at you.

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Shut ITT – A mass demo against Brighton’s weapons factory, EDO-MBM/ITT.
Wednesday 15th October ‘08

Ask the ordinary “man in the street” what role he believes the police play in society and likely as not he’ll answer something along the lines of “maintaining law and order”.

Put to him the notion that this country’s well along the path to becoming a police state and likely as not he’ll laugh at the suggestion.

The following’s a fairly standard definition of a police state:

“a political unit characterized by repressive governmental control of political, economic, and social life usually by an arbitrary exercise of power by police and especially secret police in place of regular operation of administrative and judicial organs of the government according to publicly known legal procedures”
- from the Merriam Webster Online Dictionary

Or perhaps you’d prefer this one, from Wikipedia:

“The term police state describes a state in which the government exercises rigid and repressive controls over the social, economic and political life of the population. A police state typically exhibits elements of totalitarianism and social control, and there is usually little or no distinction between the law and the exercise of political power by the executive.

The inhabitants of a police state experience restrictions on their mobility, and on their freedom to express or communicate political or other views, which are subject to police monitoring or enforcement. Political control may be exerted by means of a secret police force which operates outside the boundaries normally imposed by a constitutional republic.”

Well, obviously we don’t move from being a relatively free and unrestricted society into a regime of repressive controls overnight. Its a process of transition, and a gradual one at that.
So where would we be likely to observe this process occurring first? Most likely over the “freedom to express or communicate political or other views”.
Why? Because it seems to me that would be the most obvious and necessary first step in the development of a politically repressive regime.

Okay, let’s put the issue of a police state per se onto the back burner for the moment and move on to consider something else.

Freedom to Protest

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The Greenwash Guerillas at the Business Design Centre, London. 16 July 2008

That something else being, well, not too far removed from the foregoing… the “freedom to express or communicate political or other views”.

All too often significant sections of the Great British Public find themselves in fundamental disagreement with government policy, or find themselves deeply concerned about a serious social or environmental issue that has failed to engage the population as a whole.
The “accepted” means of registering such disagreement, with the obvious and clear intention of seeking to effect some sort of change, has traditionally been through letters to the Press, or to one’s Member of Parliament, or even to a Government Minister.
All too often however such efforts result in, at best, a dismissive response or, not unusually, a patronising nothing at all.

Ramp up the action a bit then, and we have signatures collected on a petition and delivered to the relevant authority. Effectiveness? Well, if one’s lucky there’ll be a mention in the media, followed by… frequently a patronising nothing at all.

Which is where we move into the grand British tradition of a protest or demonstration; customarily a march, sometimes a picket or other static “demo”… a form of expression much favoured by those who feel themselves ignored, overlooked, or sidelined in the prevailing political climate.

In exceptional cases, or where the cause rouses sufficiently deep passions and where no noticeable effect has been achieved by lesser means, we enter the rather more contentious realm of “direct action”. Which can take many forms, but generally entails some form of civil disobedience or even acts that may fall foul of the law…though not necessarily of the ideal of Justice!
That said though, even direct action has a worthy tradition and a certain sense of legitimacy; I’m reminded, for example, of the Suffragettes. Indeed, the very institution of Parliament that we so affectionately regard as our own has its roots in, albeit rather extreme, direct action! Such is the nature of protest in this country.

Were such freedom to protest curtailed, what other recourse would the public have when they perceive themselves as largely disenfranchised by what is often seen as a mockery of a genuinely representative political system, that our “leaders” still glibly refer to as “democracy”?

Yet that freedom to protest, so lovingly and unthinkingly embraced by all manner of political activists and advocates of social causes has, over the past few years, come under increasing threat.
The most obvious and public example of this was the rendering illegal of protests and demonstrations within a specified distance of the Houses of Parliament absent police approval!

And since when, one might ask, is it necessary to secure police approval of a demonstration in a supposedly “free” society? Does that not already constitute, in essence, one of the elements of a repressive regime in which the police can arbitrarily dictate, without consultation and without accountability, which protests are considered “acceptable” (and would that be “politically acceptable” perchance?) to the State?

However, there are other far more insidious trends at work that threaten our freedom to protest in a much more fundamental way than having to seek police permission before demonstrating outside Parliament. And though insidious, the effects of those trends are becoming increasingly apparent.

Its still only February and already this year seems to have witnessed a larger number of protests than a comparable period in previous years… all of which, in my role as freelance photographer/photojournalist specialising in covering protests and demonstrations (which is, if you like, my own personal form of “activism”), I somehow appear to have missed.
And quite a few of those protests “occupations” and “sit-ins” (many of them in response to another attack by Israel on the population of Gaza) have seen quite significant, and sometimes violent, clashes with the police.

That’s item two for the back burner.

“Anti-Terror” Legislation

Stop the War

Stop the War rally and march, London, 8th October 2007

To my mind something of a seachange occurred in the direction our society was moving following the long-to-be-remembered events of 9/11.
For me personally it certainly represented a watershed in my interests and activities, causing me to become much more socially aware and marking my re-engagement with, for want of a better phrase, the “protest movement” via the massively supported, and ultimately ignored, antiwar campaign.

Lets not dwell overmuch on the incredible dishonesty of some of the world’s leaders (principally those of the US and the UK) that brought about the invasion and subsequent occupation of Iraq, and all the problems that has since caused.
Nor let us dwell too much on the fact that those who were truly culpable for that naked (and arguably illegal) aggression have still not been properly called to account. So much for the Rule of Law.

But parallel with those events other things were occurring that will have repercussions for us all, probably much further-reaching than the fate that befell Iraq.

For 9/11 also seemed to trigger a spate of new legislation that for convenience can be bulked together under the term “Anti-Terrorism Laws”. Undoubtedly a knee-jerk reaction (initially at least) to the tragedy that occurred in America. And undoubtedly ill-conceived and poorly worded (for its stated purpose at least). But now law nevertheless.

However, I’m not entirely certain that it was all a knee-jerk reaction, nor indeed that much of it hadn’t been some years in the brewing. And there can be no doubt that more recent additions and amendments to the “Anti-Terrorism Laws” are no longer just knee-jerk reactions to that terrible event.

One of the things that has always puzzled me about this whole raft of new legislation is why we needed it anyway. Surely any terrorist act is also, per se, a criminal act, and could just as well be dealt with by the criminal law that was existing pre-9/11?
Far as I can recollect, we seemed to deal adequately enough using existing criminal law with the “terrorist threat” posed by the IRA… didn’t we?

But there is a difference between the two “sets” of laws. Moreover, a difference of fundamental importance, and one that has major implications for the sort of future we may all have to look forward to.
Throughout most, if not all, of these new “Anti-Terrorism Laws” (whether they be called by that name or not) there appears to be a common thread… the erosion of what have come to be regarded as basic “human rights” and “civil liberties”, and a shifting of the emphasis away from the notion of “innocent until proven guilty” and toward “guilty by default unless the accused can prove their innocence”.

Back burner again, and let’s reach for the next piece of the jigsaw puzzle.

The Misuse of “Anti-Terror” Legislation

Disarm DSEi 2007

The CAAT March to Custom House. Disarm DSEi protest, London 2007

Who remembers Walter Wolfgang? The OAP who was kicked out of a Labour Party conference for heckling (heckling, be it noted… a time-honoured tradition in British politics) and then refused re-entry on the basis of powers invoked under Section 44 of… guess what? Yep… the Prevention of Terrorism Act!

In the long-to-be-cherished phrase of a mate of mine… WTF?!!!

September 2005 that was. See here for a write-up of the ridiculous incident, more suited to a Tom Sharpe novel than the real world.

But by then I was already beginning to suspect that the police were using (or should that be misusing?) all their lovely shiny new “anti-terrorist” powers in entirely inappropriate situations.

And why does Section 44 of the Terrorism Act ring bells I wonder? Ah yes, I remember… just mull this over from The Guardian of 2003:

“Demonstrators at this week’s London arms fair yesterday were given permission for a full high court hearing into the legality of the police’s use of anti-terrorist legislation to arrest and stop and search protesters.

Mr Justice Maurice Kay said the application for judicial review from the campaign group Liberty raised a ’serious issue’ which should be heard as soon as possible after October 1. Liberty brought the case against the Metropolitan police commissioner, Sir John Stevens, and the home secretary, David Blunkett, on behalf of Kevin Gillan, a student from Sheffield. He was stopped by police outside the Defence Systems and Equipment International exhibition in London under the Terrorism Act 2000.”

There was also a bit about it in, amongst other papers, The Telegraph.

Now I don’t know about you, but it seems to me that there’s a world of difference between someone strapping explosives on themself and wandering into a crowded public place, and someone peacefully protesting against an arms fair (that is, an exhibition where one can see on display – and indeed buy if one’s “credentials” are “right”, which is to say, approved by the State – all the things manufactured to kill people with).

Then there was this, from greatreporter.com, in August 2005…

‘UK police use anti-terror Bill against protesters’
Five protestors are arrested in a vigil outside Parliament, as the Serious Organised Crime and Police Bill (SOCPB) is enforced for the first time in London”

It seems to me there’s a world of difference between someone loading bombs into a car and then leaving said vehicle outside of, say, the BBC, and someone participating in an “unauthorised” though peaceful demonstration outside Parliament. A demonstration, moreover, that was

“…designed to highlight the intrusion of civil liberties and highlight how the laws to tackle terrorism are now being used against peaceful protestors.”

Nor is the above simply cherry-picking from a limited number of instances.
Its becoming increasingly common (in my experience at least) to find the police using some form or another of this body of new “Anti-Terrorism Laws” (some of which masquerade under another name, as for example the Serious Organised Crime and Police Act that, so the just-quoted article claims, was “designed to tackle terrorism and organised crime”) when policing protests, particularly where there is a likelihood of some form of direct action occurring.

Consider, as another example, the statement that:

“Armed police will use anti-terrorism powers to ‘deal robustly’ with climate change protesters at Heathrow next week, as confrontations threaten to bring major delays to the already overstretched airport”

which appeared in The Guardian in August 2007.

Armed police using anti-terrorism powers to protect the profits of the airlines and ensure airline customers weren’t inconvenienced… by a bunch of non-violent protesters? Non-violent protesters moreover who in many cases were entire families with a bunch of kids in tow. Oh come on, get real please.

It seems to me that such wanton disregard for the requirement of an appropriate police response in such situations is a misuse (if not an actual abuse) of the powers the police have been granted.

Generally speaking protesters as a body are not violent criminals and thugs.

That there may be the odd one or two borderline psychotic individuals intent on using violence as a means of furthering their “cause” I wouldn’t deny, but to use that as an excuse for a blanket strategy of treating all protesters as potential criminals… nay, as potential extremists… is totally absurd.
To say nothing of the expense and consequent wastefulness of such a vast commitment of police resources. Resources, moreover, that could be more usefully employed in the more traditional areas of policing… like catching muggers, burglars, paedophiles, rapists and murderers for example.

But in the years that I’ve been observing the “protest movement”, I have yet to encounter any protester intending or deliberately planning acts of violence against the person. And certainly nothing that could even remotely qualify as a classic “act of terrorism” in the terms most sensible people understand.

Indeed, when witnessing situations where a group of unarmed and defenceless folk, of all ages and very often in the flimsiest of clothes, are hemmed in and violently set about by an organised body of booted, helmeted, shield- and baton-wielding thugs (I’m sorry, but no other word really qualifies) then I’m fairly clear in my mind who the real terrorists are.
It is no glib exaggeration to say that a line of fully-kitted riot police can strike real terror into the hearts of those confronting such a sight; particularly those for whom protest is not a customary means of expression.

It goes without saying of course that a principal function of a unit of fully-kitted riot police is to intimidate.
Which raises the rather interesting question of why the State should deem it desirable to intimidate those simply seeking to “express or communicate political or other views”.

As I said, your average protester isn’t a violent criminal or thug; your average protester is generally someone with a social conscience who is deeply troubled by what they perceive as an important social, political, or environmental issue.
Yet the police seem constitutionally incapable of making such a distinction.

Incapable? Or deliberately obtuse?

For one effect of the prevailing police attitude toward protesters, one effect of the widespread and persistent misuse of “Anti-Terrorism Laws” against protesters, is to criminalise protesters in the minds of the wider public.
An effect for which the mainstream media may be thanked, as the real facts of a reported case, facts that would put everything squarely into context, seldom get an airing. A situation of which the police must be well aware, and almost certainly use to their advantage.

Okay, so now the “Anti-Terrorism Laws” become one more item for the back burner (which now seems to be getting a tad overcrowded).

The Criminalising of Protest

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Climate Camp 2008. Monday 4th August. the Battle for the Rear Gate… aka the Battle for the Red Van… aka the Battle for the allegedly “abandoned vehicles”, whose owners were actually onsite

It appears the police are as accomplished at “spin” as any duplicitous politician.
Let me briefly pass the baton on to someone much more capable than I of illustrating a classic example of police spin… George Monbiot writing in the Guardian in December 2008, “Otter-spotting and birdwatching: the dark heart of the eco-terrorist peril“, in which he explains that:

“The National Extremism Tactical Co-ordination Unit (NETCU) is the police team directing the fight against extremists. To illustrate the threats it confronts, the NETCU site carries images of people marching with banners, of peace campaigners standing outside a military base, and of the Rebel Clown Army (whose members dress up as clowns to show that they have peaceful intentions). It publishes press releases about Greenpeace and the climate camp at Kingsnorth, in Kent. All this, the site suggests, is domestic extremism.”

NETCU aren’t of course the only element of the police capable of such trickery.

The place: Kingsnorth, in Kent. The scene: last year’s Climate Camp. And police claiming to have found a weapons cache “hidden in trees and undergrowth around the site”. No hard evidence offered of course that actually connects this alleged “find” of “an assortment of knives, a pointed throwing star, shields and chains” to the protesters.

We also have police raiding the campsite and seizing a variety of items (which included perfectly normal kitchen utensils… only to be expected on a site that anticipated catering for upwards of 1500 people for a week or so), the whole of which (these and the alleged “find”) were then, by a bit of verbal trickery, obfuscation, and a conveniently laid-on (for the benefit of the media) “display”, used to suggest that “if you look at the equipment we have seized, it is clear the plan was to use these items for criminal purposes”, in the words of Assistant Chief Constable Gary Beautridge.

How’s that for a neat bit of legerdemain then?

Naturally the campers were quick to respond…

“A spokesman said: ‘These claims made by police are ridiculous. We’re eating food at the camp, what do the police think we are cutting up our potatoes with? One wonders if Assistant Chief Constable Gary Beautridge will be raiding his own kitchen.’

The protesters also pointed out that other items confiscated included a board game and wax crayons. Isabelle Michel, one of the campaigners on the site, said: ‘Yesterday we were disappointed with the police, now we are disgusted.’”

But the damage had already been done. The “find” and accompanying police interpretation had already been reported in the mainstream media (The Independent, the BBC etc) thus worming its way into the consciousness of the public at large. The majority of whom, having little or no first-hand knowledge of Climate Camp protesters, will just swallow the whole lot hook, line, and sinker. After all, the police always tell the truth… don’t they?

So in the minds of the Great British Public protesters (and particularly environmental protesters) become just another bunch of criminals or, even worse (shriek, horror), terrorists! And of course we need all those lovely new laws to protect us from them… don’t we?

(The fact that all those lovely new laws succeed where the “real” terrorists dismally failed… in increasingly curtailing our freedoms… is neither here nor there of course!)

But what of the reality? Well, for starters you could do worse than read this article by Gareth Dale, who spent two or three days at the Camp. Or indeed my own account of my week there.

Nor are such misrepresentations by the police a new phenomenon. Even back in 1999 they were accusing protesters of “acting in a quasi terrorist mode“!

So, in this process of the criminalisation of protest, on the one hand we have the police twisting, distorting, and manipulating the “facts” to create a false impression of protesters (and no doubt throwing in the occasional downright untruth to boot).
And on the other hand we have all the new legislation being brought in that is misused by the police to obstruct legitimate protest (contrary to their oft-touted claim of seeking to “facilitate lawful protest”), and intimidate legitimate protesters. New legislation, moreover, that on the face of it was never intended for such application.

So have the police simply been handed, unasked, these new laws by a naive Government that, in the rarified atmosphere of Parliament, well removed from the real world, innocently believes they will only be used in the quest to waylay the potential suicide bomber and suchlike? Or have the police actively sought such new laws?

I am reminded of something I encountered a while ago. A sentence so rich in irony that I felt compelled to adopt it as the tagline for my blog…

“The country’s biggest force, the Metropolitan police, is to lobby the attorney general… because officers believe that large sections of the population have become increasingly politicised”

It actually comes from an article in The Guardian of November 2006 wherein it was reported that…

“Police are to demand new powers to arrest protesters for causing offence through the words they chant and the slogans on their placards and even headbands.”

the full quote being…

“The country’s biggest force, the Metropolitan police, is to lobby the attorney general, Lord Goldsmith, because officers believe that large sections of the population have become increasingly politicised, and there is a growing sense that the current restrictions on demonstrations are too light.”

Ostensibly this lobbying of the Attorney General by the police (a rather questionable act in itself) was prompted by concerns about the alleged growing threat of “Islamic extremists” and the incitement to racial hatred… with the implied connection to terrorist acts of course (to say nothing of that ridiculously worded offence of “glorifying terrorism”).
But given the police track record for consistently misusing the “Anti-Terrorism Laws” I’m not giving prizes for guessing how such new powers against demonstrations etc would actually be used.

And whilst we’re considering whether or not the police have actively sought new or increased powers, lets not forget all that furore over the extended period of detention for suspected “terrorists”.

Quoting from the Select Committee on Home Affairs Written Evidence:

” The case for extending the maximum pre-charge detention period in terrorist cases to 90 days has been set out by Ministers during the course of the debates on the Terrorism Bill and by the police [my italics], most notably in Andy Hayman’s letter of 6 October 2005.

The whole controversy over an extended detention period was generally discussed, as I seem to recollect, exclusively in the context of the type of individual that would likely find themselves ending up in Guantanamo Bay.

Er… no… let’s not get into the injustices of that particular establishment, or the “extraordinary rendition” techniques that appeared to help populate it and its kind. The point being, it was discussed in the context of the so-called “Jihadist”, the “Islamist terrorist”, the budding suicide bomber.

I honestly cannot recollect one single occasion where it was openly discussed in the context of how it might be applied against the demonstrator, the protester, the political activist.
And yet I know of nothing that specifically excludes that possibility; a crucial consideration given the well-documented police penchant for confusing non-violent protesters with terrorists.

By re-branding the protester an “extremist” or “domestic terrorist”, which is of course one of the consequences of using (misusing?) the “Anti-Terrorism Laws” against such protesters, then all the pieces are in place to clamp down on virtually any form of dissent.

Let me just remind you of part of that Wikipedia definition:

“The inhabitants of a police state experience restrictions on their mobility, and on their freedom to express or communicate political or other views, which are subject to police monitoring or enforcement.”

I hinted earlier on that not all of the new “Anti-Terrorism Laws” were a “knee-jerk reaction” to 9/11, and that much of it may have been “some years in the brewing”.
Having come this far in the discussion it begins to seem that maybe 9/11 didn’t represent quite the seachange I’d first suggested. More like a catalyst for the escalation of certain trends that were already well on the way to becoming entrenched.

In December 1994 The Independent was reporting that:

“Environmental ‘terrorists’ and green activists are to be targeted by Special Branch as part of a change in security priorities.”

whilst the previous month The Independent had reported that new guidelines revealed:

“Special Branch is to spend more time monitoring public demonstrations and targeting animal rights activists”

This came

“the day before the Criminal Justice Bill becomes law, giving the police greater powers to prevent demonstrations, raves and anti-hunt protests” [my italics]

There was speculation at the time that these changing priorities (at least for the police Special Branch) were prompted by the ending of the Cold War and the winding down of the IRA’s campaigns of violence.

As I read it then, putting it bluntly Special Branch (and by extension all other interested parties within the police and other security services) were looking for a new remit else they’d all be sitting around twiddling their thumbs for lack of anything better to do. And of course, budgets would go down the plughole.

So has all this gradual build-up (of the increasing criminalising of protesters firstly by police-fed propaganda and then by the application of a raft of”Anti-Terrorism Laws” that are deliberately misused to ensnare an ever-widening section of the population, thereby retrospectively “vindicating” the earlier propaganda) been prompted by nothing other than a handful of probable knighthood-seekers high in the police pecking order with one eye on their pension and the other on grabbing as much Government money (our money, your money!) as they can?

Or is there some more sinister agenda in play?

I don’t know. I must leave you to come to your own conclusions, taking into account the pile of things we’ve heaped up on the back burner so far. But before you do, our story is not yet complete.

So far we’ve been thinking about the, for want of a better term, “legal framework” within which the police function, how it has expanded, and how the police have exploited that expansion to vindicate their misrepresentation of protesters and dissidents as “extremists” and “terrorists”, albeit of the domestic variety.

We’ve also briefly touched upon whether this expansion of police powers has occurred as a result of poorly conceived legislation on the part of the Government that the police are then required to enforce, or at the behest of the police themselves. A not insignificant point, I would add.

Nor should we forget that the targetting of protesters etc is not necessarily an end in itself. It could as easily be the first step in a process of transition whereby an environment is created that ultimately renders everybody totally subjugated by the State, and without the means to express any form of dissent.

But that’s only half the equation. The “kid glove” if you like. What about the “iron fist”… such an indispensable element in any police state?

Riot Police

Climate Camp 2007 - 073

Climate Camp 2007. BAA headquarters was surrounded by riot cops. BAA had closed the offices for the duration of the blockade (result!) and there were rumours that yet more cops were ensconced inside, just waiting for someone to break in.

I’ve already made one brief mention of the Riot Police… or “Public Order Units” as they seem to prefer to be called. But, as I’ve said elsewhere, if it looks like a duck, sounds like a duck, behaves like a duck, then as far as I’m concerned… etc.
And we all know what I mean by the term, don’t we? So, for convenience if nothing else, I shall continue to refer to them as such.

Anyway, it seems that Riot Police have, over the past couple of years or so, become an increasingly common sight at protests… a trend that I find, to say the least, disturbing.
Especially as most incidents involving their deployment (most incidents I’ve witnessed at least) appear to be triggered by some act or provocation on the part of the police themselves!

What I find truly objectionable, bordering on the obscene in fact, is that the police should even consider it necessary to deploy such units against what are for the most part non-violent (if somewhat noisy… occasionally!) protesters.

Thus it was with considerable interest that I discovered, purely by chance, a series of articles being posted on Indymedia that delve into the genesis of this particularly nasty and… dare I say it?… “unBritish” form of policing.
They are introduced in the following terms:

“The British police public order tactics manual is a secret document establishing a paramilitary third force in the UK, under the control of a private company ACPO with permission from the home office.

It’s long overdue that more information about their plans was put in the public domain, so in a series of articles over the next 11 weeks, it will be.”

At time of writing five such articles have been posted:

www.indymedia.org.uk/en/2009/01/418797.html
www.indymedia.org.uk/en/2009/01/419998.html
www.indymedia.org.uk/en/2009/02/420982.html
www.indymedia.org.uk/en/2009/02/421761.html
www.indymedia.org.uk/en/2009/02/422077.html

each of which provides fascinating (indeed, almost mandatory) reading. Indeed, I would urge everyone to read all the articles very carefully, but holding in mind the caveat that I cannot vouch for their source.

However, assuming them to be credible, most interesting to me so far has been the second of these articles which reveals, amongst many other things, how we came to have our Riot Police in their present form.
Apparently this development was not welcomed by all senior serving police officers at the time, but grew out of a “new approach [that] was adopted by members of the Association of Chief Police Officers (ACPO) at their private annual conference in Preston” in September 1981.

The article goes on to say:

“The rise of ACPO to form, in effect, a national leadership for the fifty-two separate police forces in Britain has been one of the more remarkable developments of the past decade.”

The article further explains how “ACPO, unlike the police trades unions, [has] no basis whatsoever in statute” but that their influence has become decisive in the formulation of policies.

And it was ACPO that determined upon the change in public order policing from the more traditional form to that of something resembling a paramilitary organisation.

Most notably, throughout this transition

“there has been a shift of political control towards Whitehall and away from town halls; and public debate has been minimized, either by presenting these fundamental changes in a misleading light or by keeping them secret. In a democracy which maintains the tradition of policing by public consent, the public has not even been informed, much less asked, about the most far-reaching recent changes in police strategy… ACPO, a body with no statutory basis, made up its own mind without informing, let alone consulting, the constitutional representatives of the public either in Parliament or in the local police authorities.”

We also discover from reading these articles that the present style of policing for public order situations (that’s to say, our beloved Riot Police) is in fact a foreign import! Equipment, tactics, etc modelled on the Hong Kong style of policing. A colonial style of policing that was clearly intended to subjugate entire communities and populations.
Not, one would have thought, totally appropriate for policing tactics on mainland Britain where the police service so often claim they are “policing by public consent” (a completely meaningless statement of course, particularly so in light of the lack of consultation with elected representatives that has so clearly occurred. Or rather, not occurred! And, furthermore, particularly irritating in its disingenuousness).

And it is into the hands of this rogue police service that the Government irresponsibly entrusts ever-increasing draconian powers that, through either haste, carelessness, or deliberate intent, are so poorly worded as to permit their use in all sorts of situations other than those represented to us, the Great British Public, as being their purpose.

Um… did I just say “rogue” police service? Oops, clearly a slip of the tongue and obviously far too strong a word to use in relation to our wonderful British Police Force.
But one does sometimes get the sense that maybe they’re running a tad out of control. For some unaccountable reason the name Juan Carlos Menezes has slipped into my mind, and recollections of testimony given at an inquiry where numerous eye-witness accounts differed significantly from police testimony.

However, the police that “mistakenly” shot an innocent man in the head… numerous times… weren’t Riot Police so aren’t strictly relevant to this discussion.
What is relevant to this discussion though is how those Riot Police (or more accurately, “ordinary” police that become Riot Police by donning the appropriate gear) behave when they are deployed.

Fortunately I haven’t seen that many clashes with the Riot Police “in the flesh” so to speak. Sure I’ve watched numerous video clips of such clashes, as indeed would anyone with an interest in such matters, but that’s not quite the same as actually being there and, for want of a better phrase, “experiencing the atmosphere”.
But of the half-dozen or so I have witnessed I have always been left with the same impression… that these Riot Police (or their commanding officers) are totally incapable of assessing a public order situation correctly, that they’re unnecessarily brutal and frequently resort to unwarranted violence.

(This of course is to say nothing of the dictatorial attitude of arrogance they all, to a man (or woman!) appear to adopt… even when not directly involved in a conflict situation.)

The key to all of this, so it seems to me, is their inability to distinguish between a protest/demonstration and some other public order situation, like for example a crowd of football hooligans run amok, or a genuine riot where extreme street violence becomes the order of the day and self-evidently the police need to rapidly regain control to minimise, at the very least, the risk of injury to innocents inadvertently caught up in the rioting.

And incidentally, this latter introduces another interesting and revealing feature of protests as distinct from riots etc… in protests, even at the height of conflicts with the police, it is virtually never the case that protesters resort to deliberately inflicting harm on members of the public uninvolved in the protest.
As I’ve said before, almost ad nauseum, protesters are not by nature criminals!

And this inability to accurately distinguish between different types of public order situation works against the police in every imaginable way, not just on the ground at the time, but also in terms of storing up horrendous potential problems for the future.

This touches upon a remark I find myself keep having to repeat…

Protesters are not criminals!

Sure, the police and the Government (sometimes with the connivance of some of the mainstream media) may seek to criminalise them either in misrepresenting their activities, or in applying inappropriate legislation, or even in introducing new legislation to criminalise activities traditionally regarded in this country as freedoms or rights, but that cannot alter the fundamental truth that protesters are not muggers, they’re not thieves, they’re not gangsters or thugs; they’re not even mindless vandals and hooligans.

They are passionately driven (idealistic, one might almost say) people with a cause. A cause moreover which they genuinely believe to be right and just.
(I put it in those specific terms not to imply that they are mistaken in the rightness or justness of a particular cause, but to acknowledge that not everyone would necessarily agree with the rightness or justness of a given cause. Such is one of the prerogatives enjoyed by those living in a free society.)

And the more such idealistically-motivated people are opposed, are bullied, are victimised and are downtrodden, the more hardened their resolve tends to become! And the more their persecutors are perceived to be the willing agents of that against which they protest.

It seems to me there’s the possibility of a very dangerous escalation here… dangerous for all concerned.
For it seems to me that if such “people with a cause” continue to be targetted as common criminals, if they continue to be brutalised and subjected to uncalled-for violence on the part of State agencies then there is a very real risk that the so-far groundless accusations of extremism and domestic terrorism levelled against them may begin to take on the hue of a self-fulfilling prophecy. Which no-one wants, least of all the protesters themselves.

And by ranging against idealistic and passionate protesters seeking remedy for an unresolved cause or issue the likes of the Riot Police, kitted out in paramilitary gear with all the accoutrements of violent confrontation about their person, those self-same Riot Police may well have to bear the brunt of all the pent-up rage and frustrations that accrue from living in a society perceived to be uncaring or unjust.
For those Riot Police will no longer have the face of the friendly “Bobby on the Beat”, will no longer be seen as a person per se, but as a faceless, anonymous symbol of a greater evil.

And this can only be exacerbated if resort is made by these same Riot Police to the use of face masks and removal of identifying numbers (as seems to be a beginning trend), for then they truly do become faceless and anonymous.

Perhaps that is a far too melodramatic and pessimistic assessment of what the future may hold.
And it rests upon a couple of key assumptions or “givens”…

It assumes
(a) that the actual number of people likely to be driven to protest (in whatever cause) will increase significantly;
(b) that those involved in protest of one form or another will begin to develop sophisticated tactics to counter the tactics employed against them; and
(c) that hitherto largely peaceful and non-violent protesters may begin to believe that perhaps their commitment to a preferred policy of non-violence simply isn’t effective.

The Shape of Protest to Come?

(a) Let’s look at the first “given” very briefly, and in the light of two highly topical issues… Climate Change and the Economy.

Either of these has the potential for being the “Issue of our Times”.

Either of these has the potential for impacting upon society to such an extent that our very way of life could be fundamentally and permanently changed, and that of our children, and of our childrens’ children.
Moreover, the probability is that this fundamental change to our way of life would not be generally perceived as a positive one, and could easily escalate to detrimentally impact the very infrastructures of society, such that we witness a serious breakdown in many of the normal services and facilities we have come to take for granted.

It doesn’t require stretching the imagination too much to see how such a breakdown could lead to a dramatic increase in petty crime… to muggings, burglaries, theft, looting etc.
But it could also lead to massive civil unrest, that could so easily tip over into real and violent rioting.

However, such riots might not be “typical” in the sense of being a more extreme form of something like football hooliganism.
It seems to me rather that they would bear a much closer relationship to the hitherto peaceful protest, where people come together united in a common cause and with a belief in the justness of that cause.
The difference being though that the “protesters” would be far more “fired up” and, key to my entire reasoning, probably a helluva lot more of them, simply by virtue of the fact that these “impactful events” won’t just be affecting a few hundred, or even a few thousand, people.

We’re talking here about an entire nation! Indeed, not just one nation, but a similar situation manifesting in virtually every industrialised nation of the world!
And for a crowd such as I visualise to suddenly be confronted by massed ranks of Riot Police would, I fear, be something like throwing a match into a big box of fireworks.

Melodramatic? Unduly pessimistic? Over-reaction on my part? Hmm. Well, maybe… or maybe not.

(c) Strictly speaking I suppose I should next deal with the second “given”… but I won’t. For reasons that will eventually become clear.

So, is it possible that our hitherto largely peaceful protesters, with a majority committed to the idea of non-violence, could be persuaded or provoked into employing rather less peaceful tactics?
(This of course is putting aside the odd incident that occasionally happens whereby a protester may spontaneously and unthinkingly lash out in response to pain needlessly inflicted by the so-called “forces of law & order”).

Its needful that I should make a couple of observations first… “disclaimers” if you like.

The “policy of non-violence” that customarily seems to be adopted at most protests and demonstrations (in the UK at least), even those where “direct action” seems to be on the cards, is by no means a clear-cut one. Within activist circles there appears to be a huge spectrum of opinion about the “non-violence ethic” and thus it isn’t wise to assume that everyone is equally committed to the same extent, or even in the same manner.

This is complicated by a certain lack of clarity over what “non-violence” actually means. Clearly to inflict pain or injury upon someone is an act of violence. But is it, for example, an act of violence to set about the fabric of a military aircraft with a sledgehammer? Is it an act of violence to lock doors together thereby preventing access to, for example, a banking establishment? Is it an act of violence to pour paint-stripper over vehicles parked in the precincts of a research facility that engages in experimentation upon living animals? Is it an act of violence to harass someone, which harassment may actually consist of little other than repeatedly urging them to leave the employ of an unethical company?

If thought through carefully there are no easy answers to these questions, and as there are many such questions so there are many different answers within activist circles.
Given such wide-ranging opinions, that any degree of concensus is reached prior to some protest or other is in fact little short of miraculous!

Interestingly though, such discussions are not especially uncommon in activist circles. And in fact, in a bizarre sort of way, it is testimony to the essential integrity and finely-honed consciences of activists as a whole that they should, fairly frequently, even consider such questions. Would that “mainstream society” were to emulate their example in this respect!

And for my second observation I have to say that, throughout my years of interest in the “protest movement” I have never yet personally encountered, or even heard about, one single instance where violence against the person (any person) has been advocated, planned, or intended!
It seems, certainly of the many people that I have met within activist circles, that the very idea of such intent would be anathema to them. And this despite the many provocations to which they are frequently subjected!

So, having got those two observations out the way, is it at all conceivable that what are largely peaceful and non-violent protesters could be transformed into something that the Riot Police, for once justifiably, should be wary of?

Under normal circumstances I would unhesitatingly answer in the negative. But these are not normal times! And, were either of the issues described as a “given” at (a) to become a reality then, human nature being what it is, its certainly conceivable that the boundaries of normal self-restraint could become, albeit involuntarily, lowered.

Moreover, I do genuinely believe that if the trend to deploy Riot Police in inappropriate situations continues unabated, and if the behaviour of those Riot Police continues down the path its beginning to clear for itself, then violent confrontations such as we have witnessed recently in Greece are much more likely to occur here in Britain, particularly if the cause for which a given body of protesters is assembled is sufficiently arousing of the passions.
And under such circumstances it may well prove that the sympathy of the onlooking Great British Public will veer away from that of the police and toward that of the protesters.
One spinoff from which would of course be, at last, the final giving the lie to the mythical claim that the police act “by public consent”.

The alien image of the fully-kitted-out Riot Police, setting about their nefarious and violent business, does not sit easily with the Great British Public, and I suspect its only a matter of time before the Riot Police themselves become a cause for protest… again, similar to what has already been witnessed in Greece.

(b) And so finally we come to what I regard as the most interesting of the three “givens”: will those involved in protest of one form or another begin to develop sophisticated tactics to counter the tactics employed against them?

To some extent this already happens insofar as the savvy protester will probably employ a variety of techniques to evade the unwelcome attentions of the police; will probably be able to anticipate, with a fair degree of accuracy, which particular tactical moves are about to be employed by the police in the progress of a protest situation; and will probably understand how best to extricate themselves from difficult situations.

But none of this is quite what I had in mind. I was thinking more along the lines of pre-planned strategies to use in the event of specified “developments”; of somewhat better organisation than is currently seen in many activist circles; of a more effective/imaginative use of resources; and, both finally and crucially, the development of effective defensive tactics.

For any of this to come about requires the cultivation of a certain “way of thinking”… a way of thinking that does not seem to be particularly prevalent at the moment, although there are some indications that the whole “protest movement” is slowly beginning to move in that direction.

In fact I have in mind one specific development that has occurred over the past couple of years.

Fitwatch

Sack Parliament Protest, London, 2006

Sack Parliament Protest, London 2006

The fitwatch initiative, approach, call it what you will, originally grew out of a few ideas kicked around by a bunch of people at the Earth First gathering in 2007 (or was it 2006? I forget now). In any event, all these people each for their own reasons had become completely exasperated by the behaviour of a certain type of police unit at protests and demonstrations, and decided it was time to respond in some manner or another.

A variety of responses or actions were discussed, ranging from the fairly innocuous photographing of said police units to tactics that were somewhat more confrontational.

The units in question are the police Forward Intelligence Teams, known by the acronym FIT and thus it was appropriate that “fitwatching” came to be the name associated with those protesters wishing to respond to the intrusive surveillance conducted by these units.

I was especially interested in this initiative as I too had been utterly disgusted by the behaviour of these police units that I had witnessed at the anti-G8 protests in Scotland in 2005.
Consequently I wholeheartedly embraced the notion of “fitwatching” although opting for the least confrontational tactic of photographically documenting their activities at protests etc (alongside my documenting the protests themselves, which is of course my reason for being present in the first place).
This was a deliberate decision on my part in deference to the fact that my role in attending protests is to observe and document rather than to participate.

There is much more detailed information on both FIT and fitwatching on the fitwatch blog and I’ve already described in rather more detail my own reasons for participating on my fitwatching journal here at Tilting at Windmills.

In this context clearly I’ve had an intense interest in how the fitwatch initiative has developed, how it has fed back into the psyche of the protesters themselves, and how the police FIT have responded to this response of the protesters.

The most notable thing I’ve observed has been the gradual adoption of fitwatching by increasingly large numbers of protesters until a point has been reached where it now appears to be incredibly difficult for FIT to perform their function as effectively as perhaps they would wish.
In fact, if one accepts that the overt function of FIT was not their primary purpose at all then it is no exaggeration to say that FIT have been almost totally thwarted in their real purpose!

And that real purpose? Intimidation, pure and simple. Or “deterrence” if you prefer to use police terminology, which obviously has to be “acceptable” and “politically correct”.
I’ve referred to this aspect in the following terms on my fitwatch journal:

“Ever since the 2005 G8 protests in Scotland (where I witnessed at first hand some quite abominable behaviour on the part of the police Forward Intelligence Teams) it has become increasingly obvious to me that this tactic (of photographing all those attending lawful protests) is being used by the police principally as a means of psychological intimidation, and thus clearly serves a political rather than a legitimate “law & order” agenda.”

A “political” rather than a “legitimate law & order” agenda for, as I remarked earlier, it “raises the rather interesting question of why the State should deem it desirable to intimidate those simply seeking to “express or communicate political or other views”… unless it be for purely political purposes.

Just to clarify this, read now the words of Sgt Gerry Parker of Essex Police’s Mobile Support Division’s Special Operations on the deployment of FIT in his county:

“It mainly acts as a deterrent – we make sure people see what we are doing and, once they notice the camera, they tend to stop what they are up to.”
- from Essex Police’s journal “The Law“, May 2006

That was said in the context of community policing and the prevention of anti-social behaviour, but it does rather tend to give the game away.

And just to underline the point that overt police surveillance of protesters (and even potential protesters would you believe?) has nothing whatsoever to do with maintaining law and order but everything to do with intimidation and the compiling of dossiers on suspected dissidents (echoes of the KGB there mayhap?), let me refer you to an experience I had in Nottingham early last year, recounted here.

So, how do I arrive at the conclusion, given that the real function of FIT is to intimidate and thereby deter people from participating in legitimate protest, that the police FIT have been entirely thwarted in their aim?

Consider this (from the fitwatch blog)

FIT teams shut down on Gaza demo
Forward Intelligence Teams on the Gaza march on Saturday faced their toughest opposition to date, as people from the march enthusiastically joined Fitwatch activists in blocking police cameras.

As the FIT tried to film the march, they were soon challenged by Fitwatch activists. As the marchers saw what was happening more and more of them came over to support, and before long two FIT coppers and their photographer ended up stranded helplessly on a wall, surrounded by a sea of placards all being held at camera height. They were completely unable to operate, and when they missed getting footage of a group of Asian lads they were after, the anger showed. When, at the head of the march, another FIT team were frustrated by Fitwatchers, the police lost patience. They stopped what had been a very quiet, orderly demo, brought in the TSG, and sent snatch squads in for known Fitwatch activists, sparking a whole load of fuss and even more arrests.”

Clearly if this is the way protesters are beginning to react to the presence of FIT then self-evidently said protesters are no longer intimidated by said FIT.
Thus is would seem that by the police employing this incredibly nasty and intrusive form of surveillance in such a blatant (one might almost say arrogant) manner they have somewhat overreached themselves and scored an own goal.
More worrying for them though must be the recognition that, if protesters are no longer intimidated by one type of police unit, then they are less likely to be intimidated by others.

Its not difficult to draw some rather suggestive conclusions from this, and begin to visualise the way future protests may begin to shape up when confrontations are triggered by ill-judged police action.

Of course, those pesky cheeky little protesters can’t be allowed to get away with this, for its obviously undermining the authority of the police and there’s no way that can be allowed to happen else where the vision of a completely submissive population?

Photographers and the Media

Sack Parliament Protest, London, 2006

Sack Parliament Protest, London 2006

Now I’m not saying that the actions and successes of fitwatchers, and the fact that subsequently and thereby other photographers and photojournalists have also become alerted to FIT and… er… seen “fit” to start documenting their activities have had anything to do with it, but…

Today, 16th February 2009, yet another new piece of legislation comes into force… Section 75 of the Counter-Terrorism Act 2008. (Oh yes, I forgot to say, another new piece of “Anti-Terrorist” legislation… and we know all about them by now, don’t we?).

I have no intention of either describing or analysing this unbelievable addition to the police armoury. That’s already been done far more competently than I could in numerous places on the Web. As a good overview though one could do a lot worse than read the photojournalist Marc Valeé’s blog here and here.

Be it sufficient for me just to say how easy it would be for the police, in line with what appears to have become their accepted practise, to misuse this particular piece of legislation in order to prevent the photographic or video recording of virtually any incident that may occur at a protest or demonstration.
More specifically, any incident where police officers happen to overstep the mark somewhat.

There is of course the other whole issue of yet another curtailment of our freedoms, this time the freedom to take photographs in a public place, but it seems to me that the former is in fact the issue that should cause greater concern.
For in effect it gives the police virtual carte blanche to do what the hell they like with practically zero chance of such “incidents” ever coming before the public gaze via the media, mainstream or otherwise.

Much as we may despise the occasional unfettered excesses of a free Press, and much as we may castigate the mainstream Media for being overly biased in some situations, it still remains one of the bulwarks of an open society, exposing dishonesty and corruption in the political arena, and ensuring accountability by the agencies of the State.

And, following on from my earlier comment, the Press are all too frequently the only means available to the protester whereby police brutality and police disregard of the law can be brought before the public gaze. It can only ever be a totalitarian State that requires a gagged and blindfolded Press!

And by “Press” I embrace here not just the reporters and commentators of the mainstream Media, but also the army of freelance photojournalists and the newly-arrived but increasingly significant movement of “citizen journalism”. Significant because all too often they have begun to represent virtually the only source of “on the ground” news reportage of events that, for one reason or another, are disallowed by the agendas of the mainstream Media.
Although the Establishment has still to recognise the important role the citizen journalist fills, many of them nevertheless treat their role seriously and professionally, even equipping themselves with “proper” Press credentials and the like.

But all of that will be to no avail if the police are allowed to exercise in their usual fashion the invoking of this new piece of legislation.

Couple this development with incidents such as that which occurred with Indymedia (arguably the leading grassroots alternative news platform in this country) earlier in the year (see here and here) and it becomes very difficult to not form the impression that the State is now, in addition to stifling dissent, also seeking to stifle the free Press.

Would not this be totally consistent with the coming into being of a police state?

But before reaching a final determination on that question, there are still a few other random things that may be worth considering, some of which I shall touch upon incredibly briefly.

Last but not least…

Climate Camp 2006

Climate Camp, Yorkshire 2006

The proliferation of CCTV cameras I first wrote of this way back in May of 2007. Nothing as comprehensive as the work of a Nottingham-based photojournalist though, but a start.

The introduction of compulsory ID cards This seems to be one of those issues that’s on, then off, then on, then off again. But I think its a fairly safe prediction to say that at some stage these will become a reality in one form or another. Though they may never again be described as “compulsory” its likely that, for all intents and purposes, that’s precisely what they’ll be. Easy enough to achieve… by the simple expedient of making life in 21st century Britain virtually unliveable without them!

And there seems to be much else in the pipeline, from monitoring of users’ Web activity right through to recording movements of everyone in and out of the country.

It seems to me that we can forget the much-referred-to “1984″ of George Orwell. Think instead in terms of a nightmarish Kafkaesque scenario.

Someone please tell me we’re not more, far more, than halfway toward becoming a police state. Someone who isn’t a politician or a policeman. In other words, someone I can respect and trust.

return to index

A SHEFFIELD regeneration agency slammed for wasteful spending has almost run out of money two years early – leaving community projects with a sudden cash shortage and putting 120 jobs at risk. Burngreave New Deal for Communities has just £400,000 left of its £52 million Government-funded budget, supposed to last 10 years between 2001 and 2011.

TO MAKE POVERTY HISTORY WE NEED TO MAKE THE MIDDLE CLASS HISTORY

TO MAKE POVERTY HISTORY WE NEED TO MAKE THE MIDDLE CLASS HISTORY

Chief executive Ann Allen has told 17 community organisations it supports – which employ 100 people – there will be no more funding from April. Jobs are now at risk as the groups have only a month to find alternative cash. <!– @page { margin: 2cm } P { margin-bottom: 0.21cm } –>

Richard Belbin, voluntary sector branch secretary for trade union Unite, said it is feared 20 of the 35 staff directly employed by the agency also face redundancy.

He said: “Management has not done enough to minimise redundancies or the wider impact on the community.”

Well fuck me, no surprise there then is there, it has always been the fact That Burngreave New Deal for Communities has been shafting the community, there might be nice new gardens, hiding the poverty inside dose not ease that poverty.

Neither dose the wholesale demolition, of Woodside, years on the land stays empty, what an utter crass waist of our monies Woodside was, it was refurbished at cost of millions then demolished because the crime and other community problems was a blight, instead of working with the community Burngreave New Deal for Communities has worked against it.

It is fine for the likes Richard Belbin to bleat on how the “Management has not done enough to minimise redundancies or the wider impact on the community.” UNITE are the same union who have shafted Sacked Cowley Workers see

`http://projectsheffield.wordpress.com/2009/02/19/sacked-cowley-workers-call-mass-picket-monday/

The likes of Burngreave New Deal for Communities, and The Union Unite, have never been there for The Working Class and once again sadly we are proven right, the only good thing about this is that The Gravy Train has crashed, sadly those who will be impacted more are the people of Pitsmoor, as it should be known as not the coprate re branding of Burngreve, we can only hope we see the same anger as we have seen from the wildcat strikes, to the sacking of workers at Cowley, and that the nice new lamppost are placed to a proper use, for the hanging from of so called community leaders, and Union bureaucrats we can but dream:


See what happend here
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j93yN…layer_embedded

850 workers at the Cowley BMW plant were told they were being sacked immediately on arrival Monday 16 2 09 morning. The angry workers have pelted managers with fruit and accused union leaders of doing nothing.

There calling for:

A MASS PICKET OF THE COWLEY PLANT IN OXFORD AT 6am MONDAY MORNING GATE ONE.

This is just the fightback needed to follow on from the Lindsey wildcats.

It is long overdue that workers began to organise, the working class have allways rejected The far Left, snigerd at The Petty Bourgeois Anarchist:

So much for any union there for the boses not the workers, what a fucking disgrace The Left and The Petty Bourgeois Anarchist are, all our class are left with is the scum of The Far Right, we should never trust The Middle Class there fight is not in the intrest of our class and when the workers walked out in wildcat strikes, it was not a victory for The Working Class, but a compermise, true victory is the smashing of capitlism and the very system that keeps us as working class, until that day we should never rest..

If you can get down then do so, but as an act of unity leave your papers at home, likewise you smug patronising condensing tones, bring yourselfs and be ready to stand at the side of The working Class not act for them.

It is a 5.30am start for some of us, we meet and check our gear is working, power supply, torches, the mobiles in credit and charged, ropes checked and we are off, walking in the early rain of a Feb daybreak. All four are nervous, that’s a good indication of how serious we are taking this, the last time 2 of us were here was 1994, on a charge of theft by finding, back then it was not named urban exploration, it was just an interest in empty spaces, we should have left the carpet tiles, but lessons learned..

We arrive at Sheffield Crown Court, former Town Hall, our access made more mad due to overnight rain, we was not going to wait for another chance, it was now as we had waited 2 weeks for the snow to go, we are inside and head torches on.

We do a walk round, suss out the lay out of the building, we joke in our hyped up state, then gather back where we began, now for some images we slowly go through the former Crown Court, a lot has changed since this last exploration, junkies and other low life had begin to take this grand old lady apart, aided by the decay of time and Mother Earth.

Under foot is not of ease, we walk with care checking each other, The Clock Tower a temptation was there before us but sometimes you resist such delights and there might be another day, the rain had added to the post society feel of this place.

We do the cells, and we all find them to be more at ease than the rest of this place, back up to our access point and exit, it is now 9am, 1 hour and half since we got in, we go for coffee and talk about our little exploration, three years in the waiting for this one and we had done it.

Thanks to friends in Sheffield, other urban exploration people for the info advice and support and we all know we must have been a pain last few weeks, but seeing the images we hope you understand the addiction and need in all of this.

…”The anarchist movement here is suddenly in better shape than seemed likely a few months ago- there is a goodwill towards working together manifested in the hard work towards the June conference. Fun has reappeared with pub crawls, speed dating, red and black socials and zombie walks.”…

That will be those pissed up deluded fools from London Class War, and since when did they or the The rest of The Petty Bourgeois Anarchist do anything other than proclaim to be working class. They have never acted for The Working Class, is it not a shame the voice of our class is left to the scum of the far right?

On Mon 16 2 09 and this one is really is a fucking disgrace. UNITE union officials at Cowley were told of today’s 850 redundancies before Christmas but agreed with management not to tell their members!!! UNITE is run by  quarrelling scuzzbags WOODLEY and SIMPSON who talk tough but act weak.

Video of stormy union meeting as BMW Mini workers hear about redundancy

You do have to ask what the point of the continued existence of unions is when they don’t lift a finger but connive with bosses to bring in credit crunch sackings. Meanwhile it was nothing more than Media stunt for wannabe rebels, outside New Scotland Yard.

Have we not told you before we are not going towards a police state,

http://politics.guardian.co.uk/homea…644201,00.html

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main…portaltop.html

erm we are already there, here what is planned in the next few months

National Identity Card Act

Requirements to report changes of address, handing over biometric details, system of fines for non-compliance and incorrect data. Holding an ID card or registering onto the National ID register could be made a requirement of obtaining any other document.

Even more anti-terror bollocks

Potential Ban on Photography under new Terrorism Legislation (police will interpret whether people have good reason, so expect widespread abuse. Snatch film and camera now ask questions later). So much for a free press providing a watchful eye on the police.

Borders Citizenship and Immigration Bill

New Customs and Exercises officials with powers of arrest and search etc., reporting directly to the Home Office and Secretary of state (politically controlled police force) Citizens

Coroners and Justice Bill

Data Sharing Orders created under clause 152 allowing government departments to circumnavigate data protection act and request any data about you from any other governmental department for any purpose. E.g. medical records sent to benefits offices to check up on people claiming incapacity.

Communications Bill

Plans to retain all our communications data as part of the Interception Modernization Program (IMP)

Never even mind the Criminal Justice Act, Serious Organized Crime Act, and all the existing Anti-Terror legislation.

Ian Bone and his drunken mates, talk of a Anarchist Movement, how the next few weeks must our time, in there drunken utopia, The dystopia of the working class must be an aspiration, all our class have to look foreword to is the Death of a Wannabe someone, we could only but dream about making The Middle Class History, until then we can only hope the so called unity Ian Bone talks about becomes a reality, but like all bullshit it will never happen.

200 or so photographers turn up.

200 or so photographers turn up.

They'll not nick him today, surely?

They’ll not nick him today, surely?

Micky Mouse cameras for a Micky Mouse law.

Micky Mouse cameras for a Micky Mouse law.


Because snuck in today under the usual cover of the war against terror came Section 76 of the Counter-Terrorism Act 2008.

This criminalises anyone ‘eliciting, publishing or communicating information on members of the armed forces, intelligence services and police officers which is “likely to be useful to a person committing or preparing an act of terrorism”.

But given the police’s regular and blatant misuse of other laws such as Section 44 of the existing Terrorism Act and Section 1 of PACE, photographers feel it’s a racing certainty that it’ll get used to suppress evidence the police don’t want used against them.

“I can see it now”, wrote photographer Marc Vallee in Thursday’s Guardian ( http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2009/feb/11/police-terrorism-photography-liberty-central) “If you don’t stop taking pictures of me hitting this protester on the head, I’m going to nick you under section 76 of the Counter-Terrorism Act 2008.”

At least three legal cases are currently pending relating to such police over-exuberance at last year’s Climate Camp in Kingsnorth, Kent. Almost two thousand cops from 26 forces assembled at a cost of over 6 million quid and – having first harassed and delayed the press – chose to lay in on a regular basis on campers with steel batons.

Sadly for them these attacks were nevertheless filmed and photographed and this evidence stands ready to disprove the lies they make in justification for that behaviour. Imagine how much easier life will be for them in future if those newsgatherers can be taken away from the scene under threat of a ten year stretch.

High up behind the mirrored windows of New Scotland Yard the Forward Intelligence Team will have been at work photographing the photographers for their records.

And they’ll have noticed something new – as well as the usual twenty or so photographers they always target for “reporting the news the wrong way” there were a couple of hundred new faces: working news photographers who’ve had it up to the back teeth with being pushed around illegally on threat (and sometimes the reality) of arrest.

It’s no longer just an activist minority that sees through this sham of repression presented almost as a health and safety issue (keeping us safe from the bad men). Political police intrusion is becoming ever more invasive, is affecting all our lives and fucking up the freedoms we’re supposed to believe are (were?) our right.

This new law is just one more subtle tool in the armoury of public repression and this extraordinary turnout by what is normally an apathetic and politically careless bunch of photographers sends a clear signal that the worm is finally turning.

Know any One?
Know any One?

Climate Camp 2007
Climate Camp 2007

Police RIOT porn
Police RIOT porn

To mark the enactment of the amendment to Section 58 of the Terrorist Act 2000 making it an offence, punishable by up to ten years imprisonment, to publish or elicit information about police officers, Fitwatch have produced a new spotter card.

The above people are dangerous troublemakers. They are extremists who will stop at nothing to stifle protest and dissent in this country. If you see these people take appropriate cautionary measures, such as masking up, and take action to stop them repressing your right to protest.

If you have any information on any of the above suspects (or any other extremists we might be interested in monitoring), please email  defycops@yahoo.co.uk

http://www.fitwatch.blogspot.com

Video:  http://www.archive.org/details/scotyard16-2-09

The NUJ fears that the law will be used to stop news photographers doing legitimate work.″

More:
http://www.nuj.org.uk/innerPagenuj.html?docid=1116

RELATED LINKS
» ‘I’m a Photographer …not a Terrorist’
» Counter Terrorism Act 2008
» Documenting dissent is under attack
» Photographers fear they are target of new terror law
» UK Photographers Rights
» Photographers Rights and Rights On Arrest

PRESS C0VERAGE
» BBC
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Thorpe Marsh Power Station closed in 1994. Since then it has gradually been demollished. Well, everything except the cooling towers – 6 of them. The are also two biggish and several small buildings.

There are various plans for the site – including a nature reserve, and a landfill site (fiercely objected to by local residents). In reality, nothing will probably happen. The towers still survive because it is feared that any explosion caused would rupture the banks of the nearby canal.

The station has been closed since 1994 and the 45 acres (18 ha) site was accquired by Able UK in 1995.[2] Much of the station has been demolished and now only its six cooling towers (each 340 ft (100 m) high and 260 ft (79 m) in diameter at the base), two ash slurry hoppers, railway sidings and the station’s large adjacent electricity switching station still remain. The switching station was nearly flooded during the 2007 Yorkshire flood, which would have knocked the grid out according to news reports. The power station featured in the final episode of the 1999 ITV drama, The Last Train.

More from others

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past explorations

THE massive aid convoy which left for Gaza at the weekend speaks volumes for the decency and compassion of the ordinary British people.

It included a dozen ambulances, a fire engine, a total of 110 vehicles and £1 million worth of aid.

The sheer scale of the aid mission, which was organised in less than four weeks, stands in stark contrast to the disgraceful heedlessness of the British Establishment.

It puts to shame the government’s blatant collaboration with the Israeli murderers whose vicious attack on the people of Gaza resulted in the deaths of 1,300 Gazans in collective punishment for a series of rocket attacks that cost the lives of less than a score of Israelis over a period of some years.

The silence of Gordon Brown over the Israeli atrocity and his feeble attempts to equate the two sides in the course of Israel’s state terrorist attack on the comparatively defenceless people of Gaza left a bad taste in the mouth and besmirched any reputation (admittedly small) that Britain might have left in the region.

The convoy will go a long way towards conveying to Gazans that the government’s bloodstained and bloody-minded attitude is not shared by us all.

However, it may take more than that to wipe out the inaction of Middle East peace envoy Tony Blair.

We are told that Mr Blair holds court at the American Colony hotel in east Jerusalem. He is hiring an entire floor of the hotel at a cost of about £700,000 a year.

But we are also told that this so-called peace envoy has not even set foot in Gaza since his appointment.

And, to cap it all, he was apparently on holiday when the assault on Gaza was at its height. A more pointed insult to the Palestinians is hard to imagine.

The convoy also puts in perspective the refusal by certain pro-Israeli BBC executives to screen the appeal for aid for the people of Gaza.

BBC broadcast or no, the convoy was raised, staffed and supplied in just four weeks, proving that the Israel lobby cannot stifle the outrage felt by Britain’s people at the Gaza atrocity, an outrage that was markedly sharpened by the accurate perception that the assault was timed, not in response to unbearable provocation, but as an aid to the election campaign of pro-war Israeli parties.

However, the machinations of the pro-Israel lobby appear not to stop there.

The stunt, for it can only be described as such, of the police intercepting several vehicles on the M65 on their way to join the convoy, as a part of an operation under the much-abused anti-terror laws, was a clear and unprincipled attempt to discredit the convoy.

Nine people were detained, but six of them were released almost immediately without charge.

Of the three still detained, it is claimed that they had been under observation for some time.

If that is the case, why wait to arrest them until the police had to close a motorway to do so?

And, if they are so dangerous, why is it that, according to the authorities, they didn’t even bother using armed police?

Again, according to the authorities, they are not suspected of any terrorist activity in Britain.

We are told that the interception was part of an “intelligence-led” anti-terror operation.

So, one might recall, was the gunning down of innocent electrician Jean Charles de Menezes.

Whatever the outcome of this current “anti-terror” action, there are many questions regarding its timing and its political motivation that cry out for answers from those responsible.

 

February 15, 2009

Another Home Office power-grab?

Posted by projectsheffield under Uncategorized
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This bill would create customs officials more powerful than the police – and they would be under direct political control

Maybe you missed it. This week, moved from its original appointed date, the Lords held the second reading of what would be the sixth immigration act in a decade: the borders, citizenship and immigration bill. You might well have heard of some of the proposals involved, because the government has made a song and dance about the fatuous concept of making new citizens earn their naturalisation by doing officially approved community activities.

What almost nobody has noticed, and which was not made public until the bill was printed, is that the Home Office is to be enabled to appoint a new class of officials, with powers greater than the police, who are directly under political control. Can that be right? After all, didn’t Jack Straw say in relation to the Damian Green affair:

We are not in a police state. A police state would be where ministers were directing a police operation.

It has been made clear time and again – or at least whenever any embarrassing errors are made – that the home secretary does not control police forces. HM Revenue & Customs are insulated from political intervention in the exercise of its powers by being a non-ministerial department. It is accepted that they should not be used in pursuit of political policy. And yet …

Part I of the new bill sets out how the home secretary may appoint an immigration officer or any other Home Office official as “a general customs officer”, without revenue collection functions, but with all the powers of one of Her Majesty’s customs officers, and (cl 5):

A general customs official must comply with the directions of the Secretary of State in the exercise of functions in relation to a general customs matter.

Customs officers have enormous powers. They can arrest people, search and seize property on suspicion, and recently acquired the capacity to take fingerprints and DNA. They can (like police) seize cash under the Proceeds of Crime Act 2002, and demand the owner prove it was acquired lawfully. They have surveillance powers from the Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act 2000, and data-acquisition and sharing powers under the Identity Cards Act 2006, UK Borders Act 2007, and Serious Crime Act 2007. They have resort to “writs of assistance“, an ancient form of arbitrary search specifically outlawed in the US constitution. And under the Finance Act 2008, schedule 36, there are new information gathering powers, yet to be activated, which arguably broaden and build upon even that.

If the home secretary had openly resolved to create a new national police force – call it the national identity police – equipped with the same powers as the Dorset constabulary, say, but reporting directly to her and used for the enforcement of departmental policy there would be, if not public outrage, certainly public interest. I doubt the existing police would be pleased to be so usurped.

But what’s being done here, ostensibly in order to create a “combined border force”, is actually more dangerous than that. It’s a super-powered, semi-secret police, calculated partake of the renowned charm of the immigration service. There’s no provision for general customs officials to be identified or even distinguished from other Home Office officials, nor do they appear to have any specific duties associated with their powers, except to obey the secretary of state.

We’re not living in a police state. But by Jack Straw’s definition, we might soon be living in a general customs official state.

That they’re not HMRC officers, but Immigration Service and other Home Office officials designated by the Home Secretary to assume the powers of HMRC officers.

The Bill: http://www.publications.parliament.u…4.html#j003bor

House of Lords Explanatory Notes to the Bill

Essentially what they’re doing is reallocating some of the non-revenue customs functions of the HMRC to the new UK Border Agency (which is an Executive Agency of the Home Office rather than the Treasury) and this Bill enables the UKBA to continue to use HMRC powers in that role.

Of itself, that may not be such a problem, other than the Home Office is perhaps more easily swayed by political considerations than the Treasury. The Bill, in subsection 3 (4) has the following protective provision

Quote:
(4) If a function within subsection (2) is exercisable—

(a) in relation to a general customs matter, and
(b) in relation to any other matter,

the function is exercisable by a general customs official in relation to the general customs matter only.

There’s a list of what may be considered a general customs matter referred to elsewhere.

However, what is of greater concern to me, and is not mentioned in the article is Section 2.

Quote:
2 Power of Secretary of State to modify functions

(1) The Secretary of State may by order—

(a) amend section 1(2) (matters that are general customs matters) so as to
add, modify or remove a matter;

(b) amend that section so as to exclude its application in relation to a function of the Commissioners for Her Majesty’s Revenue and Customs or to modify or remove a reference to a function previously so excluded;

(c) make provision for that section to apply in relation to a function
conferred on the Commissioners by an enactment passed or made after
the end of the session in which this Act is passed;

(d) modify any enactment (including an enactment passed or made after
the passing of this Act) in consequence of provision made under any of
paragraphs (a) to (c).

As far as I can tell, this allows the Home Secretary to decide by order that any matter may be included as a ‘general customs function’ The Bill carefully defines what a ‘general customs function’ is (thereby limiting the application of the powers of these Home Office officials) and then allows that definition to be changed at will – littering in the street?

Furthermore, my reading of this is that the Home Secretary is able to make an amendment by order (Statutory Instrument presumably) to any piece of legislation!

Didn’t we have this battle over the Legislative and Regulatory Reform Bill a couple of years back?

 

February 13, 2009

BAIL OUT THE BANKS or END CHILD POVERTY – You Decide…

Posted by projectsheffield under Uncategorized | Tags: , , |
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Our mate Warren Draper has set up a website for all things to do with the LEVELLERS (not the band!) and to suppot the forthcoming anniversaries of  the BURFORD and  BISHOPSGATE mutinies. Be nice to restore the Leveller tradition of the London Mob sporting the sea-green colours – maybe April 1st?

Here gather the ghosts of ‘liberty’, ‘equality’ and ‘justice’; those immortal phantoms which haunt whomsoever would betray kith, kin or society just to line their own pockets. Here is the icy breath of fate that the rich feel on the back of their bloated necks – a constant reminder that the great Levelling was not defeated, merely postponed.

“‘The past is not dead, it is living in us, and will be alive in the future which we are now helping to make.’”
William Morris

We’ve been handing out the following flyer outside some of the banks that recieved a share of the government’s 500 billion pound bail-out scheme. 

small_bank_child2

If you can’t read the image on your PC the text says…

BAIL OUT THE BANKS? or END CHILD POVERTY? – The choice is YOURS!

Dear friend,

We’ve passed on this leaflet because we’ve noticed that you’re about to go into one of the banks that received a share of the 500 billion pounds of public money which the government used to bail them out of their own greedy mess.

According to the Joseph Rowntree Trust just one hundredth of the bank-bail-out money, five billion pounds, could end child poverty in the UK by 2020. A child’s socio-economic status (the wealth and class of their family) is still the best predictor of how that child will fare at school and throughout the rest of their life, which means ending child poverty is the only way to ensure equality and social justice for all.

The banks – our banks – will give out more than 5 billion in staff bonuses alone. May we respectfully ask that you raise this issue with your bank.

And if you are overdrawn at this bank and the bank-charges are making it difficult for you to pay the rent or the really important bills, did you know that you could close down the bank account, open a new one and make an offer to repay at an amount you can actually afford?

Yours truly,

The Children Yet to Come

If you’d like a pdf of the flyer to hand out at your local banks email us at the.seagreens@gmail.com

A big ‘Thank You’ to Stuffit for the ‘handbill’ idea and for the fonts

http://seagreensociety.wordpress.com/

 

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