<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" standalone="yes"?><oembed><version><![CDATA[1.0]]></version><provider_name><![CDATA[CO-OP NEWS]]></provider_name><provider_url><![CDATA[https://cooptv.wordpress.com]]></provider_url><author_name><![CDATA[Coop Anti-War Cafe Berlin]]></author_name><author_url><![CDATA[https://cooptv.wordpress.com/author/zeitgeistmusic/]]></author_url><title><![CDATA[British government seeks new powers to ban&nbsp;demonstrations]]></title><type><![CDATA[link]]></type><html><![CDATA[<p>In the aftermath of last week’s Trades Union Congress demonstration  in London, when around 500,000 people marched in opposition to the  Conservative/Liberal-Democrat government’s £85 billion austerity and  cuts package, the British government has launched a new campaign to  curtail the right to protest.</p>
<p>Elementary rights are being  threatened on the basis of incidents of vandalism and disorder, which  took place away from the demonstration—mainly at venues associated with  wealth and privilege, including the Ritz Hotel, banks and high street  shops.</p>
<p>On Monday, Conservative Home Secretary Theresa May  announced in an emergency House of Commons briefing that plans were  being urgently considered, including giving the police new powers to  issue “banning orders” to prevent people from attending rallies and  marches. Other measures to be considered include giving the police  further stop-and-search powers, forcing those attending protests to  remove face-scarves, masks and balaclavas. Outlining the proposals, May  said, “If the police need more help to do their work, I will not  hesitate in granting it to them”.</p>
<p>The opposition Labour Party  gave its support for such a crackdown. Shadow Home Secretary Yvette  Cooper said, “These incidents have been increasing every time there is a  crowd event and frankly people are fed up of it”.</p>
<p>Labour MP  Keith Vaz called for “bold and radical” measures to be introduced,  stating, “We simply cannot go on like this&#8230;. It is for the police to  tell us what needs to be done”.</p>
<p>Police powers are set to be  extended as early as next month in time for the Royal wedding in London.  Metropolitan Police Assistant Commissioner Lynne Owens told the BBC  that these powers could be granted under Section 47a of the Terrorism  Act 2000—directly linking domestic political protest with terrorism.</p>
<p>Despite  the saturation media coverage given to these episodes, the most violent  confrontations were, in fact, instigated by the police, who began  kettling several thousand peaceful protesters who had gathered in  Trafalgar Square.</p>
<p>Of the 201 people who were arrested on  Saturday, 149 people have been charged with offences so far. The vast  majority of these (138) were involved in a peaceful occupation of the  luxury Fortnum &amp; Mason store. The 138 have been charged with  aggravated trespass. The brutal treatment meted out by the police was  described in Wednesday’s <em>Guardian</em> by one of those arrested. She described how “we were dragged away, arrested and taken to police stations around London”.</p>
<p>One of the protesters incarcerated was 15 years old.</p>
<p>“That  protester, like me and many others, was locked in a cell for nearly 24  hours on the basis of evidence that was never presented to  solicitors—solicitors who were not contacted until the next morning. In  the early hours of the morning we were unexpectedly woken up and told to  take off our clothes. When we asked why, we were simply told that the  police had the right to seize our clothes and would be doing so”.</p>
<p>“Despite  the fact that not a single protester was charged with a violent  offence, or damage to property”, the police also took their mobile  phones, along with DNA samples and fingerprints, she said.</p>
<p>Matt  Foot, a criminal defence solicitor, commented, “It is unprecedented to  arrest so many people for simply protesting peacefully in a building.  And then it is intimidating to keep peaceful protesters for so long at  the police station and then charge them so quickly without reviewing the  evidence first”.</p>
<p>The mass arrest at Fortnum &amp; Mason  contrasts sharply with the police treatment of those actually involved  in the most serious disturbances, with only 11 people being charged.</p>
<p>Footage  of Saturday’s disorder from official news sources including the BBC, as  well as video shot by individuals, shows squads of riot police just  stood around whilst masked “anarchists” smashed windows and vandalised  shop fronts. The <em>Daily Telegraph</em> was moved to ask, “Were enough  arrests made? There are reports of troublemakers being wrestled to the  ground by police, but then allowed to walk away—shouldn’t they instead  have been removed from the scene?”</p>
<p>In the days leading up to the  protest, it was widely publicised that the police had acquired  “intelligence” about what was being planned by various “anarchist”  groups at the demonstration. Former Metropolitan Police chief of  anti-terrorism Andy Hayman spoke of “strong intelligence that extremist  groups are planning illegal acts of violence at the TUC march and rally  on Saturday with the sole aim of disrupting a well-intended peaceful  protest”. He then added, “It is curious that such a variety of sources  seem to be pointing towards an unlawful protest and <em>yet the police do not appear to be acting on the information</em>, preferring to deal with things on the day” [emphasis added].</p>
<p>Following  the march, Brian Paddick, a former deputy assistant commissioner of the  Metropolitan Police, said of the protest in Trafalgar Square, “Again  that was flagged up days before that they wanted to occupy Trafalgar  Square. There was a lot more I think they [the police] could have done”.</p>
<p>How can the supposed police “failures” be explained?</p>
<p>The  media speaks routinely of a number of anarchist and anarcho-syndicalist  groups as the “Black Bloc”, mainly responsible for the violence that  ensued. But the term merely refers to the black clothing they wear,  along with face masks, and does not denote a particularly well-organised  or cohesive movement.</p>
<p>These disparate groups, in fact, are an  ideal vehicle for the police to either send in infiltrators, or set up  themselves and utilise for the purpose of staging provocations. With the  police so clearly standing by, the most reasonable conclusion that can  be drawn is that a substantial number of those involved in the vandalism  and disorder were police officers and undercover operatives, carrying  out or helping organise pre-arranged set-piece disturbances in the most  high-profile locations in the capital.</p>
<p>It is well documented that  the British intelligence services and police carry out widespread  surveillance and infiltration of many political groups, including direct  action, anarchist and environmental organisations. In March 2010, it  was revealed that a secret police operative spent years spying on the  Socialist Party of England and Wales’s predecessor organisation, the  Militant group, and its youth organisation, Youth Against Racism in  Europe, in the mid-1990s.</p>
<p>The recent case of former police  officer Mark Kennedy revealed the wide extent of such police operations.  Until his cover was blown last year, Kennedy had, under the identity of  “Mark Stone”, been an undercover agent within the environmental  movement since 2003. He operated not just in the UK but throughout  Europe, visiting 22 countries in an operation costing £250,000 a year,  including his £50,000 salary. According to a <em>Guardian</em> investigation, Kennedy “took part in almost every major environmental  protest in the UK from 2003, and also infiltrated groups of  anti-racists, anarchists and animal rights protesters”.</p>
<p>Kennedy  was intimately involved in organising, directing campaigns and financing  protests, including a planned protest at Ratcliffe-on-Soar power  station in Nottingham, which subsequently led to a mass arrest of  activists.</p>
<p>The events in London must be seen in this context.  Considering the government’s immediate moves to hand the police more  powers and to curtail democratic rights yet further, one must ask the  question, “<em>Cui bono”</em>—who benefits?</p>
<p><em>The author also recommends:</em></p>
<p><a href="http://www.wsws.org/articles/2007/sep2007/mont-s04.shtml">Canada: Police agent-provocateurs unmasked at Montebello summit protests</a><br />
[4 September 2007]</p>
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<p><a href="http://www.wsws.org/articles/2011/apr2011/demo-a01.shtml" rel="nofollow">http://www.wsws.org/articles/2011/apr2011/demo-a01.shtml</a></p>
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