Government of the Dead: Sack Parliament

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Saturday 23 May 2009: The Government of the Dead returned to the streets of London yet again, this time to tell all the members of parliament caught in up in the expenses scandal that “All of them must go!”, a slogan taken from the recent Argentinian and Icelandic movements that removed their own governments.


The Guy Fawkes Revenge flash mob was thwarted though, as Britain’s MPs were on a week long holiday. Fireworks were set off at the entrance of parliament and University of East London Professor Chris Knight attmepted to walk into parliament, but was turned away by police.


The Government of the Dead have promised to return on Monday 1 June, when parliament reconvenes.

Related Links

Ian Tomlinson Memorial March

Global Economic Meltdown

Hang A Banker

All material on this blog – stills, video and print – is (c) Jason N. Parkinson 2009. All Rights Reserved.

Please contact the AUTHOR for access to any material and the extensive five-year video archive.

jasonnparkinson@gmail.com

Tamil Protests: Responding to Police Comments

Following my blog and video rush of the Tamil protest on Monday 11 May I find a fellow blogger and police officer who was involved in the operation to clear the blocked streets around parliament has responded to my post.

Metcountymounty said…
“In your vast experience, how would you have got the demonstrators to move? I’d love to hear your proposal for moving a group of people without any force when they have stated that because of failed media interest at peaceful protests that they will absolutely not move.”
Removal of people should be done with four officers to each person, one holding each limb and carefully remove them to an area – kind of like this (see still below), the first person I saw grabbed that day – where they are unable to return to blocking the street, such as a “kettle, excuse me “containment area”, or – as has become popular these days, in scenes reminiscent of 1980s Northern Ireland – a caged protest area.


Some may argue this would take too long, but as you and I were there that day, we both know the TSG response of pushing people back, crushing them, hitting them, kicking them and injuring them, did not open the road any faster. I saw no traffic passing there till around 8pm.

Everyone understands the police have a job to do, and it is a very difficult job, often facing danger, abuse and violence, but this street clearing operation did nothing but cause chaos and unneccessary injury to the protestors and police officers alike. The police van crushing the officer and his arrestee in this film (2.46min in) is a clear example of the loss of control of the situation.

Metcountymounty said…

“I’m not condoning the comments of some of the officers…”

The comments made by police officers to myself and others, including the threats of arrest and removals, often forcibly, for trying to do our job only depict the deterioration of relations between the press and the police, and unfortunately shows the blatant hatred from certain officers to the press.

The deteriorating press/police relations were highlighted at the recent NUJ photographers conference with special guest Commander Bob Broadhurst, who came under fire from scores of angry journalists and photographers because of their treatment while working. And not just at public order situations, even at a wedding, or being interviewed by international magazines.Broadhurst argued that if you are press covering a blocked street, if you are in the street you are the same as the protestors and liable to the same treatment. This arguement is absolutely ridiculous. A member of the press who covers this work knows how to get in and get out with no disruption to the police operation, like we all witnessed at the recent Brighton anti-militarist demonstration, but when the police operation’s main ploy seems to be to crush everything in front of them, that is when things go awry and protestors, press and police alike get hurt.

On Monday 11 May the London Ambulance Service recorded 22 patients at the scene, six were hospitalised with minor injuries. Two police officers were reported with minor injuries by Scotland Yard press office.

On Monday 18 May there were 16 patients at the scene, eight of whom required hospital treatment. According to the BBC 25 officers were injured that night, three were hospitalised.

Metcountymounty said…“Parliament square is an arterial route, not just for normal road users but for all the emergency services especially police and ambulance given the proximity to St Thomas’ A&E. The knock on of closing it gridlocks all the other main routes and adds minutes to response times if it is unplanned and spontaneous which puts lives at risk.

In that case I take it there will be a ban on all of the 4000 events in London every year, as all cause distruption to the arterial routes. So no more war memorials, no more London Marathon, no more Formula One races around the city, or Olympic Torches that you cannot get near due to the wall of TSG officers needed to protect it from Tibetan protestors.

Yes, these events are planned for, spontaneous road blockades are in a totally different spectrum, but that is why we have emergency planning departments in the Government, isn’t it.

The simple fact of the matter that we must never forget is the UK government, the UN and the international community must bare the brunt of the London unrest, and the £8 million cost to policing, because of their failure to act rapidly on the Tamil situation. The next question to ask must be why was there no international response.

I guess that question will be answered soon enough, but by then it will be too late for the Tamils, the dead and the displaced, which has already been labelled the worst man-made humanitarian crisis this century.

All material on this blog – stills, video and print – is (c) Jason N. Parkinson 2009. All Rights Reserved.

Please contact the AUTHOR for access to any material and the extensive five-year video archive.

jasonnparkinson@gmail.com

>Police Forcibly Detain Press Photographer

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Video Rush: Police Forcibly Detain Press Photographer

Monday 18 May 2009 – 8.20pm: While covering the London Tamil protest an NUJ press photographer was violently grabbed by TSG police officers and detained. Although he asked why he was “being arrested” he received no answer.

He was detained in a police van, questioned by police and name-checked on the Police National Computer system. Other NUJ photographers and journalists negotigated his release. NUJ General Secretary spoke to an inspector at the scene via cell phone and also demanded the release of Tallis.

Marc Vallée Photos

Jonathan Warren Photos

All material on this blog – stills, video and print – is (c) Jason N. Parkinson 2009. All Rights Reserved.

Please contact the AUTHOR for access to any material and the extensive five-year video archive.

jasonnparkinson@gmail.com

Met Commander Broadhurst Denies Journalist Surveillance

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London Tamil Protest Policing Questioned

Monday 11 May 2009: Following the weekend of constant bombing by the Sri Lankan military of the Mullaivaikal “safe zone”, London Tamil protestors took to blocking the streets around Parliament for a forth time, in a desperate attempt to highlight the plight of Tamil people.

This latest protest follows months of demonstrations and hunger strikes. The Tamil protest marches were some of the largest mobilisations London has seen since the February 2003 anti-war march, with numbers massing over 200,000.


Tamil websites reported that the weekend bombing had killed more than 3000 people and another 25,000 were displaced. The Tamil news outlets and websites have also accused the Sri Lankan military of using cluster bombs, chemical weapons and have denounced the refugee camps as concentration camps. Despite a total media blackout by the Sri Lankan government video footage has come out to show what is happening in the area of Vanni (WARNING: These films are of a highly disturbing nature).


Just after 2pm the TSG and City police massed to clear the streets. What ensued, as this film will show, was total chaos. The NUJ hit out at police tactics against the press trying to document the protest. As I write this, there have so far been three complaints of assault, two occasions of journalists being threatened with arrest and spurious comments by officers on two occasions, calling members of the press “parasites”.


According to the press office at New Scotland Yard today, there were 45 arrests and two officers suffered minor injuries. The press spokesperson said no protestor injuries were “flagged up”.


This film tells a very different story, showing clearly people being pulled from the protest unconscious and requiring immediate medical assistance. There are still unconfirmed reports of one man suffering a broken leg, but this could not be clarified today as the London Ambulance press office was closed.


From this journalist’s point-of-view, and as someone who has spent most of his street work for the last five years covering protest, the tactics used by the TSG on Monday did nothing but cause chaos and unnecessary injury to otherwise peaceful law-abiding, taxpaying, voting UK citizens.

To anyone who looks at what is going on in Sri Lanka can see exactly why these people are so desperate and feel the need to halt traffic in order to get the media to look into their story. The simple truth, the January protest being the perfect example, until the Tamils started blocking roads no one other than Tamil TV were interested in their mass protests.

It is understandable that the police needed to open the road back up, but from my experience this was not the way to do it.

The TSG followed their usual battle plan, if its in front of you hit it with force, crush them and be damned. But when you have men and women, both young and old, children and babies sat on the road behind you, the only outcome is severe injuries and collapsed victims from being crushed within an inch of their lives.


All material on this blog – stills, video and print – is (c) Jason N. Parkinson 2009. All Rights Reserved.

Please contact the AUTHOR for access to any material and the extensive five-year video archive.

jasonnparkinson@gmail.com

Video Rush: Brighton Mayday Mayday

Monday 4 May 2009: A street party and protest was called in the seaside resort of Brighton by anti-militarist campaign group Smash EDO. EDO/ITT builds bomb release mechanisms for the US, UK and Israeli military. The campaign last year saw several large protests calling to shut the factory and end weapons manufacturing in the city.

 

More recently, in January this year several campaigners were arrested after breaking in and decommissioned the factory, causing £300,000 worth of damage to computers and machinery. The decommissioners claimed they were justified in their actions because the Israeli invasion of Gaza, which was occurring at the time, was a greater crime than their own criminal damage.


This year’s protest, the largest demonstration yet, saw some 1,500 protestors take to the streets to target all businesses that profit, invest or assist in the weapons factory day-to-day running. But when a McDonald’s fast food outlet was targeted, riot police moved in and the demonstration deteriorated into an afternoon of clashes with the authorities. McDonald’s is listed at owning 61,500 shares in the ITT corporation.

Since the protest and street party, although there was little evidence of a street party, some protestors have complained of police using excessive force and some officers not having their identifiable ID numbers visible. Other protestors have complained that some protestors were not interested in a peaceful march or the campaign, but were only intent on a street brawl with the police. That said, there is a lot of resentment from protestors to the UK police, especially the London Metropolitan police, since the G20 protests in London.

From a press angle, it was interesting to see the police leaving the press to do their jobs and respect the fact we do have some experience in these matters and know how to work around them, not get in the way and get on with the job at hand. Some protestors – from my personal experience the younger, less experienced ones – took it upon themselves to attack the press on several occassions, myself included. But when a spotty masked-up 16-year-old attempts to rush an experienced riot cameraman, the outcome can only be described as comical.

1024X576 25fps footage © Jason N. Parkinson

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>Film: Global Economic Meltdown

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Film: Global Economic Meltdown

1 April 2009 – Financial Fools Day: As the 29 G20 leaders gathered in London, thousands came out on to the streets of the financial district to protest a wide range of issues from climate change to the failing capitalist system and tax payers bailout of the international banking system.

10,500 police were drafted in, at an estimated cost of £10 million, to police the protests and protect the banking institutions from what the police deemed “the summer of rage”. The end product was two police officers suspended, scores injured and hospitalised and one man dead after being attacked by an unidentified member of the TSG (Territorial Support Group) riot squad.


This film is just one journalist’s experiences and observations from the days of protest.


Music in the film comes from my good friend Rikki Blue, the fantastic I.C.H, and one of my old favourites, Senser, they are also on Myspace.

All material on this blog – stills, video and print – is (c) Jason N. Parkinson 2009. All Rights Reserved.

Please contact the AUTHOR for access to any material and the extensive five-year video archive.

jasonnparkinson@gmail.com