Posts Tagged ‘london’
Gaza and Zionist Protestors Clash
Thursday 15 November 2012: Clashes broke out between pro-Palestinian protestors, Zionist protestors and police outside the Israeli embassy in London. Anger erupted as the bombing of Gaza continued, leaving 18 people dead and hundreds injured.
Report Digital Rushes
Footage is available from reportdigital.co.uk
© Jason N. Parkinson/reportdigital.co.uk
2009 London G20 Summit

1 April 2009 saw the G20 summit land in London. Tens of thousands protested economic and environmental issues as the first bite of the global banking crisis appeared in the UK.
By the end of the first day one man, newspaper seller Ian Tomlinson, was dead after being struck down by a riot police officer. Footage shot by this journalist went on to expose the use of plain clothes police officers deployed inside the demonstration.
ReportDigital has uploaded nine video rushes from the two days of protest, with some previously unpublished footage.
Report Digital Rushes
Bank of England Clashes - Threadneedle Street Clashes 1 - Threadneedle Street Clashes 2 - Baton Charges 1 - Baton Charge 2 - Bank kettle and Injuries - Police Threaten to Arrest Press - Plain Clothes Police & Clashes - Earl Street Squat Raid
G20 News Reports
Police Baton Charge Journalists - Police Threaten Press With Arrest - Police Manhandle Protestors To Ground - Plain Clothes Police With Batons at Protest
Independent Film
Footage is available from reportdigital.co.uk
© Jason N. Parkinson/reportdigital.co.uk
Report Digital Week Ending 06/04/2012
This week’s Report Digital weekly covers the last two weeks due to workloads. The online video library is now up and running. Please contact John Harris to gain your username and password.
The 9 December 2010 Student Fees protest have been added to the library. On 26 March 2012 injured student protestor Alfie Meadows faced trial for violent Disorder at Kingston Crown Court. Meadows underwent emergency brain surgery after being struck no the head with police baton during the 2010 protest.
In March London pollution was recorded hitting high levels and a smog cloud was visible across London.
In preparation for the Olympics, on 29 March 2012 the Met police started Operation Trafalgar in the West End, “the shop window of the whole of London”.
A large fire at Star Lane in East London damaged power cables and cut power supplies to nearly 90,000 people on 5 April. Staff at local businesses around the area were evacuated until the fire was brought under control.
More footage is available from reportdigital.co.uk at info@reportdigital.co.uk
© Jason N. Parkinson/reportdigital.co.uk
Injured Student Faces Violent Disorder Trial
Monday 26 March 2012: Alfie Meadows, a student who faced brain surgery after receiving a head injury during the December 2010 student protests, will face trial for violent disorder at Kingston crown court.
Footage available from reportdigital.co.uk at info@reportdigital.co.uk.
© Jason N. Parkinson/reportdigital.co.uk
Opinions from London Slutwalk
Shot of Saturday 11 June 2011, opinions from some of the protestors on the first London Slutwalk on the need to protest and the need for a strong women’s movement during the Cameron-Clegg years.
© Jason N. Parkinson/reportdigital.co.uk
Please contact Report Digital to access this material and the extensive six-year video archive.
The G20 Protests: What A Bloody Mess!
It is now just over two weeks since the protests against the London 2009 G20 summit and a lot more has become clear since video and photographic evidence has rolled into various news outlets and online self-publishing websites.
My work on the G20 started with a short film on The Government of the Dead back in February. University of East London anthropologist Chris Knight took his band of zombies, dancing their way along Oxford Street to Tyburn, the site of ancient public executions, now known as Marble Arch, to hang an effigy of a banker. This followed on from the previous film Global Economic Crisis: The First Wave, which documented the initial London protests against failing capitalism and the £500 billion banker bailout.
Film: Government of the Dead: Hang a Banker

On April 1st, as thousands gathered around Liverpool Street station, the Space Hijackers drove a “riot tank” to RBS headquarters in the financial district (and immediately had it confiscated) and Climate Camp settled in their tents on Bishopsgate, I followed one arm of the four-pronged march on the Bank of England, straight into the lines of some 10,500 on duty police officers, all called in to protect the 29 leaders of the G20 group, and protect the banks and the bankers, well, apart from the Threadneedle Street branch of RBS, which was the only building in the area not boarded up.

The rest of the day panned out as most protest journalists imagined, hence many experienced photographers and video people using the now mandatory improvised safety equipment – helmets and arm and leg padding – something in itself that says a lot about policing these days. Others were not so ready for the brutal onslaught brought down into the streets by the infamous Metropolitan police force and the notorious black-clad, storm-trooper unit, the Territorial Support Group (TSG).

One particular baton charge at a group of press at 5.29pm left one photographer beaten and trampled by riot police.
Another photographer earlier that day had his arm broken after riot police beat him with telescopic truncheons, despite him holding up a press card and identifying himself as a “legitimate journalist”. For me, my trip to Strasbourg to cover the anti-NATO protests was dogged with a three-day headache and uncontrollable bouts of tiredness, symptoms I have experienced before and know to be mild concussion, after being repeatedly hit across the head with batons, when several attempts to smash my camera failed. This was on top of wearing a professional bright red mountaineering helmet with “PRESS” stencilled across the front and back. My legs above the shins ended up with two wounds, where I was repeatedly kicked and the shin pads I was wearing cut through the protective foam and dug two holes into my legs. The final attack I received was in the 5.29pm baton charge, 39 seconds into the film, on the second charge, you can see a police medic, using his baton as a stabbing implement, jabs me in the stomach with both hands.
On April 2nd, journalists trying to cover the memorial of Ian Tomlinson were then threatened with arrest by a City police inspector under Section 14 of the Public Order Act: “You have got a choice,” he announced, “you can either go away now or you can spend the rest of the afternoon in a cell. What do you want to do?”
Now, as I write this, the National Union of Journalists (NUJ) is considering legal action over this incident.

The sad fact of the matter is the violence and police tactics has yet again taken the limelight in nearly all coverage of the G20 summit. The issues being raised by protestors was mostly lost amid images of baton charges and bleeding skulls.
And the latest on the Ian Tomlinson case, as I try to finalise this blog is this. The second post mortem on Tomlinson finds he did not die from a heart attack but abdominal haemorrhaging.
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.


