FIT
Press Freedom: Domestic Extremist Film Trailer
Million Mask March

Wednesday 5 November saw the biggest Million Mask March London has ever seen in the three years since its inception. Thousands of protestors poured down Whitehall to Parliament Square, which has been fenced off since the Occupy Democracy protest turned walking on the grass into a revolutionary act.
Ten arrests followed clashes, as protesters tore down fences and tried to reclaim Parliament Square for the democratic right to protest, moved on to Buckingham Palace to show disgust for the monarchy and then on the central London studios of the BBC, where the public funded news and television organisation was criticised for its news coverage and accused of covering up the Jimmy Savile child abuse scandal.
1920X1080 footage © Jason N. Parkinson available via jasonnparkinson@gmail.com
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Police Surveillance Document Assange Protestors
Press Freedom: Hostile Reconnaissance
The film follows on from the 2008 film Press Freedom: Collateral Damage that exposed the extent of police surveillance on street journalists. The film includes interviews with photojournalist Jess Hurd, NUJ General Secretary Jeremy Dear and Hickman and Rose partner Anna Mazzola. They are a few among many who continue to campaign to expose and fight the increasing erosion of civil liberties and press freedom in the UK.
© Jason N. Parkinson/reportdigital.co.uk
Press Freedom: Hostile Reconnaissance
Police Surveillance of Journalists at Anti-BNP Protest
Journalist Surveillance: “TREAT AS RESTRICTED”
Following the Guardian report on the police treatment of FIT Watch activists Val Swain and Emily Apple at the 2008 Kent Climate Camp colleague and friend Marc Vallée blogged about the NUJ formal complaint that has now been delivered to Christopher Graham, the new information commissioner.
Vallée pointed out that despite repeated attempts spanning eight months to access the material held by the Metropolitan Police on five journalists involved in Data Protection Requests, only a minimal amount has come to light.
Vallée received one page from a police officer’s note book, which for some reason listed him with “(FIT)” written next to his name. And that was all he got, despite knowing from his case against the Met they had film of his assault by FIT and TSG officers while covering the 2006 Sack Parliament protest.
The London-based photojournalist, who specialises in covering protest and public order situations, has recounted a list as long as a MP’s expenses claim form on the times he has been stopped, questioned, photographed and filmed.
And it is no different for me. The only information I received back under the Data Protection Act was the above form, documenting my S44 “Stop and Account” outside the US Embassy on 28 March, 2008, while covering a protest calling for the release from death row of journalist and Black Panther activist Mumia Abu Jamal.
As the form states, the reason for suspicion – “seen filming the US Embassy”. I might add with over £2,000 worth of equipment, in broad daylight, and carrying a national and international press card. Not the behaviour of a terrorist recon, one might say.
One thing that sticks out on the data on this form is being repeatedly listed as “Treat as Restricted” and any other relevant information is blacked out. This my lawyer has repeatedly questioned. To date there has been no explanation.
The Met have consistently denied that UK journalists are under surveillance, or that any details are held on a database. Yet this trickle of data has already contradicted the official police line.
On the 28 March US Embassy incident, after denying the police access to my footage, one officer gave me a copy of the pink slip and said, “There’s another one for your collection.” Which is true. I do indeed collect Stop and Search forms. But the question is, if they do not hold data on the press, how did they [the officers and HQ] know I had been detained on many previous occasions?
So, the question then is, if one Stop and Search is recorded and the data held, what about all these others, and all those where I was detained and the officers did not have the relevant form to issue?
The answer probably lies in that the 28 March incident was reported in the NUJ Freelance monthly, along with a catalogue of FIT surveillance, photographs, video, note-taking – the whole cahoots.
2007 was a particularly bad year for me. I was detained by police some 23 times, either for Stop and Search, Stop and Account, or just a good old fashioned talking to – be it under S44, S60 or S14.
2008 was a little less frustrating with eight times, although four of those were while trying to cover Climate Camp.
This year things seem to have eased off on this issue, but the unfortunate turn is, in less than a year I have been at the brunt of four injuries while working, one of those leaving me with internal injuries and off work for a month.
Related Films
Press Freedom: Collateral Damage
For licensing contact: jasonnparkinson@gmail.com