Showing posts with label police. Show all posts
Showing posts with label police. Show all posts

Sunday, December 30, 2012

New York City Highlights Problems with Politicised Policing

English: NYPD Dodge Charger #2909 in midtown M...
 (Photo credit: Wikipedia)


A secretly-recorded audio file of New York City Police carrying out a stop-and-frisk on a seventeen-year-old illustrates the problem with NYPD's controversial policy. Among the frequent swearing by the police officers, the recording includes numerous threats by the police to physically assault the youth, who was not arrested and had not committed a crime.

A recent video based on the incident reveals that the policy of stopping and searching suspicious-looking individuals is the result of orders from New York's elected mayor. Serving and retired police officers reveal (anonymously in some cases) the pressure they are routinely put under by their superiors to complete such stops, regardless of whether such actions are warranted by any objective suspicion of crime. In the process, the rights of individuals to be unmolested by the agents of the state are routinely ignored. The policy also involves racial profiling and fulfilling quotas, both of which are outlawed under New York state law. 

These infringements are the result of political orders from an elected official, pandering to the perceived expectations of a vocal section of the electorate. The problem is that the policy is applied disproportionately to those who do not have or do not know how to use their political voice.

This perversion of public service is an unintended consequence of elected officials running the police service. This development has been enshrined in British law this year with the creation of elected police commissioners. Paradoxically, democratic norms are sometimes better upheld with high calibre unelected officials running the police service.
 





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Friday, November 16, 2012

Police and Crime Commissioners: The Parable of the Empty Ballot Box

The crest of Eton College.
The crest of Eton College. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)




A rich man came from Eton to London. On his way to being appointed ruler of his people, his deputy said to him:

"You are a rich man, my Lord, with properties in Oxfordshire and London. When you are ruler, the bankers will demand their money from the people you rule. When that happens, the people may turn against you as you strip their assets. Hear my words, then, and listen to what I say.

Let it be when you are ruler, that all people, high and low, man and woman, great and small, rich and poor, gather in every place where they live. Let them choose for themselves men and women of good character, wise and just, to be their police and crime commissioners, to administer justice, to appoint chief constables and to set locally-targeted policing priorities. Let them be paid between £65,000 and £100,000 by the people who choose them, that the people may love you when the bankers have stripped them."  


The deputy's words pleased the rich man for he thought, "Surely to choose one's own police and crime commissioner is more precious than silver; and to set locally-targeted policing priorities is more valuable than gold." 

And so it came to pass that when the rich man was made ruler of the people, he remembered the words that his deputy had spoken to him. He sent heralds throughout the kingdom to announce that all people, high and low, man and woman, great and small, rich and poor should gather in every place where they lived and, on a dark and wet day in November, choose for themselves men and women of good character, wise and just, to be their police and crime commissioners, to administer justice, to appoint chief constables and to set locally-targeted policing priorities.

"This will make the people love me when the bankers have stripped them," said the rich man to himself. 

But when the heralds went forth, the people of the land rejected the words that were spoken to them. Some, they threw in their bins; some they ignored, and some they turned off while they were speaking through their televisions.

When the day came, the people announced with one voice, 

"We will not gather in every place where we live. We will not choose for ourselves men and women of good character, wise and just, to be our police and crime commissioners, to administer justice, to appoint chief constables and to set locally-targeted policing priorities. We will not pay them between £65,000 and £100,000 of our own money while the bankers strip our assets." 

And so it came to pass that from Cornwall to Newcastle, the people of the land did not gather in every place where they lived. They did not choose for themselves men and women of good character, wise and just to be their police and crime commissioners, to administer justice, to appoint chief constables and to set locally-targeted policing priorities.

When he heard this, the rich ruler was dismayed. But the rich ruler decided to pay the new commissioners anyway, between £65,000 and £100,000 of the people's own money, while the bankers stripped their assets. "For," said the rich ruler, "If I cannot make the people love me,  surely at least these commissioners will welcome me. For you cannot fool all of the people all of the time, but you can fool most of the people some of the time."

And the deputy pondered these things in his heart.

 









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Sunday, September 04, 2011

The Police, Notting Hill Carnival and the Permanent 'State of Exception'

Resident participation at Notting Hill Carniva...Image via Wikipedia

 
 
This article is published by Aaron Peters, and openDemocracy.net and re-published here under a Creative Commons licence.
 
The original article can be found here
 



“The flames of November 2005 still flicker in everyone’s minds...As an attempted solution, the pressure to ensure that nothing happens, together with police surveillance of the territory, will only intensify.” - Account of the policing fallout after the 2005 riots in France.


What qualifies as a 'successful' Notting Hill Carnival now seems open to debate. This year's carnival with its unusually good weather, high turnout and great food and music meant that, as ever, Europe's largest carnival (the second largest in the world after Rio in Brazil) was a feast of the senses and a day in which Londoners of all ages, creeds, colours - and importantly classes - could mix, share and dance.


Dawn raid ahead of Notting Hill Carnival: PA


Was this, then, a success?

After the London riots some two weeks ago, the media drummed up the possibility of further public disorder. After all, as recently as 2008 there were indeed riots on the streets of Notting Hill in the immediate aftermath of the event. At the previous 2010 Carnival, 230 arrests were made over the two days.

It is clear, then, that the avoidance of major public disorder in excess of that seen since 2008 represented a 'success' for the Metropolitan police, the event organisers and much of the mainstream media. When combined with the usual joy of the event itself, high attendance and the fortune of clement weather, it should come as no surprise that carnival organiser Chris Boothman declared that the event had allowed Londoners to "reclaim the streets".

This is of course not the first 'successful' policing of a major public event this year. There was the 'success' of the Royal Wedding, with its bizarre pre-arrests of dozens of activists, followed by equally ludicrous arrests on the day itself. The policing for the Royal Wedding was all done within the broader context of a Section 60 of the Criminal Justice Act, which was imposed on the City of Westminster, just as we saw a Section 60 imposed for the Notting Hill Carnival. 

A brief clarification of what Section 60 of the 1994 Criminal Justice Act actually is. It gives  a police officer of the rank of inspector or above the competence to,
...request  authorisation for additional search powers on the basis of a reasonable belief that incidents involving serious violence may take place or that people are carrying dangerous instruments or offensive weapons in the area without good reason", such powers relating to,"...pedestrians and vehicles in a specified locality, for a specified period, not exceeding 48 hours at a time.”
In the case of the Royal Wedding, the 'specified locality' of the Section 60 issued was the City of Westminster. For Notting Hill Carnival, the Section 60 was applied to the whole of London - a truly unprecedented step. The application of the section was not applied to a 'specified locality' but rather to a city of eight million residents. Is London, a global metropolis, now considered a 'specific locality' where normal legislation can be temporarily suspended for 48 hours? To what extent, then, is the United Kingdom or England considered a less specific locality?

As with the Royal Wedding, we saw a number of pre-arrests before the carnival. Whereas the Royal Wedding arrests essentially had a pre-crime basis, the arrests before the carnival were more about getting as many people as possible on rather minimal charges, such as possession of cannabis, and then inserting non-attendance to carnival within their bail conditions. A highly expensive process for the taxpayer ensured the non-attendance of around ninety individuals who may or may not have chosen to attend the event. One can only wonder how many pre-crime arrests or targeted charges with bail impositions will accompany the run-up to the Olympics in 2012 or the Queen's forthcoming Diamond Jubilee. My guess is far, far more.

Along with these pre-emptive arrests and the deployment of the Section 60 itself, there was of course the policing of the event on the Saturday and Sunday. How can one really call any event resulting in 274 arrests and 32 hospitalisations peaceful? What was the nature of these arrests? Will the police provide a breakdown of those arrested: their race, age, gender and reasons for their arrest? In light of the unprecedented police numbers on the streets of West London and the issuing of a citywide Section 60 this is the very least the Metropolitan police should be doing.
Anecdotally, I have been informed of several incidents during the carnival involving arrests. The first is that of a man who was stop and searched under a section 60 for blowing a vuvuzela. Before I relate the incident, let's make this clear: the police can stop and search under a section 60 if there has been serious violence or disorder in the vicinity. They can resort to Section(s) 43 or 47 ( sometimes invoked against people taking photographs for example) if there is sufficient grounds to 'suspect' involvement in terrorist activities.

What explanation can account for a person being stop and searched for blowing a musical instrument?  The story is recounted below by a friend who witnessed the events:
“...he was walking up Westbourne Park road with one of the free vuvuzelas they were giving out. A line of police was walking up towards him taking up most of the road. He was blowing on his horn and they deemed it to be too close to them and jumped on him and pulled him over to one side with a cop on each arm holding him in a crucifix position. around 10 cops surrounded him and one of them bruised his girlfriend's arm when she tried to help....they searched him, found nothing but continued to hold him asking for his name, address and date of birth.
"My mate refused to give them and asked why he was being searched: it was under section 60. He asked what violence and they claimed that blowing a horn near them equated to assault and that either way, "you are swearing aren't you, you dickhead!". A long row ensued with them allegedly threatening to nick him several times. Unable to get his name, they found his credit cards started addressing him by that name. He denied they were his so they threatened to nick him for theft! Eventually he gave them his name, DOB and address and they let him go. It took 15-20 minutes though. Officers numbers I caught where KF982, KF119 (Forest Gate). The officer who conducted the search was  a constable Elton from forest gate.”
Another incident involved a man who was arrested because he had given a 'thumbs down' to a passing cohort of police officers from the balcony of his home. As one friend of the arrestee in question recounts:
"...the arrest happened when some police were walking past us - we were on a rooftop. My friend gave them a thumbs down, and they stopped and beckoned him down. He refused to go down but they posted men on the door of the house we were in and said they wouldn't leave until we had gone down.
 "After fifteen minutes or so we went down to talk to them. The officer at the door (A) said my friend had sworn at his colleague (B). This was a lie and we said so - we all knew he had said nothing. It was clear to us they had decided to take offence at the thumbs down and had invented the swearing to justify their over-the-top reaction. Officer B shouted over 'If he denies it just arrest him'. Then Officer A told my friend to go and apologise to Officer B and he would not be arrested. He explained that my friend should be 'humble - very humble' when he apologised, he should address Officer B as 'sir', and he should not deny he had sworn.
"My friend agreed to apologise to Officer B (mostly because his mother was in the house I suspect) but felt the need to be truthful and say he hadn't sworn. For this he was arrested. His mother then went to talk to Officer B to try to clear up the misunderstanding and he threatened her with arrest. The friend was released not long after, having been told he would get a fixed penalty notice."
The same man who had witnessed this event also said, “I had another friend the previous day who had an officer threaten to smash his face in because he laughed at the officer's threats during a stop and search issued under a Section 60".

Over 250 individuals arrested during the carnival, nearly 100 arrested before the event and banned from attending (mostly as part of bail conditions for minor offences), a London-wide 'suspension' of normal legislation with regards to stop and search: Notting Hill Carnival was anything BUT evidence of Londoners 'reclaiming the streets' as Chris Boothman would have it. Instead, it offers yet another example of the insidious nature of how basic civil liberties are being compromised with increasing ease by the London Metropolitan Police. This continued erosion of liberties is equalled only by the passivity of a highly uncritical and uninformed media whose ambitions are to demand that we 'keep calm and carry on' regardless of what occurs.

The 'exceptional' manner in which Notting Hill Carnival was policed shows that the Royal Wedding was anything but an anomaly and that in all probability there is worse to come in the remaining year and 2012. Expect Section 60s to be issued at party conferences this Autumn (where large demonstrations are anticipated) and at any major student or anti-cuts demonstration.

The suspension of 'everyday' legislation is now becoming normal. 'Exceptional' conditions are increasingly viewed as quotidian, something Giorgio Agamben explores in his book 'State of Exception'. We will increasingly see tactics designed to deal with crisis employed during ANY situation of mass public assembly – whether it be a political protest, carnival or sporting event.
As Brett Neilson writes of Agamben's thinking on the matter,
"...this figure of generalized catastrophe under a sky void of transcendental authority...(is) characterized by 'governmental violence that ignores international law externally and produces a permanent state of exception internally, while all the time pretending to uphold the law." 
In light of Cameron's remarks on the recent London riots and 'silly' European human rights legislation, Agamben's views on executive power replacing legislative power in contemporary ‘liberal democracies’ are especially pertinent.

On Twitter, I remarked about all of this being a 'new normal'. A  friend remarked that it was anything but new for young, primarily BME males in London and other major UK cities. I am inclined to agree. Before the confrontational and counter-productive policing practices that have caused so much anger among the urban young become common practice in everyday policing, the public must start holding the police to account, particularly over excessive numbers of arrests, the use of section 60 and stop and search. The mainstream media, political commentariat and the political parties are, as usual, dismissive or unable to see the very real problems of arbitrary authority and the lack of transparency and accountability with the British police.

A section 60 for a whole city under the auspices of policing a public event is an abuse of power. We must ask that it does not happen again.








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Saturday, July 23, 2011

Filming in Public: Police More Aware than Private Security Firms About Rights

Following guidelines issued last year by the Association of Chief Police Officers, it appears from this video that the police in the UK are more tuned in these days to the rights of the public to film buildings in public space.

Private security guards, however, appear to be ignorant of the law. 









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Thursday, March 24, 2011

Stop the press: man in dressing gown caught on CCTV! - Big Brother Watch

Security camera at London (Heathrow) Airport. ...Image via Wikipedia




As one of the commentators on this story asks, what business is it of the police, or CCTV operators, to stop or film a member of the public who is not breaking any laws nor giving grounds for suspicion that he is about to do so?

Furthermore, what right does the Council have to describe the man's activity on its public newsletter?

Behind the humour of the incident there is a telling illustration about the increasing intrusion and interference of the state in the lives of its citizens.





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Wednesday, January 12, 2011

Mark Kennedy, ACPO and Global Open

The Mark Kennedy story reveals some murky links between sections of the police, who have infiltrated activist groups on the political left and within the environmental movements, and global firms who hire private security companies to spy on such activists.

The Guardian has a lot of information on the story, including some background on one such firm, Global Open. Their registered business address is 10 Springpark Drive, Beckenham, Kent. It's the house with the blue door.

I don't suppose the owners object to such information being shared publicly. They are in the freedom of information business, after all. In fact, the focus of Global Open, according to their website is gathering and sharing with their clients information  on people involved in "activism" such as "Environmental issues; Anti-corporatism; Anti-globalisation."









Follow up:

Fitwatch, based on a report from Indymedia,  today carries a picture of who it claims to be a second undercover police officer operating deep within groups of environmental activists in Leeds. The officer is named as Lyn Watson. 

Meanwhile, the Guardian today claims that a third officer has been revealed, having infiltrated a group of around 20 anarchists in Cardiff.  Fitwatch also names the officer as Mark Jacobs and carries a photo.


Clearly there are major questions that need addressing about the policy of police infiltration of political and environmental groups. 




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Tuesday, November 02, 2010

On Police Brutality

A silhouette showing a police officer striking...Image via Wikipedia


Without looking for it, I have recently stumbled upon a number of articles and cases of police brutality, alleged and proven.


The theme began with an article by Matthew Smith listing a number of deaths of people detained in police custody in London in recent years and outlining the apparent lack of action that has resulted from them. I commented on the piece.

Next came a series of incidents from the United States. First, an in-depth piece by New York's Village Voice on the beating up of Levelle DeSean Ming, a 41-year old taxi driver who beeped his horn as a group of drunken newly qualified off-duty police officers stumbled out of a bar and in front of his yellow cab in 2008. Another off-duty officer, not part of the group who carried out the assault, intervened, was himself assaulted by the drunken officers and has subsequently been assigned to desk duty for the last two years.

Earlier in the year, 22-year old Amit Bornstein, of Marlboro, New Jersey, was arrested at his home by Monmouth County Sheriff’s Officers for failing to appear in Court for minor misdemeanor and traffic infractions. Seven hours later Amit’s body appeared at the local hospital. Surveillance tapes of the time Amit was in police custody have been seized by the County Prosecutor’s Office and have not been released. His family are demanding justice.

With remarkable timing, i then read this by anarchist lawyer David D'Amato who argues that police abuse is the rule, not the exception.

"We can brush aside police abuse as an aberration in an otherwise sensible system, or we can correctly understand it as an unavoidable feature of a warped incentive structure designed by and for the power elite."

Maybe.

Certainly, prison chaplain and state politician Stan Moody has plenty of shocking stories to tell about reality of institutionalized injustice inside the Maine State Prison system in the United States. I've listened to others also describe the way that the prison institution tends to facilitate the brutalization of prisoners by the guards, even if the latter are perfectly reasonable people on the outside.








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Friday, September 24, 2010

FBI Launching Mass Raids of Antiwar Activists’ Homes -- News from Antiwar.com

180 pxImage via Wikipedia
FBI Launching Mass Raids of Antiwar Activists’ Homes -- News from Antiwar.com


They came first for the Communists,
and I didn't speak up because I wasn't a Communist.

Then they came for the trade unionists,
and I didn't speak up because I wasn't a trade unionist.

Then they came for the Jews,
and I didn't speak up because I wasn't a Jew.

Then they came for me
and by that time no one was left to speak up.




Pastor Martin Niemoller, German anti-Nazi theologian (1892–1984)





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Sunday, April 25, 2010

Police, Camera, Action!

Like Paul Scoles, the star of this fine video gives hope and inspiration to ginger, middle-aged men everywhere.


POLICE CONTROL from Everything Is Terrible! on Vimeo.






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Friday, November 13, 2009

More on Police and the (Social) Media

Following yesterday's post about the refusal of a local paper to sign an indemnity form with Essex Police, which would restrict the paper's freedom to use a story in a way other than that proscribed by the force, two other related stories appeared on the radar.

First, the Met have started to request that images held in external databases showing officers with their number badges covered should be removed and not used. The Evening Standard describes this move as an attempt to "rewrite history".

Second, blogger Simon Collister claims to have received an "aggressive" voicemail from Dick Fedorcio, Director of Public Affairs and Corporate Communications at the Metropolitan Police, asking him to contact him if he planned on blogging about the Met in the future.

"He advised me, in a rather intimidating fashion, that if I planned on blogging about the Met again I should give him a call in advance."


I'm not easily shocked. But today, I am.





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Thursday, November 12, 2009

Local Paper Won't Play Ball With Police's Managed News Service


"It's a national form and the purpose of it is to ensure that the material they gather is used for the right purpose, and not used for some later story which is totally unrelated." So says a spokesman from Essex Constabulary as he describes an indemnity form used by the force which local media organisations were asked to sign before being giving access to a police photocall at a recently-discovered huge cannabis factory.

Although most media organisations signed the form, the Epping Forest Guardian declined to do so and was therefore barred from the photocall. Among other things, the indemnity form asked media companies to guarantee that material would not be "archived" for future use and would be used only in connection with the immediate "purpose" of the photocall. It also asked them to give an undertaking that no material would be used in a way that was "detrimental" to the Essex Constabulary.

Local editor Anthony Longden responds: "Our policy on indemnity forms is certainly nothing new - we don't sign them because they make what we consider to be unreasonable demands, and we prefer to protect our independence and our journalistic material."


The paper's refusal to sign resulted in it being initially denied access to the location , a fact that a police spokesman commented on: "I am aware that some have refused to sign it but they have missed out on a major opportunity. For this particular newspaper, it was probably their main story for this week's edition."
The paper subsequently found out the location of the factory and has run several stories on the events there.

The police's attempt to manage this piece of news is regrettable and reflects an unhealthy trend towards curbing freedom of the press. It is unreasonable in a free society that the state/police should be allowed to determine the "purpose" of a news story or proscribe how it should be used in the future.

It's hard enough running a local newspaper these days. The Guardian are therefore to be especially commended for refusing to go along with this attempt by the police to manage the news. Essex police should stop using these indemnity forms and stop trying to control the media in this way.

I appreciate that Thomas Jefferson is not one often quoted this side of the Atlantic. On this matter, however, he has much to to say:

"I would rather be exposed to the inconveniences attending too much liberty than those attending too small a degree of it."

and

"Information is the currency of democracy."




photo r0bz


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Wednesday, May 27, 2009

Peru: Is This an Oil War?



In scenes reminiscent of the American frontier during the C19, this week has seen a state of emergency declared and the Peruvian Army ordered into the country's Amazon region to help the police put down a protest by indigenous tribal groups against the granting of oil drilling permits to multi-national companies.

As previously reported on this blog, Anglo-French group Perenco is sending about 1,000 workers into the Peruvian Amazon to drill in lands which contain significant numbers of native Amazonian tribes, including several that have had no contact with outside cultures and are therefore particularly susceptible to imported disease. Canadian petrochemical firm Petrolifera are also active in the region in the Ucayali Basin, and control about 4.5 million acres in Peru.

Perenco's operations are in the Maranon Basin near the boarder with Equador in an area that it claims holds over 300 millions barrels of oil which it hopes to extract at the rate of 100,000 barrels per day. Perenco secured the drilling rights after Perenco President Francois Perrodo met with Peruvian President Alan Garcia Perez and pledged to invest $US 2 billion into energy-related development in the area. Perenco plans on drilling over 100 wells, building local pipelines and central processing facilities in the area, which is home to the Cacataibos, Isconahua, Matsigenka, Mashco-Piro, Mastanahua, Murunahua and Nant tribes.

American energy company ConocoPhillips owns a concession of over 10 million acres in the Peruvian Amazon and has been criticised by NGO Amazon Watch for the risk their operation poses to indigenous people groups who have chosen a policy of non-contact in order to preserve their traditional culture and to protect themselves from disease.

Directives by the Government of Peru passed over the last two years have relaxed restrictions on oil exploration in the Amazon and up to 30,000 people have been holding a month long protest to call for the repeal of these decrees. There have also been blockades of key rivers and roads into the affected areas, as illustrated in the video below.

A British friend and long-time resident in Peru recently told me that the public money pledged to educational and health care improvement among the Amazonian tribes rarely reaches its intended recipients and that corruption in all levels of government is known to be widespread.



Peru Indigenous Mobilization from Amazon Watch on Vimeo.






Up to date news and fuller details about organised campaigns to stop oil and gas exploration in the Peruvian Amazon can be found here.

Possible actions concerned citizens could take include:

Alternatively, concerned citizens could always write or pay a visit to the oil company of their choice and have a chat with the managers there about how you feel their company is behaving in northern Peru. Contact details are as follows:


Perenco

Thames House
Thamesfield Way
off Pasteur Road
Great Yarmouth
Norfolk
NR31 0DN

Tel: +44 1 493 414 000
Fax: +44 1 493 414 001



Petrolifera

Suite 900
332 Sixth Avenue SW
Calgary
Alberta
Canada
T2P 0B9

Fax: 403.538.6225


R. A. Gusella
Executive Chairman
(403) 538-6201

or

Gary D. Wine
President and Chief Operating Officer
(403) 539-8450

or

Kristen J. Bibby
Vice President Finance and Chief Financial Officer
(403) 539-8450




ConocoPhillips

Meet the Leadership Team or The Board of Directors and then pay them a visit at

600 North Dairy
Ashford

Houston,

TX 77252-2197


Phone: 281 293 1000







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Tuesday, February 10, 2009

British Journalists in Mass Photography Protest Outside Met Police HQ


Recent years have seen an increase in the use of police powers to interfere with the right of British citizens and journalists to take photographs in public places.

Of particular concern is a clause within the Counter Terrorism Act which sanctions the arrest and imprisonment of anyone whose pictures are "likely to be useful to a person committing or preparing an act of terrorism."

Even before the Act becomes law on Monday 16th Feb, police have been accused on several occasions in recent months of attempting to interfere with journalists and members of the public taking photographs in public. Recent examples include:

  • photographer Jess Hurd had her camera forcibly removed and was arrested for 45 minutes while taking photographs of a wedding in London's Docklands in December 2008. National Union of Journalists spokesman Jeremy Dear said of the incident: "Despite the government’s warm words about the right to photograph in public and new Home Office guidelines it appears the routine abuse of these powers goes on."
  • a Metropolitan Police Sergeant attempted to forcibly remove the camera of NUJ member Justin Tallis while photographing an anti-BBC demonstration on January 24th. Full story here.
  • also in January, an amateur photographer was stopped by police while taking photos of ships in Cleveland. He was asked if he had any terrorist connections and told that his details would be kept on file.

Meanwhile, in March 2008, Austin Mitchell MP obtained 190 signatures for an Early Day Motion
protesting the recent spate of incidents involving police officers, police community support officers or wardens attempting to confiscate cameras and other equipment or otherwise interfering with the right of citizens to take photographs in a public place.

In response to these trends, and on the day the above law officially comes into effect, photographers from across the country will be conducting a mass picture taking session outside New Scotland Yard, home of the Metropolitan Police.

The photo shoot is supported by the National Union of Journalists and the British Journal of Photography.

The event also has a facebook page here.

An opportunity for some happy snapping.








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Friday, January 30, 2009

2012 Olympic Free Speech Threat


Well done to IOC (that's Index on Censorship, by the way) for this alarming story on the draconian powers that have been passed into law through the London Olympic Games and Paralympic Games Act 2006.

Among the more penicious clauses in the Act are the following:

  • dedicated road lanes in London for government ministers, games officials and sponsors
  • fines of up to £5,000 for motorists who use these dedicated lanes
  • regulation of advertising in and around the Olympic area by the executive (not Parliament)
  • restrictions to extend to "non-commercial" advertising and "announcements or notices of any kind"
  • advertising to be defined as including the "distribution or provision of documents or articles...the display or projection of words, images, lights or sounds..."
  • unlimited fines as punishment for breaches of the above regulations
  • permission for the police to forcibly enter property to "remove, destroy, conceal or erase" anything deemed inconsistent with the advertising regulations
You get the picture.

Essentially, the Act codifies the legal basis for the executive branch of government to create a sponsor-friendly zone around the Olympic venues (possibly including those outside London) within which citizens may not be permittted to advertise non-sponsor companies.

Of even greater concern, however, is the legal basis for restricting speech of any kind which might be regarded as harmful to the commercial sponsors of the Games. This could include, among other possible actions, protests about employment practices of sponsors, even posters in private house windows expressing views critical of sponsors.

Let's imagine a possible scenario. Imagine you were on your way to the Velodrome to see Britain's finest cycle their way to glory and gold. On your way, you pass a row of houses whose enlightened citizens have decided to let the world know how angry they are about the hundreds of abductions, tortures and kidnappings of trades union officials at Coca Cola bottling plants in Columbia and how these crimes, plus numerous murders of union leaders at Coca Cola factories, are alleged to be the work of paramilitary units with links to managers within Coca Cola in these same factories.

Imagine as you passsed these houses, whose residents had displayed posters highlighting these crimes, how outraged you would be to see police raiding these houses and "removing, destroying or erasing" these posters before your very eyes so that senior managers at Coca Cola would not have their commercial hegemony of the 2012 Olympics challenged.

Wouldn't you think that such actions were:

  • un-just: all the force of the law is placed in defence of powerful commercial interests at the expense of the rights of the ordinary citizen
  • un-British: we are essentially a people who believe in free speech, unhindered by the agents of the state
  • un-Olympic: Olympism is defined in the opening statements of its charter, as a philosophy which seeks to create "a way of life based on the joy of effort, the educational value of good example and respect for universal fundamental ethical principles" and further states that a key goal of Olympism is to promote "a peaceful society concerned with the preservation of human dignity."


Of course, it will be argued that in the end the courts will not pass heavy penalties for peaceful protestors who happen to fall foul of this Law.

The fact is that peaceful protestors should not even be brouight before the courts in the first place and should not be required to face the intimidation of arrest, charge and trial just for exercing their ancient right to speak and stick up posters, even if they do offend Coca Cola, Visa, General Electric or McDonalds.








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Friday, June 13, 2008

An Open Letter to David Davis MP

Dear Mr Davis,

I would like to applaud the statement you made outside Parliament yesterday.

When the history of Britain in the C21 comes to be written, the cost of petrol, fluctuations in house prices and the latest sports results will pale into insignificance compared with the fundamental issues concerning the relationship between the citizen and the state which are being played out at the present time.

I commend you for raising this issue against the backdrop of the divisive bill which has just been passed in Parliament by the narrowest of margins allowing terror suspects to be detained for up to 42 days before being charged.

There is an urgent need to articulate at a senior level that the civil liberties which this bill has eroded are not luxury items for those who are particularly interested in that sort of thing. Rather, they are the bedrock of democracy, justice and the rule of law. Their erosion will affect every ordinary citizen, in some cases turning the moderate into a radical, with terrible implications for all of us.

While I applaud the principled stand taken on this issue by such groups as Liberty and Amnesty, as well as the opposition to the bill by some members of the Labour Party, by your own party leader and by the Liberal Democrats, I believe that you have a unique opportunity through the coming by-election to raise the issue at a broader and more intensive level.

I commend you as well for setting the 42-day detention bill within its broader political and historic context. The relentless erosion of freedoms under the current government has been breathtaking. You are right, in explaining the reasons for your resignation, to highlight the other major areas in which our freedoms have been and are being challenged:

  • detention without charge of terrorist suspects for up to 42 days
  • the introduction of national identity cards for all British residents
  • the growth of the surveillance state through CCTV
  • the emerging national DNA database
  • the subtle erosion of jury trials in certain cases
  • the strengthening of security powers to stifle legitimate public protest
  • the restriction of freedom of speech through the creation of "hate laws"

These are all issues that have been of great concern to me and which, I'm sure you will agree, transcend party politics.

Your campaign deserves the support of people of all political backgrounds who are concerned about the ever intrusive power of the state and the corresponding loss of privacy and freedom.

This is an issue for all who value the principle of human liberty.















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Wednesday, June 04, 2008

Proposed Sealing of Neighbourhoods in Washington DC by Police

This is an outrageous story.

A proposal is on the table in Washington DC - the nation's capital - to empower police to seal off selected neighborhoods in an attempt to curb crime.

The "Neighborhood Safety Zones" would have police checkpoints in targeted areas, police would demand to see ID and refuse admittance to people who don't live there, work there or have a “legitimate reason” to be there.

This is absolutely the behavior of a police state.

Since most social trends come here within a few years, this is one to watch (with horror) in Britain in the coming few years.








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