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11oct poilce arrest people giving out flyers |
Free Speech Crushed In Liverpool!
Arrests Made!
11.10.2008 images © Tony Knox
Freedom Not Fear | Liverpool
A crowd of two hundred people, angry
and disgusted, watched as legal
campaigners from 10 protest groups had
their leaflets and tables confiscated in
Church Street, Liverpool this Saturday
11th October. Two arrests were made.
What began peacefully enough ended in
near-riot as police physically
manhandled members of the public and
protesters in order to force a way
through for the van carrying the
arrested pair.
At one point, around six police vans
and a dozen police officers were
required to quell angry protest at the
suppression of free speech in a crowd –
mostly shoppers and visitors - seething
with anger and contempt. Shouts of “Let
Them Out!”, “You're A Disgrace!” and
“Free Speech!” resounded from the
buildings, the crowd drawn by the police
over-reaction entirely blocking Church
Street and spilling onto Hanover Street
in a dangerous melee.
Over the last few months, campaigners
on issues as diverse as the war in Iraq,
animal rights and defending the NHS have
been the subject of police bullying,
with literature confiscated and
cautioned and arrested. Liverpool
Freedom of Expression was formed to
defend free speech and the right to
campaign in public places. This was its
first action.
Around 10 campaigning groups set up
campaign stalls and immediately the
police swooped and began confiscating
materials. What began with one police
officer, rapidly escalated with first
four, then a dozen forced to respond to
a situation rapidly turning ugly.
Throughout, no campaigner did anything
but stand their ground, arguing
passionately for the right to free
speech and to campaign in the city
centre. One person was arrested for
doing just that. The second for asking
why the first had been arrested.
This prompted a very passionate and
angry reaction, people sat down in front
of the police vans, formed a rolling
blockade and otherwise tried to prevent
their innocent friends being taken away.
But throughout, no violence was offered
and protesters were at pains to debate
and to argue but not to provoke the
police into a violent response; it came
anyway as they were pushed, shouted at
and manhandled out of the way.
The incident ended peacefully at 2.30pm
although many people vowed to make their
way to St Anne Street police station -
the local lock-up - to voice their anger
and file a complaint at police tactics.
Two hundred people – and the many
hundreds more who witnessed the ugly
incident – went away disgusted at this
waste of time, money and resources.
Another PR disaster for the Merseyside
Police.
31 photos | 433 views
items are from 11 Oct 2008.