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

Sunday, April 06, 2025

Nine arrested in police crackdown

by New Worker correspondent

Police repression has reached a new level after a meeting of a youth-led environmental and political activist group was broken up  and a number of houses of their supporters were raided last week. Over 20 Metropolitan Police officers crashed into a Youth Demand Welcome Talk at a Quaker meeting room in London and arrested six people for conspiracy to cause a public nuisance. In separate incidents  three other Youth Demand supporters were arrested in other parts the country. Youth Demand, which was established in January 2024, is part of a co-ordinating committee called Umbrella that includes three other direct action protest groups.  
Quakers in Britain said police officers, some equipped with tasers, forced their way into the Westminster Quaker Meeting House just before 7:15 pm. Officers reportedly “broke open the front door without warning or ringing the bell first, searching the whole building and arresting six women attending the meeting in a hired room”.
The Met told the media that "Youth Demand have stated an intention to 'shut down' London over the month of April using tactics including 'swarming' and road blocks. While we absolutely recognise the importance of the right to protest, we have a responsibility to intervene to prevent activity that crosses the line from protest into serious disruption and other criminality”.
The Quakers have condemned the raid saying they “support the right to non-violent public protest, acting themselves from a deep moral imperative to stand up against injustice and for our planet. Many have taken non-violent direct action over the centuries from the abolition of slavery to women's suffrage and prison reform”.
The Welcome Talk is an opportunity to share information about the ongoing genocide of the Palestinian people in Gaza and the West Bank and about the mass killing that is being imposed on vulnerable people across the globe as a result of the accelerating climate crisis. It is also an opportunity to share plans for non-violent civil resistance actions to take place in April.
One of those arrested was Ella Grace-Taylor, a student, who said “At this point, it couldn’t be clearer that we are in a police state. Our politicians will stand by as police engage in mass arrests and imprisonment of anyone who speaks out against the government for being responsible for genocide. By arming Israel and refusing to call what is happening a genocide, they are perpetrating mass slaughter.  Hundreds of children were killed in Palestine in the last week. We won’t stop saying it. We won’t be intimidated.“.
A Youth Demand spokesperson said “it’s clear that the government sees Youth Demand as a threat. They know that we are right.  There are thousands of young people who are horrified by what the government is doing to facilitate genocide and who know that they have been betrayed as their future is fucked. We will not be silenced. Young people all over the country are coming together to shut London down day after day throughout April. Sign up for action at Youth Demand.Org 
“We refuse to be ruled by liars, war criminals and arsonists. We will not let them get away with this. We refuse to be ignored. It’s time for young people to take to the streets day after day and shut London down. Only sustained mass resistance can put an end to genocide. By standing together we can grind the murder machine to a standstill”.

Saturday, September 02, 2017

Police bar hundreds from carnival



ANOTHER very successful Notting Hill Carnival has just drawn to a close with around a million people on the streets of west London having a good time.
Television news bulletins have been full of colourful pictures of people in fantastic and beautiful costumes dancing along to the music and they always include a few shots of police officers joining in the fun.
But those bulletins have totally failed to inform us that prior to the event 656 people were arrested, not on the basis of any crime they had committed but on the basis of crimes that senior police officers thought they might be going to commit.
David Musker, the Metropolitan Police gold commander for the event, admitted that he does not care what he arrests people for. He said: “I don’t really care what we arrest them for, I’ll be [as] lawfully audacious as I can to get them off the streets.
“So whether they’ve got heroin or they’ve got other class A drugs, [are] drug dealing, [or] serious violence takes place at carnival, we will try to target them and get them off the streets.”
According to the Guardian, many people were been released on pre-charge bail. This means the police have yet to decide whether there is enough evidence to charge them with any offence. But it does mean they can impose bail conditions.
And most were banned from the area where the carnival takes place.
As the Canary on-line news agency previously reported, the police were already facing accusations of racism for the way they had been conducted their policing operation.
And as a spokesperson for the Network for Police Monitoring (Netpol) told the Canary: “Carnival receives this treatment precisely because it is the UK’s largest celebration of Caribbean culture.
“It helps the police to justify the continued targeting of black communities for the disproportionate use of stop and search powers in London. It reinforces the deeply racist idea that these communities are somehow intrinsically – and uniquely – linked to violence and drug use.
The Met is also facing criticism for its use of facial recognition software at the carnival. Musker claimed about the software: ‘It’s not loaded; it’s loaded with people who we know are involved with criminality, who are wanted. It’s not a speculative search tool.’
“But given the police hold more than 20 million images in their facial recognition database, this statement may give little comfort. Musker also claimed to have consulted privacy groups to ensure ‘that what we are doing is proportionate, legal and effective’.
“But it is not ‘proportionate’ to arrest 656 people when the person in charge of the policing operation doesn’t care what they’re arrested for.
“It is not ‘proportionate’ to scan whole crowds to see if they match an image. Whether it is ‘legal’ or not is something that will be decided in the future.
“And ‘effective’ is at best unknown, and only relevant if no one cares about our civil liberties.
“Using pre-charge bail conditions to keep people away from events is nothing new. It is a tactic that the police have often used against protesters. And it has faced much criticism.
“But this is on a massive scale, and from a Met commander who appears to be utterly blasé about what he’s doing. This policing operation should worry us all. From pre-emptive arrests to facial scanning, this is not the sort of society any of us should want to live in.”