Defend The Right To Protest » Posts » PUBLIC FORUM to call for police not protesters to be put in the dock WEDS 8TH JUNE, 7PM, ULU
PUBLIC FORUM to call for police not protesters to be put in the dock WEDS 8TH JUNE, 7PM, ULU
WEDS 8th JUNE, 7PM, UNIVERSITY OF LONDON UNION, MALET STREET
SPEAKERS TOMORROW NIGHT TO INCLUDE
JODY MCINTYRE: “The police have proved themselves to be a violent gang that are out of control. In my case, they consider a video of a police officer pulling a man out of his wheelchair and dragging him across the road to amount to ‘no evidence’. In the case of Smiley Culture, they have provided no explanation as to how a police raid of a man’s home resulted in that man dying from a single stab wound. In the case of Alfie Meadows, they are charging a student who almost died as a result of their violent actions. Just as PC Simon Harwood is now being charged for the death of Ian Tomlinson, it is the Metropolitan Police who should be on trial for violent disorder, not student activists.”
SUSAN MATTHEWS & MATTHEW MEADOWS - ALFIE MEADOWS PARENTS: “As Alfie’s parents we still feel extraordinarily lucky that he survived a serious assault by a police officer. We will never forget the long night we spent waiting to know whether his brain operation would be successful. We look forward to the release of the findings of the IPCC investigation. He has now been charged with violent disorder. The case will be heard in open court where Alfie will protest his innocence. We support our son in his quest for justice.”
JOHN MCDONNELL MP: “The use of pre crime arrests, violent police tactics, dragging more and more people through the courts, and threats of new anti trade union legislation, all represent a concerted attempt to suppress protests against the Government. They are simply provoking greater and more determined resistance.”
SARA TOMLINSON - STOP KETTLING OUR KIDS/NUT: “We insist that our young school and college students must have the freedom to protest without fear of violence.”
PLUS: MERLIN EMMANUEL -JUSTICE FOR SMILEY CULTURE, UK UNCUT, TONY BENN AND BRYAN SIMPSON
MORE INFORMATION:
PUBLIC FORUM: WE WON’T LET FEAR RULE THE STREETS - ITS RIGHT TO PROTEST
Weds 8th June, 7pm,
University of London Union (ULU), Malet St
MERLIN EMMANUEL -JUSTICE FOR SMILEY CULTURE
JODY MCINTYRE
ALFIE MEADOWS
TONY BENN
UK UNCUT
BRYAN SIMPSON (arrested for occupying Millbank)
JOHN MCDONNELL MP
SARA TOMLINSON –NUT & Stop Kettling our Kids
THE GUILLOTINE 3 (under suspicion for conspiracy to commit street theatre)
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This week Alfie Meadows, the student protester who needed life-saving brain surgery after the December 9th demonstration last year, will face charges of violent disorder at Westminster Crown Court. With him will be many others facing similarly serious charges including affray and aggravated trespass. All those accused are people who expressed their legal right to protest at one of the demonstrations against this current government’s attempt to impose austerity measures.
Last week, an IPCC supervised inquiry found that police were ‘justified’ in dragging disabled student protester Jody McIntyre from his wheelchair, even if they did admit to ‘inadvertently’ hitting him with a baton. While Simon Harwood is eventually facing manslaughter charges for the death of Ian Tomlinson, protesters and the right to protest are under threat everywhere, as we see in the criminalisation of student and other protesters, the attempts to scare potential protesters away from future demonstrations by threats of police violence and the pre-emptive arrests of supposed ‘troublemakers’ in advance of the royal wedding.
To bring together all those concerned about the real threats to freedom of assembly we are now facing, and an increasingly brutal coalition government, supporters will be holding their own hearing regarding where ‘violence’ is really coming from – outside the court hearings of Alfie Meadows and other arrested student protesters this Thursday and Friday. The night before, Defend the Right to Protest will be holding a public forum at ULU with speakers including Tony Benn, Jody McIntyre, John McDonnell MP, UK Uncut and many others.
DEMAND JUSTICE FOR ALFIE MEADOWS, JODY McINTYRE, SMILEY CULTURE
PUT POLICE VIOLENCE NOT PROTESTERS IN THE DOCK
9th June, Westminster City Court, 70 Horseferry Road, at 9am
The cases of Alfie Meadows, Jody McIntyre, Smiley Culture, Kingsley Burrell Brown and Ian Tomlinson highlight the scale of violent and political policing in Britain today and the impunity with which they are being allowed to operate.
ALFIE MEADOWS was hit so hard by a police baton during the student fees protest on 9 December that he required three hours emergency brain surgery. He has been charged with violent disorder, despite an ongoing IPCC investigation into the police behaviour towards him on the day.
JODY MCINTYRE was struck with a police baton, forcefully removed from his wheelchair twice, and dragged across the road by a police officer. Last week, an internal police investigation supervised by the IPCC concluded that Jody was ‘inadvertently’ struck with the baton, and that his removal from his wheelchair was ‘justifiable and lawful’.
SMILEY CULTURE died from stab wounds during a police raid on his home.
KINGSLEY BURRELL BROWN died in suspicious circumstances after being sectioned in a mental institute by the police.
IAN TOMLINSON died after being pushed to the ground by a police officer at the G20 demonstrations. After initially denying any involvement, the DPS have now charged PC Simon Harwood with manslaughter.
MORE:
The action against Jody McIntyre was percieved justifiable given the officers’ perceived risk to him - a risk blamed on the violent disorder of protesters. This follows hard on the heels of the outrageous decision to charge Alfie Meadows with violent disorder
In reality the violence that occurred on the fees demonstrations came from the police. Many peaceful protesters were charged by mounted officers or with batons and shields, and thousands were contained in a kettle for hours into the night without food, water, shelter or toilet facilities.
The unlawful killing of Ian Tomlinson during the G20 protests show these are not isolated incidents but part of wider pattern of police violence.
In March this year Smiley Culture died from stab wounds sustained during a police raid on his home. Thousands have joined Smiley Culture’s family in demanding answers and justice. They have been told to await the result of an IPCC investigation.
But how can anyone trust the IPCC to rule on a case involving the police that took place at Smiley Culture’s home when they allow the police to get away with justifying violence towards Jody McIntyre which featured widely on BBC news footage?
The treatment of Alfie, Jody and Smiley Culture and many others shows that a culture of impunity surrounds the issue of police violence.
It also shows that while protesters can face jail terms simply for speaking out against cuts, police officers are still not held to account for their violent actions, even when they result in death.
On the 8th June we will be holding a public forum to discuss how we can organise to defend arrested protesters, win justice for victims of police violence and assert our right to protest.
On 9th June, the day Alfie Meadows faces his first hearing, supporters will be coming to the court to demand the charges against him are dropped. We will be demanding justice for Aflie Meadows, Jody McIntyre, Smiley Culture and all other victims of police brutality.
On 10th June more student protesters, including BRYAN SIMPSON (see below) will be in court -charged for there involvement in mass demonstrations against fees and cuts.
The campaign urges everyone to get involved and defend the right to protest.
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Freedom from repression, nothing less