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  • IT COULD STIFLE THE VOICES OF THE PUBLIC AND RIGHT TO PROTEST: ANGER AS PM SEEKS TO TAKE ACTION TO STOP 'DISRUPTIVE PROTESTS'


    Carl Davison - Editor
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    UK News



    Prime Minister Rishi Sunak is backing the police to clamp down on what he describes as highly disruptive and dangerous protests, under controversial plans announced today, although just what is the definition of disruptive?

    Campaign groups up and down the country, claim it is just a way to silence the voices of protestors, stating that the definition of what is considered to be disruptive is unclear.

    An amendment tabled to the Public Order Bill, the Government will broaden the legal definition of ‘serious disruption’, giving police greater flexibility and clarity over when to intervene to stop the disruptive minority which it says use tactics such as blocking roads and slow marching to inflict misery on the public.

    Such protest tactics were regularly used during the Barton Moss protests which took place in 2013.

    However. the courts agreed that in the vast majority of cases, slow walking tactic was legal in this instance, as they were walking along a known public footpath.

    Police at the time claimed it to be a road, which was not the case as confirmed by the local council, which maintained that it status as a public footpath had not altered.

    Despite repeated calls for the police to stop and evidence to show that it was not a road, officers continued to remove protestors from the public footpath in order to facilitate the passage of trucks onto the site.

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    They were regularly dragged aside and arrested by police who claimed they were blocking the road into the iGas exploratory site, despite them clearly having a legal right to walk along the path.

    There are genuine fears that such new, sweeping powers could be used to stifle genuine and legal protest.

    While the Government has already given police additional powers to prevent protestors using guerrilla tactics, police chiefs have told the Prime Minister that there is some uncertainty over what reaches the threshold of ‘serious disruption’.

    The changes introduced today will give police officers absolute clarity over when they should step in. In practice, this will mean:

    police will not need to wait for disruption to take place and can shut protests down before chaos erupts

    police will not need to treat a series of protests by the same group as standalone incidents but will be able to consider their total impact

    police will be able to consider long-running campaigns designed to cause repeat disruption over a period of days or weeks

    Prime Minister Rishi Sunak said:

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    “The right to protest is a fundamental principle of our democracy, but this is not absolute. A balance must be struck between the rights of individuals and the rights of the hard-working majority to go about their day-to-day business.

    “We cannot have protests conducted by a small minority disrupting the lives of the ordinary public. It’s not acceptable and we’re going to bring it to an end.

    “The police asked us for more clarity to crack down on these guerrilla tactics, and we have listened.”

     

    Commissioner of the Metropolitan Police Service, Sir Mark Rowley said:

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    “The Met has a long history of policing protests, responding quickly and effectively to incidents involving crime and where serious disruption is caused, often in challenging situations. We have specialist officers trained to deal with a range of tactics, but this is complex, time-consuming work.

    “It is clearly understood that everybody has the right to protest. Increasingly however police are getting drawn into complex legal arguments about the balance between that right to protest and the rights of others to go about their daily lives free from serious disruption. The lack of clarity in the legislation and the increasing complexity of the case law is making this more difficult and more contested.

    “It is for Parliament to decide the law, and along with other police chiefs, I made the case for a clearer legal framework in relation to protest, obstruction and public nuisance laws. We have not sought any new powers to curtail or constrain protest, but have asked for legal clarity about where the balance of rights should be struck.

    “I welcome the government’s proposal to introduce a legal definition of “serious disruption” and “reasonable excuse”. In practical terms, Parliament providing such clarity will create a clearer line for the police to enforce when protests impact upon others who simply wish to go about their lawful business.”

     

    National Police Chiefs’ Council Lead for Public Order and Public Safety, Chief Constable BJ Harrington, said:

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    “We welcome the constructive conversations with government over more clearly defining serious disruption. This will support officers in confidently and quickly taking action and making arrests where appropriate.
    “Policing is not anti-protest, but there is a difference between protest and criminal activism, and we are committed to responding quickly and effectively to activists who deliberately disrupt people’s lives through dangerous, reckless, and criminal acts.

    “Police have a responsibility to appropriately balance the rights of the public who are going about their daily business lawfully and the rights of those protesting.”

     

    The College of Policing have confirmed today that they will produce guidance outlining the additional powers given to officers over the last year.

    National Highways is also reviewing its guidance, taking learnings from previous protests to ensure that roads are reopened as quickly as it is safe to do so.

    Today’s announcement is the latest step in the Government’s continued commitment to tackle the highly disruptive protests that the British public have been increasingly subjected to over the last few years.

    Through the Police, Crime, Sentencing and Courts Act, the Government introduced a statutory offence of public nuisance and created powers for the police to place conditions on unjustifiably noisy protests and increased the sentences for obstructing the highway.  Measures already announced in the Public Order Bill include creating a new criminal offence for interfering with key national infrastructure and for ‘locking-on’.

    The Prime Minister also sat down with the Home Secretary and police chiefs in December to give a clear message that the Government expects protesters who disrupt the lives of others to be swiftly removed and arrested.

    Matthew Scott, Kent’s Police and Crime Commissioner said:

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    “When Police Leaders were summoned to No. 10 last month, the Prime Minister made it absolutely clear that the law-abiding public must be protected from disruptive illegal protests. The Prime Minister promised to give policing the powers needed to end disruptive protests faster.

    “Today, the Prime Minister has delivered on his promise to PCCs and Police Leaders to aid police forces by clarifying the law governing disruptive protests.  This is in addition to the steps the Government has already taken to give policing more powers in the Police, Crime, Sentencing and Courts Act.

    “Kent Police was robust in dealing with these activists during last year’s disruption. This new clarity is welcome and should mean no more excuses from any agency for not clearing up disruption effectively.”

     

    Nick Harris, National Highways’ Chief Executive, said:

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    “The strategic road network is the backbone of the country, supporting the movement of trade, the daily commute and connecting friends and families, so people have a right to expect it to operate efficiently.

    “We’ve already obtained civil injunctions to deter reckless and dangerous protests on these busy roads. When they do occur, our guidance will help keep disruption to a minimum by ensuring that the carriageway is opened as quickly as it is safe to do so.”

     

    Main Photo: The late Albert Spiby




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