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15th December 2006
The House of Lords handed down a landmark ruling on Wednesday on the scope of free speech and protest rights. The judgment found that anti war campaigners human rights of free
speech and assembly had been violated by Gloucestershire police when
the police prevented coaches attending an anti-war demonstration organised by Green party member Dave Cockcroft at RAF
Fairford in March 2003.
Police stopped and searched 120 peace
campaigners then sealed the coaches and escorted them back to London.
The demo was Gloucestershire's largest ever demonstration with an
estimated 5000 people and speakers including Green MEP Dr Caroline
Lucas, George Monbiot, Mark Thomas and Thom Yorke.
Organiser of the demonstration, Dave Cockcroft who is a Green party
member and Stroud Town councillor, said: "It is ironic that the police
violated human rights by detaining these coaches. These people were
seeking to join the peaceful demonstration against an illegal war that
has devastated Iraq and left over 100,000 dead."
The test case was brought Jane Laporte along with 120 other anti war
campaigners who were prevented from attending a lawful protest at RAF
Fairford in March 2003, just hours before the base was used for bombing
raids on Iraq. The case was heard over three days in October this year.
Giving the lead judgement of a unanimous court, Lord Bingham of
Cornhill said that the case had: "raised[d] important questions on the
right of the private citizen to demonstrate again government policy and
the powers of the police to curtail exercise of that right."
They had done so wholly unlawfully in this case, their Lordships held,
because the Human Rights Act had brought about “a constitutional shift”
creating for the first time a right to protest which the common law had
previously been “reluctant and hesitant” to acknowledge (para 34 of
the ruling). Freedom of expression was “an essential foundation of
democratic society” (para 36) and there had been no reason to restrict
it in this case. Rejecting the police’s argument that suspicions about
some of the coach passengers entitled them to turn back everyone, Lord
Bingham commented: "There was no reason (other than her refusal to give
her name, which however irritating to the police was entirely lawful)
to view the claimant as other than a committed, peaceful demonstrator.
It was wholly disproportionate to restrict her exercise of her rights
under articles 10 and 11 because she was in the company of others some
of whom might, at some time in the future, breach the peace."
The campaigners had travelled in three coaches from London to attend a
lawful and authorised demonstration at the airbase from which bombing
raids on Iraq were about to be launched. They were stopped and searched
en route by Gloucestershire police and then asked to reboard their
coaches. The doors were then sealed by police who escorted them in
convoy back to London. Both the High Court and Court of Appeal ruled
that the forced return was unlawful, but approved the Polices’ decision
to turn the protestors back. The Lords’ decision overruled the lower
courts on this aspect of the case. An appeal by the police against the
finding that they had unlawfully detained the campaigners on the return
journey was also rejected.
Cllr Philip Booth, a Stroud District councillor and local Green party
spokesperson said: "Under this government we have seen a steady erosion
of the rights that underpin our democracy like the right to express
dissent and to do so collectively with others in public. This decision
is important and gives us the right to protest peacefully in all but
extreme circumstances."
John Halford, a public law and human rights specialist at Bindman and
Partners, represented the campaigners. He said today: "The Lords have
given a principled judgement on where the line should and must be
drawn: peaceful protest can only be prevented in the most extreme
circumstances which are very far from this case. These campaigners
wanted to protest lawfully against an unlawful war. The Lords have
unhesitatingly said they had that right."
Jane Laporte in whose name the test case was brought fought a 3 ½ year
legal battle to ensure that the police’s actions should not go
unchecked: "The willingness of the police to bow to political pressure,
by stifling dissent and arbitrarily detaining protestors in this way,
brings the proper role of the police into question. They should, as the
judgement found, be the facilitators not suppressors of peaceful
protest. I am delighted the House of Lords has said their actions were
completely unlawful and a human rights breach.”
Notes for editors:
Further background:
On 22nd March 2003, three days after the start of the US/UK war on
Iraq, a demonstration organised by the Gloucestershire Weapons
Inspectors (GWI), attracted over up to 5,000 protestors to the
airbase. Groups travelled to Fairford from 37 locations across the UK.
American B-52 planes flew from RAF Fairford airbase to bomb Baghdad
(see http://www.fairfordpeacewatch.com/ ) and Fairford was the site of
excessive policing during the war on Iraq. (Within 52 days (from 6
March 2003), police conducted over 2000 anti-terror searches in the
vicinity.) GWI, Berkshire CIA and Liberty issued a dossier showing how
stop and search powers of the Terrorism Act 2000 were misused by
police. For the report "Casualty of War - 8 weeks of counter-terrorism
in rural England" see http://www.gwi.org.uk/ and
http://www.liberty-human-rights.org.uk/ The Government estimated the
added cost of policing RAF Fairford was £6.9 million. The airbase
continues to be upgraded for use by US Stealth (B2) Bombers, greatly
expanding the US capacity to "invisibly" deploy tactical nuclear
weapons anywhere in the world within hours. Further info at
http://www.gwi.org.uk/ and
http://www.atkinsglobal.com/skills/design/sectors/aviationdefence/jfsiraffai
rford/
The police had argued, at the hearing in October, that they were in
fact protecting the protestors' right to life, by preventing 120 of
them from reaching protests at RAF Fairford (Gloucestershire). The
officer in charge of policing the protests stated that, since the US
military had reserved the right to use "deadly force" in the event of
an intrusion into the base, "had a member of the public been killed or
injured by one of the armed personnel guarding the B52 aircraft…the
political consequences would have been extremely damaging to the
coalition partners". Helen Wickham, a coach passenger, said: "I think
it is deeply worrying that Gloucestershire police, confronted with the
possibility of US troops shooting unarmed protestors, chose to defend
the US use of lethal force over our right to protest. I wonder if there
was pressure on them to do so."
This ruling will impact significantly on policing of future
demonstrations and will have implications for the Austin/Saxby May Day
2001 cases against the Metropolitan Police to be heard early next year.
On Mayday 2001, police detained thousands in Oxford Circus for seven
hours to "prevent a breach of peace".
The Human Rights Act 1998 came into force in October 2000. It requires
the police and other public authorities to avoid breaching key European
Convention Human Rights Articles save where legislation makes this
impossible. Amongst the key rights are Article 5 (deprivation of
liberty must be justified in accordance with a procedure prescribed by
law and on one of the five grounds listed in paragraph (1) of the
Article), Article 10 (freedom of speech and expression) and Article 11
(freedom of assembly).
At common law a constable may arrest a person without warrant whom he
or she reasonably believes will commit a breach of the peace in the
immediate future, even though at the time of the arrest such person has
not committed any breach. This power is subject to a number of strict
restrictions, however: the belief must relate to an act or threatened
act harming any person or, in his presence, his property, or which puts
a person in fear of such harm; the belief must relate to the likely
actions of the particular individual or individuals against whom the
power is used; and when the particular individual is acting lawfully at
the time the power is used, the threat of his committing a breach of
the peace must be sufficiently real and imminent to justify the use of
such a draconian power.
Contact details:
Fairford Coach Action is the name of the group of more than 90
passengers who have collectively decided to pursue a Judicial Review
case against the police's actions on 22nd March 2003. Full background
information is available on the website. Visit the site for links to
the full judgement, related web articles, statements of support, and
testimonial statements from coach passengers.
http://www.fairfordcoachaction.org.uk/
John HalfordBindman and Partners 0207 833 4433 Jane Laporte (the claimant) can be contacted on 07817 483 167
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