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MOBS AND COPPERS

Monday’s Smash EDO demo forced the Brighton bomb makers to shut up shop after surrounding the factory with the Remember Gaza funeral procession.

The protest, commemorating the victims of the Israeli massacre in Gaza a year ago, began in Wild Park, close to the Home Farm Road site. As hundreds of protesters gathered the police attempted to issue Section 14 notices in an attempt to impose conditions on the demo.

In a memorial to the 1400+ Palestinians killed, around 300 black-clad protesters carried coffins and banners towards the factory. At the bottom of the road the protest split, with most of the crowd scrambling up the bank into the woods behind in an attempt to make it to the factory cross country. The rest remained at the bottom of the road, which was blocked off by lines of police vans, where they read the names of the victims of Israeli aggression. The back of EDO was surrounded, as mounted police, and dogs guarded the fence. With the police beating protesters with batons, some managed to get into the back of a nearby bakers through a wire fence, only to be met by more of the baton-brigade, causing a tactical withdrawal into the safety of the woods. The police weren’t risking any re-run of the Shut ITT demo in October 2008 (see SchNEWS 651) when protesters managed to redecorate the back of the factory in shades of red, and despite the ingenuity of those seeking redress for the Gaza atrocities, the police presence was too overwhelming on this occasion to make it onto site.

The crowd regrouped on the main road, with several requiring medical attention. The demo then moved off into town, peacefully but purposefully. At several points police attempted to block off the road but the protesters surged round the sides of police lines.

The procession was briefly kettled on Lewes Road, before police allowed it to progress to The Level park. The police announced the march could go no further but protesters pushed on into town.

As the crowd began to disperse into the streets, police locked down the city centre, closing off roads even when there was no sign of marchers. Around 50 peaceful protesters were kettled in the narrow streets of the North Laines for around an hour as evening shoppers looked on. A roaming group of four marchers carrying a Remember Gaza banner tried to give a stray copper a taste of his own medicine by using the banner to kettle him against a building but the humourless plod made his escape by tearing it down.
Leading up to the demo police had been ramping up the tension, staking out pre-demo meetings and following and harassing known activists. On Sunday night, a local squat was raided by armed police on spurious burglary grounds. One man was held until the demo was over, then released without charge.

Coverage from the local rag The Argus once again sidestepped the real story focussing instead on the ‘hijacking’ of the city centre and the chaos and disruption of a single day’s dissent. The expression of outrage for the presence of activists in the bohemian shopping resort and for non-compliance with the police before the event fails to see or ask the obvious. As a spokesperson for Smash EDO rightly pointed out: where is the outrage for the devastating loss of human life in Gaza? Where is the support for the legal right to protest? Why would activists campaigning against the production of arms in their own town ever consider complying with the political policing of an event designed to silence all dissent? Wake up Brighton: while bomb makers remain at large in our town we should be thankful that there are those who have something to say about it.

*See smashedo.org.uk



 
 

The following comments have been left on this story by other SchNEWS readers...

Added on 24th January 2010 at 23:53 by K. McEgan

Why don't you just get stuck into plod? Remember Brixton '81 & '85? New Scotland Yard delenda est.


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A brief history of the Dragon Festival and Cigarrones travellers site, southern Spain.
The Cigarrones travellers’ site is one of several communities which have sprung up near Orgiva in Andalucía, Spain, in recent decades. Coming to the southern tip of Europe to escape the repression against travellers in Britain and elsewhere, they have carved out a life of avin’ it autonomous anarchy – despite increasing attention from tinpot local authorities who act like Franco is still in. Since 1997 the site has held the annual Dragon Festival - now arguably one of the most significant free festivals in Europe – but this is also under attack. Here is a brief history written by a resident of Cigarrones:
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