Saturday, January 10, 2009

Gaza Protest in London January 10th

The Stop The War coalition organised a protest in London today. It started in Speaker's Corner in Hyde Park at 12.30. I got down there around 3pm and by that time everyone had marched to the Israeli Embassy in Kensington. I found them by following the sound of loud speakers and chants. I had to climb over a fence of Hyde Park with the help of a group of well-to-do middle aged people who were also climbing over. I could hear the noise all the way from the other side of Hyde Park. As I got there, the official speeches were just wrapping up. There were thousands of people in the street still though so I stuck around to take pictures of the crowd and then it all kind of kicked off.

Crowd standing outside a posh London hotel



Mostly people were just chanting "Free, free Palestine" and waving their signs.



Clearly this guy was no newbie to "causes"







This is some kind of hippy-mobile.







That's an Israeli flag in the air



A group of guys started setting alight Israeli flags and stamping on them...











At this point, I was in a big group, flanked against a row of police with shields and helmets. About 50 yards down the road was another row of police facing the other way, with a group of protesters on the other side. They were trying to get people from the other side through to our side and weren't letting people back the other way. I chatted to a guy with press pass who said his friend was on the other side and that a Starbucks had been smashed in. He flashed his pass to a cop to try and get through and I was considering holding up my camera (big professional SLR with a long lens sometimes does the same job as a press pass) and trying to pretend I was with him... but the cop denied him anyway.

Things seemed pretty peaceful on our side as far as I could see, people were chanting, the flag burning was the worst I saw up to this point. All of a sudden, a row of police mounted on horses trooped in behind the line of standing police. This drew strong boos from the crowd, and people started saying the police were planning to charge at us to move us back. People started yelling "shame on you" at the police and scattering backwards. I found it weird that the police had called in extra reinforcements as it really didn't seem necessary and it definitely made people angry that the police were beefing up. As the crowd dissipated I saw this...





I don't know what had happened to him and I've since read in the news that a policeman was knocked unconscious so I guess this was the guy. Every now and then the police would make a little surge and people would start running backwards and shrieking. I ran backwards a bit at this point, as the prospect of getting trampled down by a row of mounted police wasn't appealing. As we ran, I saw a guy who had tripped over a barrier and was lying on the floor, a couple of police grabbed him and there was a scramble in which they hit him as he was trying to get up. I don't have any photos of it though as too many people were in the way, and I was still running away, so take it as you will.

Some people were dragging the metal barriers into a row to form a blockade to stop the police advancing further.







We ended up with this kind of set up, police were on one side...



And protesters were on another, behind a barrier they'd set up themselves.




This was when people started throwing various stuff at the police, mainly the wooden poles that had been used to hold up signs. They were very light and the police were looking unconcerned and just knocking them away with their shields.

People in the crowd were still chanting "Free, free Palestine"
lady with signs

And the drumming started again...


A couple of guys went in front of the barriers and waved their signs and chanted



Then about five police vans appeared from behind the crowd, driving through towards the front. A few protesters banged on the vans, and threw sticks and even barriers. I decided to blur this guy's face.


These guys ripped these metal bars from some basement steps of a house.

I guess they intended to throw them but they must have thought better of it because I saw them again ages later still holding them.

Someone had the idea of putting the barriers underneath the wheels of the vans, and that led to a few minutes of the vans driving back and forth, sometimes at quite some speed considering how many people were around. The police were obviously trying to get protesters to move back. They'd surge forward every few minutes, and people would run, myself included. I was very conscious that if the police wanted to, they could just trample us. There were lots of barriers around still and I was worried that I, or other people, could get trapped. It felt like a very real possibility that anyone caught in the wrong place at the wrong time could end up on the wrong end of a police baton. After each little surge, the crowd would regroup and begin chanting again until, after another few minutes, the police would suddenly start running towards us again, seemingly unprovoked.

Around this time I wandered a bit further back to send a text to my friend and when I got back, only a few minutes later, things seemed a little calmer. A few people decided to sit on the floor in a gesture of peaceful protest.














The atmosphere in the crowd was so calm at this point, seriously. No one was throwing things as far as I could see. People were chanting "free free palestine" and that was all.

These guys were even taking comedy "us running at the police" photos.


It was calm.

Then suddenly the police yelled "FORWARD" and marched at us at speed. People had to scramble to get off the floor and we moved back about 30 yards. These photos are super blurry because I was walking backwards while taking them.





Everyone just seemed confused about why we were being forced back. This happened a few more times, the crowd would settle in a new spot, calm. The worst people were doing was yelling "You can move us back but you can't get rid of us" and yet the police would still yell "FORWARD" and surge at us. I guess they had just had enough and wanted the protest over so they could go home.

More police arriving...


The police had succeeding in separating the crowd by now, and I decided to make my way home. I chatted to this girl, who was using a loud speaker to call to the police lining the streets back towards the tube station... "Happy New Year, nice to see you all, it's been a pleasure. Hope you had a great Christmas, and a great day today", all laced with heavy sarcasm.

3 comments:

MeanMrMustard said...

Thanks, Amy, for documenting this, and for sharing it.

Anonymous said...

I attended the initial meeting point at Speakers Corner and I listened to a few of the speakers. I didn't participate in the march but I did show up later on at the Israeli Embassy where there were various pockets of people shouting chants in support of the innocent civilians of Gaza. My reason for being there were humanitarian I just could not sit back at home seeing blatant war crimes being committed by the zionists on babies, women and children. I decided to leave around 6.30pm, however, the police had surrounded the area and periodically allowed protestors to leave from a chosen point. There were around 200 people that wanted to leave, we had to wait over 40 minutes as the police only let 4 people out at a time.Each person when they were eventually allowed to go had their photograph taken and had to state their full name, address and DOB.Each person was then throughly searched for weapons. I was accused of taking part in a riot which was far from the truth. I explained I had attended a peaceful protest voicing my views about the current situation in Israel. I was then escorted 10m down the road by two police pfficers on each side. The police were very rude and treated me like a criminal. I am a Teacher, Female, 5'2 and petite there was no need for this assumption. In any demonstartion there are always a few that over step the mark but why should the rest of us be tarred with the same brush?

jaymeekae said...

@anonymous.. thanks for your comments, I hadn't heard about any of that at all. I guess you were on the side that had the Starbucks smashed in?

Can I also ask... are you someone I know? If not, I'd be interested to know how you came across this post! Thanks :)