Yet the fact that Mitchell was not immediately arrested by the police officers in question for using 'foul and abusive language' also highlights the class nature of the law and the role of the police in society. The whole incident reminded me of a time I was arrested almost a decade ago 'for using foul and abusive language' during the Iraq war while taking part in an anti-war protest. A group of anti-war activists had got up early and were now lying down in a 'die in' outside the local BBC (in protest at their craven pro-war stance) in a fairly main road, blocking rush hour traffic. I was not actually involved in the 'die in' but was handing out leaflets nearby and joining in the chants of 'BBC - Propaganda TV'. Eventually a series of police riot vans showed up and about forty or so police leapt out of them. No doubt annoyed at having had their leisurely morning cooked breakfasts rudely interupted by reports of this protest, the police were not in a particularly good mood and started indiscriminately arresting protesters lying down in the road, with all the characteristic politeness and gentility one has come to associate with the British police (1429 deaths in police custody from 1990-2011). Together with another anti-war activist I began remonstrating with the police from the sidelines along the lines of 'Well done', 'What heroes you guys are', 'What a great democracy we are living in' etc.
This line of sarcastic commentary did not earn me the warmth of the police as they were going about arresting those involved in the 'die-in' and dragging them into police vans, and one massive police officer came up to me and told me to leave the area. I say told me to leave the area, essentially he started pushing me back - indeed nearly pushing me over. Though I did not argue at all and was slowly moving back, I was clearly not going back fast enough for the cop who then nearly shoved me over backwards. I remember saying something like 'What the f**k are you doing - I am moving back okay?' at which point he said 'If you swear at me again I will arrest you under Section 5 of the Public Order Act [or something along those lines]'. I was sceptical that nearly pushing someone over backwards and then threatening to arrest them for accidentally swearing was really fair - and so said 'What the f**k?' again - at which point I was promptly arrested by the cop for using 'foul and abusive language in a public area'. I was not ultimately charged - the police statement about what I allegedly had said was so manifestly self-evidently bullshit that I think they realised it was best not to pursue it in a court of law - but the point remains - the police are there to protect the interests of the rich and powerful - which is why even when a rich millionaire Tory like Mitchell openly acts like the absolute arrogant tosser he is there is no talk of him facing any kind of criminal charge. It seems a timely moment nonetheless to plug the following event:
Defend the Right to Protest 2012 National Conference
AUSTERITY, INJUSTICE & THE POWER OF PROTEST
Sunday 14th October, 2012, 11:30am – 5:30pm, University of London Union, Malet Street.
Across the world people are resisting austerity.
They also have to confront violent tactics by the police and the draconian use
of the law.
In Britain students demonstrating against fees
were subject to kettling and mounted horse charges. In Quebec the authorities
responded to an all out strike with emergency laws.
Governments are attempting to undermine effective
protest at a time of unprecedented cuts. Faced with public sector strikes,
Coalition ministers threatened to introduce more hard line anti-trade union
laws. Such attacks also take place against a wider context of injustice and
clampdown involving stop and search, police racism and deaths in custody. They
include the use of protester “ASBOs”, pre-crime arrests and other infringements
of civil liberties as seen around the Royal Wedding and the Olympics.
This conference will take place as people prepare
for an autumn of struggle: the TUC march against austerity, the NUS education
demonstration and strikes in the private and public sector. It will examine the
nature of the current attacks on protest, what laws and tactics are being
employed and why. It will look at how protest movements have confronted these
challenges in the past and discuss the future of resistance here and
internationally. Practical workshops will also inform people of their rights and
how to run a defence campaign.
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