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#OccupyDemocracy: Protesters hold Parliament Square despite arrests

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#OccupyDemocracy: Protesters hold Parliament Square despite arrests — RT UK

Police have arrested up to 40 people in the course of weeklong Occupy Democracy protests outside the UK Parliament. Activists had originally set out to resist government austerity, poverty and inequality.

Hundreds of police officers have conducted often aggressive operations to remove protesters from Parliament Square and stop demonstrators from setting up camps.

Those arrested have been charged under various public order bylaws, including the Police Reform and Social Responsibility Act 2011. Police have used the laws to confiscate backpacks, umbrellas and pizza boxes, claiming these count as sleeping equipment.

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Among those arrested were Green Party MP Caroline Lucas and Green London Assembly Member Baroness Jenny Jones, who was later released without charge.

“I have never been arrested before and I didn’t expect it now. It was rough and I’m very shaken up. I am proud to say that my first arrest was in support of Occupy London, Occupy Democracy and everything they stand for,” Jones told organizers.

The heavy-handed reaction by authorities has transformed the protests into a movement for the freedom of speech and freedom of assembly - rights that activists and supporters feel have been trampled upon.

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Comedian and self-styled revolutionary Russell Brand says the protests are a legitimate call for change.

“People are coming together to demand democracy peacefully, not violently, in a humorous way. People from different backgrounds with different beliefs are coming together to ask for a basic, fundamental right that we are told we already have,” Brand told RT’s Harry Fear in Parliament Square.

“The police themselves, before long, will be on the right side of this argument. I’m sure that before long the police will join these protesters, and then we’ll see a true unity and we will see some semblance of democracy in this Square – a symbol of our great democracy in this country – a democracy that exists in name but not in action,” he added.

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One protester named Danny has been ‘occupying’ the Churchill plinth for over a day, sitting atop the statue holding a placard, which states “The revolution will not be confiscated.”

“I’m up here because Churchill is a symbol of freedom and we’ve had our freedom to protest removed, with no proper explanation why,” Danny told organizers.

“The rights of the damaged area of grass to regrow this week – rather than next week after our protest – has been deemed to be of more importance than our rights to assemble and protest, even though a significant area of the square is intact.”

Protesters aim to remain in the square until at least Sunday.

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The only media in England who dared to giving a report is The Guardian, but used their own method to distort the fact in the first version
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But later they may find it is not an issue happened in the far-east and people can easily find the truth so they changed the website content
Police move to clear Occupy protesters from Parliament Square | UK news | The Guardian
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Police officers and Occupy protesters in Parliament Square on Saturday night. Photograph: Yui Mok/PA
Police made one arrest after hundreds of officers converged on Parliament Square in London on Sunday night in an attempt to remove Occupy Democracy protesters.

A Metropolitan police spokesman said that officers were enforcing a notice to desist. The demonstrators, who were in the third day of occupying the square, were given 30 minutes to leave or face arrest.

Possessing items that could be used for sleeping in Parliament Square was made illegal under the Police Reform and Social Responsibility Act 2011.

One protester used a smartphone to send a live video stream of the eviction to the Bambuser website as others condemned the police action on social media.

Officers could be seen dragging away some of the protesters after they refused to leave.

An Occupy spokeswoman described the police action as “absolutely crazy”.

She said offficers told them that they could not sit on tarpaulins, which were deemed to be “structures”.

Officers did not remove all of the protesters and between 50 and 100 remained in the square late on Sunday night.

The person who was arrested was being held in custody at Charing Cross police station.

Occupy London said on its Twitter feed: “David Cameron supported HK pro-democracy protests but is intent on crushing them in UK w[ith] violence.”

The group planned to remain in Parliament Square for another week. According to its website, the goal of the Occupy Democracy campaign is to “direct the energy from current single-issue struggles into a critical mass that can radically challenge the corrupt and unrepresentative system”.
 
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