| |
|
Feature:
Friday July 8
2005
|
|
|
GLENEAGLES PROTESTERS CONDEMN
POLICE ASSAULTS
|
ANGRY protesters have condemned police tactics at the
G8 Alternatives demonstration in Auchterarder, outside Gleneagles
on Wednesday, when riot police, mounted police and police
with dogs were used to disperse demonstrators after hundreds
had marched peacefully into a field.
James Shade and Jackie Wilson, from Govanhill, Glasgow, spoke
to News Line.
James said: They battered me and they battered a lassie
as she was sitting down in a protest, with her back to them.
They kept kicking her in the back until she got up and
then they were just coming at us, drawing their batons and
hollering out at the top of their lungs at us.
It was completely over the top.
Most of the people in the field were pacifists. They
were no threat to anyone.
I had to throw my top away. I was hit with a shield
and put on my backside and people had to draw me away so the
dogs wouldnt bite me and they didnt get me with
the batons.
I had my hands in the air and I said peaceful
protest.
There must have been hundreds of people in the field
when they started attacking us.
All we did was go into the field instead of the street.
It was a statement and they werent wearing numbers.
The worst of it is we pay their wages.
Nick, a photographer from South Africa, said: I followed
the people into the fields.
We still got through after the riot police had actually
arrived to block everything off.
There were hundreds in the fields and that obviously
got too much for the police and they called in more riot police
and police with dogs and the horses and then tried to shepherd
everyone into small areas.
A lot of people refused to leave, which prompted the
police to get a bit aggressive.
I ended up getting smashed with one of their shields
and I saw a couple of police push a woman and an old man.
After that, people followed what the police were doing,
got into small groups and dispersed.
It was a big police operation.
I thought the decision to transport riot police into
the field in a military helicopter was a scare tactic.
I think the fence that surrounded the field was at least
a mile from the G8 summit.
Nick added: I thought it was pretty underhand to try
and stop people coming to demonstrate outside the G8. Its
freedom of expression.
But when they have to cover their backsides any tactic
becomes acceptable.
Maureen and her daughter Siobhan Duffy, from Irvine, who went
by coach to take part in the march, said they thought that
from the outset the way police handled the event was
a disgrace.
We were getting information on the bus through on the
way to Auchterarder that the media were reporting that the
event was cancelled, they said.
The Chinook helicopter they used is used to move troops
in Northern Ireland.
We wondered if they were bringing troops.
There was a far too large police presence, said
Maureen. It wasnt necessary and I think it was
designed to be intimidating.
Siobhan said: One of my friends was a steward at the
event and he phoned up a BBC newsdesk and they said to him
that they should think about perhaps the G8 Alternatives march
should be cancelled.
This was when stewards were trying to ascertain where
the information had come from that the march had been cancelled.
I think my civil rights were violated today, said
Maureen. I had a right to go there.
Despite roadblocks and scare stories in the capitalist
press before the march, around 15,000 people took part in
the demonstration.
Many villagers came out onto the streets to welcome the protesters.
The march began from the local park and the demonstrators
made their way along the road in a carnival atmosphere until
they were met by metal fences, with mounted riot police assembled
on the other side.
The march was shepherded around a corner towards a field and
many people decided to march through the field up to a police
control tower in the distance, where there were more metal
fences.
As the march came round the corner there were already cranes
with TV cameramen at the top of them to film proceedings.
Then police reinforcements were brought in using a Chinook
helicopter, to cries of Shame and boos from the
crowd in the road, where riot police had also moved in.
Auchterarder was full of police even as demonstrators tried
to find their coaches to get home.
Before the march started, coaches carrying people to the protest
were stopped near a roundabout, some miles away.
They were held by the roadside for hours, before eventually
being allowed to proceed under an escort of police vans.
Whilst they were waiting at the roadside, radio reports said
the march had been cancelled.
There were also reports that Stirling had been sealed off
and police had used pepper spray on some people there and
that there was a ring of steel around Gleneagles.
About a thousand people were not able to get on the coaches
from Edinburgh and several people who were left behind in
the city also complained about policing there.
One of those travelling by coach to the G8 Alternatives march
told News Line what he thought of the G8 leaders summit.
Trevor Ngwane, from Soweto in South Africa, who was wearing
a Make Capitalism History badge, said: The
policies of the West have created a lot of poverty and suffering.
The rich get richer. The poor get poorer. Children dying
of hunger, people dying of disease and the despair of unemployment,
environmental destruction and deforestation and general loss
of hope in the future and in human solidarity.
As long as we allow capitalism to continue to exist
the pain and suffering will continue.
|