Britain: Kill the Bill protests take on police powers

May 6, 2021
Issue 

Thousands of people mobilised in 50 locations around England on May 1 against the proposed Police, Crime, Sentencing and Courts Bill, which activists say will erode the right to protest.

If passed, : widen the range of conditions that the police can impose on protests and the circumstances in which they can impose them; make it easier for police to charge participants with offences relating to breach of conditions at a protest; introduce a statutory offence of public nuisance; and create new stop, search and seizure powers for police.

Justifying the bill, the British government claims that as a result of Extinction Rebellion鈥檚 2019 protests 鈥渟ome of London鈥檚 busiest areas were brought to a standstill for several days鈥 and cost the police 拢37 million. It also cites the 2020 Black Lives Matter protests, claiming 鈥172 Metropolitan Police Service officers were assaulted by a violent minority鈥.

The Kill the Bill Coalition was , and released a statement saying the bill 鈥渋s a dangerous and unnecessary piece of legislation that endangers the rights and safety of every single one of us 鈥 We stand united and reject attempts to divide our movement into 鈥済ood鈥 and 鈥渂ad鈥 protestors.鈥

The coalition argues that the proposed bill 鈥渋ntensifies police brutality against Gypsy, Roma and Traveller communities, and criminalises their way of life". The bill will give police power to criminalise protests for being 鈥榥oisy鈥, disruptive or 鈥榓nnoying', and uses "鈥榩rotecting鈥 women as a cover to expand police powers and increase custodial sentences."

It will also expand stop and search powers which, the coalition notes are "regularly used to harass and terrorise young black people." Finally, the coalition explains the bill "will silence the calls for justice by families of those whose loved ones have died at the hands of the police 鈥 [and] makes those at the sharpest edge of state violence even more unsafe 鈥 including migrants, sex workers, disabled people, and racialised communities.鈥

More than 90 diverse groups have signed on to the statement.

Following the May protests, activist Neil Faulkner wrote: 鈥淲ith thousands out in Central London, hundreds in major cities and towns like Brighton, Bristol, Manchester, and Newcastle, and smaller protests in around 50 places altogether, the Kill the Bill Coalition has emerged as a major new campaigning force.

鈥淭he protests everywhere were young, diverse, and vibrant. They brought together the widest range of organisations, from local trades councils and union branches to radical activist groups like Sisters Uncut, Black Lives Matter, and Extinction Rebellion.

鈥淚n Central London, participants included Kurdish, Iranian, and Palestinian activists, the IWGB [Independent Workers of Great Britain] union of precarious workers, the London Renters Union, various women鈥檚 groups like Southall Black Sisters and Women Against Rape, as well as more mainstream labour movement organisations like local Labour parties, Momentum groups, and UNISON [Public Service Union] and RMT [National Union of Rail, Maritime and Transport Workers] branches.鈥

Faulkner believes the campaign can win, but says activists are up against powerful forces: 鈥淲e cannot afford to underestimate the threat that this right-wing programme of police power and fascist-type politics represents.

鈥淭his corrupt, reactionary, vicious regime will not easily be defeated. The system faces a deepening ecological and social crisis, and that means pro-system regimes like the [Boris] Johnson government face crises of legitimacy in the face of growing popular resistance. The drive towards fascism and a police state is 鈥 as we explain in 鈥 a direct consequence of the systemic crisis of world capitalism. The stakes are therefore very high.

鈥淭o win, we must reach out and turn the campaign we have launched from a movement of thousands into a movement of hundreds of thousands.鈥

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