Protests Don’t Kill People, Plastic Bullets Do
June 22, 2012 · by
http://onesmallwindow.wordpress.com/2012/06/22/protests-dont-kill-people-plastic-bullets-do/
Last month, the Metropolitan police confirmed
that following the riots in August 2011, its stockpile of plastic
bullets, or baton rounds, had increased to over 10,000 by the end of the
year; just prior to that, the Met had around 700 bullets. Through a
freedom of information (FOI) request made by former Liberal Democrat
member of the London Assembly, Dee Dorcey, the Met revealed that in 2010-2011 the use of plastic bullets was authorised 22 times.
The
use of plastic bullets is very much a British method of crowd control.
Pioneered as a “safer” alternative to rubber bullets, they were first
used in Northern Ireland in the mid-1970s. In that decade alone, over
40,000 plastic bullets were fired. This “safer” method claimed its first
victim in 1975 in 10-year old Stephen Geddis.
Since
then, 13 other people have died. Hundreds of others have suffered upper
body injuries, been blinded or suffered brain damage, most often not in
riot situations, and children in particular have been affected. Plastic
bullets were not designed for crowd control and are only to be used
when absolutely necessary. Although the former chief constable called
for an end to their use in 2007, plastic bullet use has increased in the
past couple of years, with over 350 rounds fired in June to July 2011
alone.
With
the fresh rise in plastic bullet use in the North of Ireland and
stockpiling across other parts of the UK, in the same week as the
inquest into the death of Sean Riggs in police custody and the trial of PC Simon Harwood
for the death of Ian Tomlinson, a press conference was held in
parliament on Thursday 21 June, “Use of Plastic Bullets will Fuel Racial
Tensions”, chaired by Labour MPs Jeremy Corbyn and John McDonnell.
Speakers included veteran campaigner on the issue, Clara Reilly, from
the United Campaign Against Plastic Bullets (UCAPB), Paddy Kelly from
the Children’s Law Centre in Belfast and Stafford Scott, from the
Tottenham Defence Campaign (TDC), a supporter of the Mark Duggan family.
The
UCAPB has been campaigning for almost 30 years against the use of
plastic bullets in the North of Ireland and calls for an outright ban on
the use of these “lethal and excessively dangerous weapons”. Clara
Reilly, of the campaign, said that they were “dismayed”
last year at news that plastic bullets could be deployed during the
summer riots in England. Mrs Reilly said, “it is obvious there is much
work to be done in local communities around racial tension and abuse,
police accountability, poor housing, unemployment and how the promotion
of human rights must become a policing priority.” She also expressed
concern that the further escalation of the use of plastic bullets in the
North of Ireland could put an end to the peace process.
Paddy
Kelly of the Children’s Law Centre in Belfast expressed concern that at
least one child will be murdered this summer by a plastic bullet. In
2010, a 17-year old suffered serious injuries. She described them as a
serious breach of children’s rights and had only served to escalate
tensions in the North of Ireland. She also expressed her worry that with
the stockpiling of plastic bullets in the aftermath of the riots in
England, the upcoming Olympics and rising racial tensions, plastic
bullets could be used against black and Muslim youth this summer in
England. She urged people in London to be vigilant “as the consequences
are severe to bear”.
Stafford
Scott of the TDC expressed concern that the government appears to have a
greater interest in the police having and using plastic bullets than
the police force itself. Mr Scott stated that in view of the recent
riots, it appears that the government is well aware that its policies
will fuel more unrest. He urged the government to rethink its strategy
against protesters, as the use of plastic bullets, CS gas, water cannons
and other heavy-handed deterrents to protest will not stop people
taking to the streets to exercise their legitimate rights.
John
McDonnell MP agreed with Stafford Scott’s analysis that there is a
considerable political dynamic to this policing issue. Jeremy Corbyn MP
said that under the current government there has been a move from
policing by consent to policing by enforcement and that there is a
security paranoia developing in the UK, making it easier for the police
to access and justify large stores of such weapons.
The
two MPs attending stated that they would take action on this issue.
John McDonnell said that stopping the cuts and austerity measures is the
only real viable alternative to preventing the type of social disorder
such violent tactics are intended to quell.
The
solution does not lie in arming the police or heavy-handed and
dangerous policing but in dealing with the underlying causes of the
increasing social unrest, embodied in the wide-sweeping cuts to public
services, growing (youth and) general unemployment and the closure of
facilities that foster social cohesion. Stockpiling these weapons
creates hysteria and an impetus for their use, given their ease of
access.
Recently, measures have been introduced further restricting the right to protest around parliament
and severe sentences have been given to people taking part in student
protests. Coupled with the austerity and privatisation agenda, the CEO
of private security firm G4S also predicted this week that in five
years’ time, large parts of the police service, a crucial public
service, will be run by private firms. The prospect of unaccountable private “policemen” running around with plastic bullets is frightening.
In
the North of Ireland, accountability has also been an issue with the
public authorities. Families and individuals who have been affected have
attempted to take legal action. Many court cases have been brought and
while large amounts of compensation have been paid, an admission of
wrongdoing in itself, only one policeman has ever been charged, in 1984
for the murder of John Downes; he was, however, acquitted. The police,
army and government have not been held accountable in any way.
Plastic
bullets are used elsewhere, including in Spain and the Occupied
Territories. In spite of its use in the North of Ireland over the past
few decades, there has been little reporting about this issue in the
mainstream British media. Clara Reilly said, “the public has no idea of
what plastic bullets are and what they can do, or they would otherwise
be opposed to their use”.
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