149 lines
7.5 KiB
Plaintext
149 lines
7.5 KiB
Plaintext
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Live Animal Export Protest In Britain - by Juliet Maxam
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THIS year the small Essex town of Brightlingsea has become
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famous. On January 16 the once sleepy riverside town became a
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centre for live animal exports. The world's Press made its way
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to the town, and images of pensioners, mothers and children
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clashing with police were beamed around the world on television
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screens, in newspapers and magazines.
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The first week of protests saw hopes raised and dashed,
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promises made and broken, the seeds of disillusionment sewn, and
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bitter confrontation. And all of it was captured in print, on
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video and radio.
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On the third day Essex Police deployed in riot gear - hard
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helmets with visors, protective shin, arm and body pads,
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gauntlets and boots. Astonished protesters, largely locals,
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mainly pensioners and middle class women with children were
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physically removed from the path of the animal lorries. Police
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were quickly accused of heavy handed tactics.
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Hundreds of complaints were logged at Essex Police
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headquarters. The Police Complaints Authority was called in to
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supervise an investigation into police tactics during the first
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week, to be conducted by Commander Bernard Luckhurst of the
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Metropolitan Police. The findings of the investigation were
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revealed last month. Commander Luckhurst blamed the Press for
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the breakdown in relations between Essex Police and the
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Brightlingsea protesters. He said some video producers were
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willing to manipulate available material and there was evidence
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of "extremely subtle editing". My newspaper, the East Anglian
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Daily Times, was criticised for using a photograph of a
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policeman with his foot raised above a protester sitting in the
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road. Mr Luckhurst said subsequent photographs clearly showed
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the policeman was stepping over protesters. Commentary on GMTV
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describing a photograph used in The Guardian as portraying a
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sole protester surrounded by police was also attacked.
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Justifying his tirade against the media in what was
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supposed to be an investigation into police tactics, Mr
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Luckhurst said that most complaints received by Essex Police
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were from people who had not been at the demonstrations, but had
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seen them on television or in newspapers. He did concede that
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some police officers had been a "little too zealous" and that
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officers on the ground should have acted sooner to deal with
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problems such as constables not displaying their numbers and
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covering their faces with balaclavas.
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I have been reporting the demonstrations in Brightlingsea
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since day one. Nine months later, the protests still continue,
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once a day, five days a week, as long as there is a shipment.
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Nine months later I am still there reporting the issue.
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Reporting the Brightlingsea demonstrations has been the most
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difficult, exciting, exasperating job I have faced in my three
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years as a reporter. Monday to Friday, once a day, for the last
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nine months, with only a few exceptions, a convoy of sheep and
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calves has been shipped from Brightlingsea. For every convoy
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there has been a demonstration - once or twice up to 2,000
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people, often about 300, more usually nearer 100 protesters.
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The story has more twists and turns than a roller coaster. In
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January, wharf owner Ernest Oliver declared the wharf was for
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sale and the Town Council launched an appeal to buy it. In
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April, Assistant Chief Constable Geoffrey Markham sent a letter
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to everyone in Brightlingsea telling them he intended to use the
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Public Order Act to police the demonstrations, so Brightlingsea
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Against Live Exports disbanded rather than risk being jailed for
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organising the protests. In June, a group of "eco-cowboys"
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chained themselves to a beat-up old bus at the entrance to the
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wharf. In August, the livestock exporter behind the
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Brightlingsea trade, Roger Mills, issued writs against 14
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protesters, and sought injunctions to stop them from protesting.
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Most recently, one of the Brightlingsea 14, Derrick Day,
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collapsed after venting his spleen at the meeting between the
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PCA and protesters and died later in hospital. Court cases
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abound, with defendants including Mr Markham, Mr Mills, various
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protesters, haulage companies and a Press photographer.
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Throughout the nine months of reporting Brightlingsea I have
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tried to sit firmly on the fence, but have been charged with
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bias by all three sides. I have been accused of not telling the
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truth - by protesters, of barefaced lies - by the exporter, and
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of fuelling the protests - by the police. I feel like piggy in
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the middle, a feeling the police claim for themselves, although
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they use different terminology.
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All three sides want to use me to bolster their image and
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cause. Accounts of anything in the least bit controversial or
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damaging to one of the sides inevitably leads to complaints.
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After Pc Pat Lane was taken to hospital with a puncture wound
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following a demonstration in August, I was harangued for days
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afterwards by protesters complaining because I reported that Pc
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Lane had been stabbed. I was even advised by my news editor not
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to show my face in Brightlingsea for a few days.
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Each tip off and fact has to be carefully checked, not only
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with the three main players, but with Essex County Council
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trading standards department and the Ministry of Agriculture,
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Fisheries and Food. Some of the rumours I have tried to stand up
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seem ridiculous now, but it would have been a good story if a
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convoy of sheep had been radioactive, or a dead sheep had been
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thrown off the livestock ship and washed up at Frinton. It would
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have been excellent to meet an ex-Beatle if the rumour about
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Paul McCartney visiting the protesters had actually been true.
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Once I even hung around waiting for Jurgen Klinsman, who was
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also supposed to be on his way to offer his support to
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protesters. One late night phone call led to a wild goose chase
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around the Essex countryside looking for sheep lorries allegedly
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parked in a lay-by - we found them, unloaded, at a lairage.
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I have learned some amazing facts during the continuing saga.
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Did you know, for instance, that sheep do not get seasick
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because they have two stomachs? A Belgian ministry of
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agriculture vet told me that while I was waiting for the
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Brightlingsea livestock ship, MV Caroline, to dock at
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Nieuwpoort, Belgium, in freezing rain and wind. And I have been
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put off salami for life after a protester told me some countries
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in Europe make it out of donkey meat.
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Physically, reporting demonstrations has been difficult. For
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the first few days I was getting down to Brightlingsea by 6.30am
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and not getting home until 11pm. In three seasons I have had to
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contend with icy winds, rain, hot sun and a plague of thunder
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bugs, while jotting notes in my pad. In addition, I have had to
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avoid getting arrested and crushed. Skills I can now boast
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include judging crowd numbers, knowing where the action will be
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and avoiding being trapped behind a police line.
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During the last nine months, my patience has been tested to
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extremes. I have had to endure hysterical protesters heckling me
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in the heat of a demonstration, snide comments and abuse from
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all sides, and have even been blamed for the continuing protests
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by residents of Brightlingsea not involved in the issue. But I
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was undoubtedly pushed closest to breaking point when Commander
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Luckhurst blamed the media for damaging the relations between
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police and protesters - to me that was the most unfair
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accusation of the whole nine months.
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I am proud of the job I have done in Brightlingsea. It has
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been tough and frustrating. At times it has been exhilarating,
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at times it has been tedious. It has been a lesson in using the
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power of the Press responsibly.
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