166 lines
7.9 KiB
Plaintext
166 lines
7.9 KiB
Plaintext
Brightlingsea Animal Export Protest - by Rob Kemp
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(taken from Park Life, Essex University Paper)
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It was a chilly January evening when the first sheep lorry
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passed along the winding road to Brightlingsea. What thoughts
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were going through the driver's mind as he negotiated the
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junction at Thorrington Cross, as he passed the church that
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marks the boundary of the small Essex port, as he came to the
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first few houses? Did he think that the fury and determination
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of the people of Brightlingsea would have faded during their
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long day's vigil?
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Many of the 1000 people who faced him on that first
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evening had been on the streets since before dawn, resolved to give
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the exporters no chance to elude their vigilance. Many were
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pensioners, many were children, most had never before ventured
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out to protest about anything at all.
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As the lorry edged towards the wharf it was clear that the
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protesters had plenty of fighting spirit in reserve, even after
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all these hours of waiting. Eggs and nails flew at the lorry,
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someone tried to break the cab window, others lay in the road. A
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disabled man threw himself in front of the lorry's wheels. That
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was enough for the police; they told the driver to turn back.
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As the 11 o'clock deadline approached, after which no
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lorries could legally enter the road leading to the wharf, a senior
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police officer gave his word that the sheep lorry would not be
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allowed to return that day, and the crowd finally dispersed,
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claiming a significant victory.
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But had it all been too easy? Perhaps the first consignment
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was never meant to get as far as the wharf. This lone lorry with its
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bleating cargo may have been meant as a trial run, to test the
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resolve of the protesters. If the blockade was successful on the
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first day, the exporters may have reasoned, numbers might
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gradually drop off as people became complacent about their
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victory.
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If that really was their hope, the events of that first day
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must have prepared them for disappointment. Gales stopped the
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shipment the next day, but the day after, Wednesday, saw the
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most extraordinary scenes the sleepy riverside community had
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ever witnessed off their television screens. Hundreds of police
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wearing full riot gear literally threw people out of the way of
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a rather more purposeful four-lorry convoy. There were more than
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200 complaints about police behaviour on that day alone. "We
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have seen mothers being pulled away by their hair with their
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children still clinging to them, by the people we tell our
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children to go to for protection," one resident said.
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From that point on things started, as they inevitably would,
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to go the exporters' way. Their trade is still legal, and it is
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incumbent on the police to protect it -- even if it means, as it
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has in Brightlingsea, that relations between the police and the
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local population slump to an all-time low.
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Just days after promising at a public meeting that no lorries
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would be allowed to break the law by driving to the wharf after
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11pm, the Assistant Chief Constable, Geoffrey Markham, gave his
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permission for one convoy to do exactly that. This action is now
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being questioned in the courts, but it is typical of what many
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in Brightlingsea see as the police's lack of fairness in dealing
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with the live export protests.
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Other factors have strained relations between the police
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and protesters almost to breaking point. In April, the police
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invoked the 1986 Public Order Act to restrict demonstrations --
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effectively stopping protests from blocking the road. Calling on
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this piece of legislation broadened the issue in many people's
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eyes to include civil as well as animal rights, because of its
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restrictive effect on the way people were allowed to demonstrate.
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The police, however, view the matter more as a problem of
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keeping the peace and protecting the public. A spokesman said:
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"We aim to be fair to both sides: the exporter has the legal
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right to trade in the town and to pass his lorries through the
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town. It is a legal trade.
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"At the same time, protesters have the right to demonstrate
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peacefully, but lawfully. The two coming together, there will be
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confrontations, and the majority of the restrictions that we
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imposed were for public safety reasons."
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But arguably the most serious breakdown in relations with
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the police followed the publication in September of a Police
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Complaints Authority report dealing with complaints relating to
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the first week of protests. If Brightlingsea residents expected
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some kind of acknowledgement from the police that they may have
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overstepped the mark in the early days of the protest, they were
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disappointed. Instead much of the blame was laid at the doors of
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the media, whose reporting was criticized as irresponsible and
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deceitful. In early October a meeting to present this report to
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the people of Brightlingsea ended in angry scenes as protesters
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vented their frustration. One man, Derrick Day, collapsed
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following a particularly vehement outburst and subsequently died.
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The protests later that week saw a resurgence of violence,
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attributed to mounting anger over the report and its tragic
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sequel, the death of Mr Day. Lorry windows were smashed, and
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cars belonging to the chief exporter and to Trading Standards
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officers were also damaged.
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In mid-October vandals broke down a 6ft fence to enter the
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wharf and wreaked havoc, smashing windows and spraying graffiti
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directed at the exporter, the wharf owner and Essex Police. The
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wharf owner has estimated that since the start of the live
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export protests #80-90,000 worth of damage has been done to his
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property.
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The ten months during which animals have been exported
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through Brightlingsea have seen many reversals of fortune for both
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sides. There have been acrimonious exchanges between protesters
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and exporters -- one livestock exporter, Richard Otley, was
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bounced around in his Range Rover by protesters just for showing
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his face in the town. Television images at the time had a
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disturbing resonance with the last pictures of the two soldiers
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whose car strayed into the path of an IRA funeral. No such fate
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befell Mr Otley, but he was lucky he managed to keep his doors
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shut.
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Since then, relations between the two sides have hardly
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improved. In August exporter Roger Mills began legal proceedings
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against the so-called "Brightlingsea 14" for damage to his
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business, and also sought injunctions to stop them from
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protesting.
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In the most recent development, Roger Mills himself
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appeared in court last week on a charge brought by the RSPCA of
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causing suffering to sheep.
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Since the early days of the protests a small but determined
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contingent of students has supported the Brightlingsea
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residents. Some have been arrested -- including Louisa Newell,
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currently chair of the university's Animal Rights Society.
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Another, Simon Brunner, a second-year history student, recalls
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his own contact with the police: "It took six of them to get me
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off the road, and I got hit in the stomach a couple of times."
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A number of prominent people and celebrities have visited
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the protests since they began, including Labour MP Tony Banks,
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writer Carla Lane and pop star Billy Bragg, who narrowly avoided
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arrest after sitting down in the path of the lorries. Such
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events have given a welcome boost to the solid core of
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protesters who return week after week. But what hope is there
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that their cause will ultimately succeed?
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Local Tory MP Bernard Jenkin attempted in March to
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introduce legislation to ban live exports, but his bill was blocked by
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the government. The Labour party has pledged to ban the trade if it
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comes to power, but that may be a long way off. While exports
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continue, there is little doubt that the police will do
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everything they have to to protect the exporters' rights. For
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the moment, it appears that an uneasy stalemate has come about:
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the exporters admit that their trade is being damaged by the
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protests, but seem determined to exercise their right to carry
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on with it. The overwhelming mass of public opinion may be
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against them, but the law is on their side.
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(ENDS)
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