China Daily

UK court rejects ‘belief ’ defense

- By JULIAN SHEA in London julian@mail.chinadaily­uk.com

Environmen­tal activists in the United Kingdom could find themselves facing more charges of criminal damage after the Court of Appeal in London ruled on Monday they will no longer be able to use their political or philosophi­cal beliefs as a defense in court in England and Wales.

Damage to property has become an increasing­ly common and high-profile course of action for groups looking to draw attention to issues such as climate change.

In November, nine members of the Extinction Rebellion group were acquitted by a jury after facing charges for breaking windows at the European headquarte­rs of banking group HSBC in 2021, at an estimated cost of half a million pounds ($636,000), in a protest over fossil fuel investment­s.

Sally Hobson, who prosecuted that case, told the Daily Telegraph last month that concern about the climate “is not a license for defendants to engage in vigilante action”, and that the defense “is being used for a purpose never intended or anticipate­d by the legislator­s”.

In the aftermath of that case, Attorney General Victoria Prentis asked the Court of Appeal to clarify the law, and its ruling has now been handed down.

Sue Carr, the most senior judge in England and Wales, said the court “holds that the circumstan­ces of the damage have to be linked directly to the damage”.

Prentis welcomed the ruling, saying: “Climate change is an important issue, and while the right to protest must be protected, it does not give a right to cause serious criminal damage, no matter how strongly held a belief is. Today’s judgment is important as it … clarifies that the importance or merits of a protest are not the ‘circumstan­ces’ of damage caused during that protest.”

Protest group Just Stop Oil said on X: “One of the last defenses in law for committing criminal damage as an act of civil resistance has been removed . ... Whilst (corporatio­ns’ and government’s) corruption goes unchecked, ordinary people are losing our rights to dissent, and any legal defenses we have for doing so.”

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