Daily Mail

WAVING THE WHITE FLAG

On one of UK’s busiest routes, officers stroll past eco-warriors who’ve paralysed London for THREE days – insisting they must respect protesters’ ‘rights’. No wonder police are accused of ...

- By Jemma Buckley, George Odling, Xantha Leatham and Jim Norton

POLICE were accused of surrenderi­ng London’s streets to hundreds of eco-warriors last night.

Astonishin­gly, activists managed to seal off key thoroughfa­res for a third day and vowed to stay until their demands were met.

As officers were pictured strolling past drum-playing protesters blocking Waterloo Bridge to traffic, the Met said it had to respect the environmen­tal campaigner­s’ right to protest.

Last night, Environmen­t Secretary Michael Gove called for an end to the demonstrat­ions, saying: ‘We’ve got the message.’ Tory MP Andrew Rosindell said: ‘[Police] should be clearing the streets so Londoners can get to work. Instead they have surrendere­d the streets to these people.’ Only late yesterday evening did officers mobilise in numbers to clear the blockades.

After coming under increasing pressure, they swooped into Parliament Square – only for the activists to later

return and continue banging drums and chanting ‘extinction rebellion’.

Since Monday, Waterloo Bridge has been totally closed to traffic in both directions, with protesters – orchestrat­ed by the ecological campaign group Extinction Rebellion – planting trees, setting up vegan food stalls and chaining themselves to a truck.

In Oxford Circus protesters have taken over the streets, parking a bright pink boat on the main intersecti­on. The protests have enraged many commuters and business owners. More than 340 arrests have been made in the capital.

Last night, Chief Superinten­dent Colin Wingrove, in charge the policing operation, insisted officers were doing ‘everything in their power’ to contain the protest. He added: ‘The Met has a duty to balance the rights of those engaged in protest and who are acting within the law, against the needs and rights of Londoners to go about their daily lives with minimum disruption.’

At around 8pm it finally appeared that officers were trying to clear the key sites.

But critics said they had treated the mostly peaceful protesters with a light touch and demanded action to take back the streets.

Tory MP Sir Nicholas Soames, the grandson of Sir Winston Churchill, said: ‘Not absolutely convinced that our excellent Metropolit­an Police are at present maintainin­g The Queen’s Peace on the streets of London. Absolutely unacceptab­le that our great city is being held to ransom.’

London mayor Sadiq Khan was criticised after praising the eco- warriors for their ‘co-operation’.

Last night, Mr Gove said those trying to raise awareness about climate change were ‘ moved by high ideas’, but some of their actions had been ‘over the top’. In remarkable scenes across London:

Activists mocked the law by returning to protest hours after being arrested;

Police custody cells were left full to bursting, amid claims that Scotland Yard had run out of space;

A protester attempted to disrupt train services by gluing himself to a carriage;

Others glued themselves to the garden fence of Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn;

Protesters carried out yoga classes on the car-free roads they had blockaded;

Business leaders warned profits had slumped by £12million due to the protests;

At least 55 bus routes were shut down and 500,000 commuters were affected;

Home Secretary Sajid Javid wrote to Met commission­er Cressida Dick to offer the force ‘whatever support it needs’.

Extinction Rebellion, the Left-wing campaign group behind the demonstrat­ions, has said its protests will escalate over two weeks if its demands are not met.

It wants the Government to introduce a legally-binding policy to reduce carbon emissions to net zero by 2025.

Tory MP Philip Davies described the situation as ‘a complete outrage’, adding: ‘It is about time the authoritie­s got a grip and took whatever action is needed to clear them out of the way.’

Yesterday, train services were also disrupted in the city’s financial district Canary Wharf as an activist glued himself to one of the Docklands Light Railways carriages, while two others stood on the roof and unfurled a banner. Business owners said the protests have so far caused a £14million loss in takings.

There are fears that millions could be lost if the protests continue over the Easter bank holiday weekend. Taxi drivers said police had ‘failed in their duty’ to keep the roads open.

Commuters and tourists also complained their journeys had been hampered and that it was hypocritic­al for environmen­tal campaigner­s to target public transport networks.

Many of the activists are grandparen­ts, first-time protesters and middle- class workers who said they had flocked to the streets to highlight the ‘climate emergency’.

Dai Davies, who led the Met’s riot squad in West London in the early 90s, said last night: ‘The Met seems to have slightly been caught with their pants down.’

A Home Office spokesman said: ‘The right to protest peacefully is a long-standing tradition in this country and a vital foundation of our democracy.’

With the politician­s off for Easter, some might imagine Britain has been granted some respite from internatio­nal self-embarrassm­ent. Well, think again.

We might be enjoying a couple of weeks without our MPs but that image of a rudderless, incompeten­t country is now being ably maintained by, among other things, a pink yacht, currently parked across one of London’s most famous intersecti­ons, and the transforma­tion of one of the capital’s most important bridges into a yoga mat.

Now entering Day Four, the so-called ‘Extinction Rebellion’ is settling down nicely as our new national joke.

Between them, a handful of earnest, peaceful and impressive­ly organised eco-warriors have managed to bring the capital to a standstill while the police make inconseque­ntial arrests and the other 99.9 per cent of the population are left asking: who, exactly, is in charge here?

Among yesterday’s highlights were one group who shut down the Docklands Light Railway and a quartet who glued themselves to Jeremy Corbyn’s house (though they later unglued themselves and said they were very sorry). today, we are promised widespread chaos on the tube network.

Who decided that people should be allowed to enjoy an extended camping holiday at central London landmarks? Who agreed that people should be allowed to build plywood lavatory cubicles in the middle of London’s Oxford Street? they are not even public ones, it transpires, but only available to those with the key.

Who said that more than 50 bus routes should be blocked with impunity? Who gave permission for a musical stage to be erected indefinite­ly across both carriagewa­ys on Waterloo Bridge, not to mention a skateboard­ing ramp?

London has seen protests of every stripe over the years, some of them violent. however, they have tended to come and go in the course of a day or two.

this one, which, it must be said, remains peaceful, is now settling in for the long haul. the organisers say that they are preparing for an open- ended stand- off with the police until the Government agrees to their core demands.

Since these include supplantin­g Parliament with a ‘citizens’ assembly’ and the end of capitalism, it might be a very long wait. Yet how much longer is London prepared to have some of its most important thoroughfa­res sealed off to traffic by a self-appointed cadre of weknow-best activists?

i arrive at Oxford Circus – the crossroads of Britain’s two bestknown shopping thoroughfa­res, Oxford Street and Regent Street – to find a 20ft bright pink sailing boat on a trailer parked in the middle. Around 20 recumbent protesters are chained to its trailer. A couple of hundred others stand around it swaying to tunes played by a grey-bearded disc jockey who has set up his sound system in the boat’s cockpit.

he fires off revolution­ary slogans in between his Radio 2-style repertoire of hits from the Seventies and Eighties. ‘We’re here to tell the politician­s: F*** you!’ he shouts, to a few lame cheers.

it is the middle of the afternoon. it’s wholly inappropri­ate on a road junction next to the world’s largest toy shop, hamleys, as a steady stream of children pass by.

But the police do not bat an eyelid. Most stand around ‘monitoring the situation’. i find one police sergeant politely enduring an interminab­le lecture on the state of the planet’s permafrost by a pimply teenage know-all in a Green Party bib.

i wait and wait for the policeman to ask him to move on but, instead, he asks him a question about tree-planting.

the police are certainly keen to keep the temperatur­e down. All are in soft hats and hi-vis vests rather than riot gear.

Every now and then, a team of seven or eight move in and pick up one of the protesters lying by the boat. Most of their targets go quietly, having volunteere­d for arrest in advance of these protests.

Many will be back again as soon as they are released. there are none of the combative anarchist element who trashed Oxford Circus during the May Day anti- capitalist protests a few years back.

there are no balaclavas, no fingerjabb­ing conspiracy theorists aggressive­ly filming the police or the media. it is, largely, a combinatio­n of fresh-faced college activists and a lot of grey-haired people in sensible walking boots who look ready to ramble.

‘i’ve only been on three demonstrat­ions in my entire life,’ says Bob hill, 65, a retired civil engineer from Abergavenn­y, who genuinely knows his stuff about pollution levels and global warming. ‘this is so important that we just have to do everything to make the politician­s listen. And it’s no use having

a one- day protest. It’s got to go on.’ Here, too, is Robin Boardman-Pattison, 21, one of the organisers. He has taken a year’s break from his modern languages degree course at Bristol to focus on this cause. Viewers may have seen him walk out of a heated television interview with Sky’s Adam Boulton yesterday. ‘He wasn’t asking me proper questions,’ Robin explained. ‘The media need to take this seriously.’

He had no problems whatsoever with the police, he went on, merely with the Government. ‘We are a world-leading economy and we have to set an example. And we will maintain our programme of economic disruption until the politician­s listen.’ How does this win hearts and minds? And why on earth make all this noise when the entire political class is on holiday and thus cannot hear?

‘This is an internatio­nal movement and this was the date that was set in advance,’ says Robin, from Beckenham, Kent.

I explain that a lot of people look on all this as a lot of posturing by an arrogant middle-class minority who are inconvenie­ncing millions and achieving nothing.

‘A lot of middle-class people also know that we need to cut back on our consumptio­n,’ he replies.

Over on Waterloo Bridge, there are similar scenes. The mass yoga session from earlier in the day has finished. Many just lie in the sun reading a book, as homebound commuters weave past their rucksacks and the potted plant displays which some demonstrat­ors have erected. Some office workers make little attempt to hide their contempt for the people who have added half an hour to their commute but there is no abuse.

Again, there has been a slow trickle of arrests here too, although they do all add up.

By the end of the day, the Met puts the total thus far at 340. But if most of those are simply going back to their original spots straight afterwards, the police strategy seems a little flawed.

‘It’s about proportion­ality,’ one police officer explains when I ask why it is permissibl­e to park a boat, trailer and toilet block in Oxford Street for days on end but not permissibl­e for an ordinary person even to drive a car down it.

‘If we tried to move everyone, there’d be a riot.’

At some point, in the not too distant future, there is going to be a riot if they don’t.

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 ??  ?? Floating voters: A 20ft pink yacht at the crossroads of Oxford Street and Regent Street – with protesters chained to it
Floating voters: A 20ft pink yacht at the crossroads of Oxford Street and Regent Street – with protesters chained to it
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 ??  ?? Rise and whine: Morning sees the camp of protesters awake in a makeshift hay field, while commuters make their way across the the bridge on foot
Rise and whine: Morning sees the camp of protesters awake in a makeshift hay field, while commuters make their way across the the bridge on foot
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 ??  ?? Karma down, dear: A mass yoga session in the road on Waterloo Bridge
Karma down, dear: A mass yoga session in the road on Waterloo Bridge
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 ??  ?? Show of strength: Police officers in Parliament Square on their way to ‘monitor the situation’ – three days after protests began
Show of strength: Police officers in Parliament Square on their way to ‘monitor the situation’ – three days after protests began
 ??  ?? Not a care: Activists dancing in the middle of the road
Not a care: Activists dancing in the middle of the road

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