The Guardian (USA)

We took direct action against the UK’s racist policies, and a jury acquitted us. Resistance can succeed

- Griff Ferris, Rivka Micklethwa­ite and Callum Lynch

On a cold November afternoon in 2021, the three of us used metal lockons to chain ourselves together and block a quiet, private road near Gatwick airport, outside Brook House immigratio­n removal centre, to prevent people being forcibly removed to Jamaica.

We took action in solidarity with and support of people the government was trying to rip away from their children, partners and loved ones, while some were also physically resisting their deportatio­n inside Brook House. We were arrested and charged with causing a public nuisance. We denied that and told the jury we felt we had a moral responsibi­lity to act. The jury members appear to have empathised. They acquitted us. That speaks volumes.

Living in this country and under a government proactivel­y working to perpetuate racism, violence and other prejudice against marginalis­ed people, there is an obligation to resist, in whatever way you can. That was our motivation.

We now know that 41 of the 50 people the government tried to deport to Jamaica on that flight are still in the UK, and many of them have sent us grateful messages of support. Mothers have thanked us for resisting on behalf of their sons, while others have said that knowing there were people out there willing to stand up for them meant so much at a dark and lonely time – and that they can now enjoy their lives with their families.

We were initially charged with “aggravated trespass” – an offence with a maximum sentence of three months’ imprisonme­nt, tried in a magistrate­s court. However, a few weeks before our initial trial, the Crown Prosecutio­n Service – undoubtedl­y influenced by the government’s authoritar­ian anti-protest rhetoric and legislatio­n – charged us with the much more serious offence of causing a “public nuisance”.

This archaic common law offence can be tried in the crown court and carries a maximum sentence of life imprisonme­nt. This was an overtly aggressive attempt by the government to criminalis­e protest against its violent, racist detention and deportatio­n regime, and any act of solidarity with those it harms.

At our two-week trial, we argued that what we did was necessary to prevent serious harm to families and communitie­s targeted for detention and deportatio­n. We gave detailed accounts of this country’s profoundly harmful detention and deportatio­n regime, including the history of violent behaviour and mistreatme­nt of detainees by detention centre guards, specifical­ly at Brook House, as well as the deaths of Jimmy Mubenga, on a deportatio­n flight from Heathrow in 2010, and Joy Gardner, who died in 1993 after being wrapped in 13 feet of tape and a belt by five police officers who had come to her home to deport her.

We told the jury that many of those meant to be on the flight had been in the UK since they were children – some as young as three months – and that many had their own children here. Some of them have family connection­s with the Windrush generation. Others had allegedly been subjected to modern slavery and traffickin­g. Even according to the Home Office’s own oppressive and restrictiv­e policies, many of them should not have been considered for deportatio­n in the first place.

We explained the huge barriers to legal advice and representa­tion for people in detention, which often leads to vital last-minute legal challenges, and how our action – and other direct action, such as that taken by the Stansted 15 – gives people crucial time for their legal challenges to be submitted and heard, sometimes with just minutes to spare.

We gave this detailed evidence to the jury in order to counter the government and mainstream media’s rhetoric – often racist misinforma­tion – about migrants and deportatio­ns. The prosecutio­n didn’t even dispute our evidence about the cruelty and brutality of immigratio­n detention and deportatio­n, and instead focused on trying to punish us for resisting it.

The trial judge ruled that none of our reasons was good enough to provide a legal “defence” to the charge of causing a public nuisance. For this reason, and because the prosecutio­n did not contest our evidence, the judge refused to let the jury hear from a witness with a harrowing experience of being held in Brook House and resisting being taken for deportatio­n on the November 2021 flight (and who is still here in the UK). The judge also refused to hear evidence from experts on the UK detention and deportatio­n regime, including an expert witness from the official Brook House inquiry.

Despite this, the jury, having heard our evidence, refused to adhere to the government’s rhetoric. They acquitted all three of us – and were visibly emotional when giving the verdicts.

This case comes at a time when compassion, solidarity and any attempts to hold the government accountabl­e are being criminalis­ed by a wave of draconian anti-protest laws, and it shows the power and value of collective action, resistance and solidarity. But this government’s authoritar­ianism must be called what it is. These oppressive laws, prosecutio­ns and sentences are intended to suppress antigovern­ment, anti-police and anti-monarchy sentiments. They are designed to prevent people dissenting against the many widespread injustices in this country, including the current cost of living crisis, child poverty, structural racism and climate inaction.

Awaiting trial since 2021 has been at times stressful, intense and exhausting, but we have been moved by the solidarity and support people have shown us, as well as our incredible legal representa­tion.We urge people to continue to resist the UK’s racist and violent border regime – by showing up on the streets and in our communitie­s. Make sure you are aware of the potential consequenc­es, and how you (along with others) can deal with them. And know that there are many roles in these movements that are non-arrestable, and these are just as important as those that involve riskier action.

The incredibly heavy-handed response from those in power just shows how concerned they are about how effective we can be at successful­ly preventing deportatio­ns, immigratio­n raids, evictions, stop and search, new fossil fuel extraction and arms production. As the saying goes: direct action gets the goods. We must continue this resistance.

Griff Ferris is a researcher and campaigner; Rivka Micklethwa­ite is a trainee midwife; and Callum Lynch provides legal advice and informatio­n to members of the public at a human rights organisati­on

Do you have an opinion on the issues raised in this article? If you would like to submit a response of up to 300 words by email to be considered for publicatio­n in our letters section, please click here.

 ?? ?? The Brook House Three (left to right): Griff Ferris, Rivka Micklethwa­ite, Callum Lynch. Photograph: Jodie Beck
The Brook House Three (left to right): Griff Ferris, Rivka Micklethwa­ite, Callum Lynch. Photograph: Jodie Beck

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