End Austerity Now & Class War – 2015

End Austerity Now & Class War: On Saturday 20th June 2015 I sent to photograph the march organised by the People’s Assembly Against Austerity from the Bank of England to Parliament Square. Class War came to protest calling for direct action rather than marches which changed nothing and after photographing them in the City I went with them to Downing Street – and they paused for a brief protest at the Savoy on the way.


End Austerity Now at Bank

Bank

End Austerity Now & Class War - 2015

Large crowds gathered around the Bank of England for the start of a massive march against austerity organised by the People’s Assembly Against Austerity and supported by many groups including CND, the Green Party, People’s March for the NHS, Global Women’s Strike, Basic Income, Revolutionary Communist Group, Clapton Ultras and many other groups and individuals from around the country.

End Austerity Now & Class War - 2015
Clapton Ultras -“Football for all. Good times, good songs and Polish lager. Always antifascist.”

So many were being affected by the cuts which had forced down incomes, cut benefits and the welfare state, cut education, destroyed youth services, made massive cuts to the NHS and public services while supporting the bankers whose actions had led to the crisis.

End Austerity Now & Class War - 2015
Austerity is a Con – Westmonster Banksters sponsored by Rothschild

The programme of austerity introduced by the coalition government and continued under the Tories had seriously harmed the country and slowed its recovery from the financial crisis and seemed to be a punishment for the crimes of others, which had been made possible by the changes to the banking system introduced under Thatcher in 1986.

End Austerity Now & Class War - 2015
End Austerity Now & Class War - 2015

As usual estimates of the number of marchers varied hugely, with the organisers claiming a quarter of a million, while the BBC contented itself with ‘”thousands”. From the time it took and the density of the crowds I think it was at least a hundred thousand. Parliament Square was well filled with others still arriving, but like many others I went home rather than listen to the speeches.

More pictures of the marchers at End Austerity Now at Bank and in Class War and End Austerity Now.


Class War at End Austerity Now

Queen Victoria St

End Austerity Now & Class War - 2015
Class War held their banner on a footway overlooking the march

Class War had come to the protest to call for end of A to B marches to rallies and call for direct action. They succeeded in diverting several hundred of the marchers to make their way to protest at a squatted pub near the Elephant which Foxtons want to open as an estate agents.

Class War had brought several banners including the ‘Political Leaders’, a new version of that seized by police at a ‘Poor Doors’ protest, the ‘Lucy Parsons banner with its quote “We must devastate the avenues where the wealthy live” and ‘We have found new homes for the rich‘, with its rows of crosses on graves extending into the distance which police were then still pressing charges against Lisa McKenzie over.

Lisa McKenzie
Adam Clifford

Lisa was there along with the others including Adam Clifford who stood for Class War in the Westminster constituency, today wearing a top with fake exposed breasts and holding a fairly lifelike looking baby. As well as those above the protest others protested on the side of the street below.

Many marchers raised fists and shouted in solidarity with Class War as they passed, though some shook their heads, while others tried to ignore them. This wasn’t easy as they made a fair amount of noise and let off several smoke flares.

Around 30 police gathered around them at one point and it looked very much if they were going into action, but after a discussion between several senior officers on the scene, most rapidly walked away.

I stayed in the area either with them above the march or down below on the densely crowded wide street for around an hour, making many pictures both of Class War and the marchers.

They sit in the pub and police wait for them outside

When the end of the march appeared to reach them they joined in for a couple of hundred yards then peeled off to go to the Olde London pub on Ludgate Hill

More pictures at Class War and End Austerity Now.


Class War at the Savoy

Strand

Class War insist on the right to protest outside the Savoy

After a rest in the pub Class War walked down towards Westminster with their police escort to carry out more protests.

Approaching the Savoy Hotel some broke out into a run to get ahead of their escorts but found that there were more police already waiting there.

But they unrolled their banners again and briefly blocked the entrance with ‘New Homes for the Rich’ and ‘Lucy Parsons’ banners. After minor scuffles and arguments with police they marched on.

More pictures at Class War at the Savoy.


Class War in Whitehall

Whitehall

A woman talks to Adam Clifford of Class War holding a baby and a banner outside the gates of Downing St

Class War continued their protests in Whitehall, displaying their banners, setting off flares and dancing with others to a sound system which joined them briefly.

They then moved off towards Downing Street where they posed for photographs with all three banners – and threw a flare over the gate.

Their protest continued there with short speeches and more dancing. People were still coming down the street to join the People’s Assembly Against Austerity protest in Parliament Square and some stopped briefly to join in.

Eventually Class War decided it was time to roll up the banners and leave before police intervened – and it was time to go to the pub again. But for me it was time to go home.

Many more pictures on My London Diary: Class War in Whitehall.


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Islington, Charlton & Refugees – 2005

Islington, Charlton & Refugees: On Saturday June 19th 2005 I photographed Imagine Islington, a green festival in Islington, then went out to Charlton for the Horn Fair, before finally returning to central London for a Refugee event taking place as a part of the Coin Street Festival in Bernie Spain Gardens on the South Bank of the Thames in Lambeth. Again I’ll give the texts I wrote at the time with links to more pictures from the events on My London Diary.


Imagine Islington

Islington

Islington, Charlton & Refugees - 2005
Painting the ‘Hugh Jart’ mural on Islington Green

Imagine Islington was another green festival, but with rather more fun than some, taking place at 7 locations around the Angel and Islington Green.

Islington, Charlton & Refugees - 2005
Rhythms Of Resistance
Islington, Charlton & Refugees - 2005
Weapons of Sound, playing a range of containers, trolleys and other objects

On the Green there was music from Rhythms Of Resistance and Weapons Of Sound, a giant mural to paint by ‘Hugh Jart’, an air-miles game and other attractions.

Islington, Charlton & Refugees - 2005
The food miles interactive game from ‘Arts Desire’ was designed to show the high cost in carbon emissions of importing fruit and veg

Elsewhere there was a wind installation at St Mary’s Church, a Biodiversity Garden in the NI Centre, the Incredible String Trio Pluck (they described themselves as “the world’s most musically challenged string trio“) in Chapel Market and more.

Islington, Charlton & Refugees - 2005
Recycling is fine, but there needs to be more emphasis on reusable containers and on simply consuming less and wasting less.
Islington, Charlton & Refugees - 2005
More Pluck in Chapel Market

This was a pleasant event for the family but largely concentrated on the froth rather than the essentials of the challenge the world faces.

More pictures on My London Diary.


Charlton Horn Fair

Charlton House, Charlton

Charlton House

I wanted to go to Charlton simply because the annual Horn Fair there was notorious for its “indecencies and frequent riots“, eventually leading to its suppression by an order in council in 1872.

Irish dancing

Unfortunately its modern recreation turned out to be a much more tame affair, although Charlton House remains impressive.

[I also took a few pictures on my journey to Charlton and on my way from there to Coin Street, some also included in my 2006 post.]

More pictures on My London Diary.


Refugee Week, Coin Street: Celebrating Sanctuary

Coin St Festival, Bernie Spain Gardens

Albanian dancing

Meanwhile in Coin Street, another Refugee Week event, Celebrating Sanctuary, was taking place.

The men’s dance was more energetic
This Chinese dancer made some great patterns with her long streamers
Then we had a fantastic performance by a large group of all ages from Uganda, in various tribal dress and a great deal of energy

Among the events I photographed were Albanian dancing, a Chinese dancer with long streamers and African dancing from Uganda.

More pictures from the event on My London Diary.


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Rathayatra, Roller Skates & the World Cup – 2006

Rathayatra, Roller Skates & the World Cup: I began Sunday 18 June 2006 by photographing the annual Rathayatra chariot festival in Hyde Park and on its way to Trafalgar Square, before going to Parsons Green where I found the West London Green Fair rather disappointing but did briefly meet a large crowd on roller skates on a ride around London.

Later I went to New Malden to meet a friend and photograph Koreans who had gathered at a local pub to watch South Korea playing France in Leipzig in Group G of the 2006 World Cup. South Korea had earlier beaten Togo, and drew with France but a few days later lost to Switzerland and so failed to progress to the knockout phase of the cup. Below is what I wrote in 2006 (with the usual corrections) and links to more pictures from the day.


Hare Krishna: Rathayatra Festival

Hyde Park to Trafalgar Square

Rathayatra, Roller Skates & the World Cup - 2006

One of London’s more colourful annual events is the Rathayatra or Chariot Festival organised by the Hare Krishna movement. The three chariots carry representations of three deities, Lord Jagannatha (Krishna, the Lord of the Universe), Lady Subhadra and Lord Balarama, and pulling the ropes grants eternal service at the end of life in the spiritual world.

Rathayatra, Roller Skates & the World Cup - 2006
Rathayatra, Roller Skates & the World Cup - 2006

The ceremony dates back around 5000 years in the ancient holy city of Jagannath Puri in Orissa, India, but was only established in London rather more recently in 1969.

Rathayatra, Roller Skates & the World Cup - 2006
Rathayatra, Roller Skates & the World Cup - 2006

The chariots are accompanied by musicians and dancers, and there is free food for all at Trafalgar Square where the procession ends.

Rathayatra, Roller Skates & the World Cup - 2006

This year’s festival also celebrated the 108th anniversary of the birth of A C Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada (1896-1977), who in 1966 founded the Hare Krishna movement.

Many more pictures here on My London Diary.


West London Green Fair

Parsons Green

I called in briefly at the West London Green Festival at Parson’s Green on my way to New Malden, but there didn’t seem to be much happening there.

The Skate Rollerstroll called in briefly, but didn’t stop for long.


Korea v France

The Fountain Pub, New Malden

Korean Face painting in New Malden
I’m about to have two stripes painted on my cheeks by this young woman

I was on my way to New Malden, where I met up with Paul Baldesare to go and photograph Korean supporters watching the Korea v France match at one of the local pubs.

Both inside the pub and in the garden were a whole lot of large screens, with Koreans coming to watch the game.

We got there quite a while before the start when everyone was just starting to get into the mood. Soon we both had red and blue stripes painted on our faces.

It was very much a community event, with everyone enjoying themselves, and emotions obviously ran high once the game had started.

Along with the hundreds of Koreans there were a few non-Korean locals, and one French woman with a France t-shirt. I talked to her briefly before the game began, but couldn’t find her later when I went to take some photographs in the crowd. So everyone in my pictures is a Korea supporter.

When I left, a few minutes into the second half, Korea were trailing 1-0. I missed the equaliser, and the after-match celebrations when the High Street was full of Koreans celebrating the draw.

Many more pictures here on My London Diary.


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Shaker Aamer, Raif Badawi & Climate Change – 2015

Shaker Aamer, Raif Badawi & Climate Change: On Wednesday 17 June 2015 the weekly ‘Stand with Shaker’ vigil outside Parliament was visited by two of the new intake of MPs. Outside Downing Street human rights organisations took part in a national day of action calling for the release of Saudi blogger Raif Badawi. A mass lobby on climate change brought around 250 MPs out of Parliament to meet voters who were urging them to persuade our government to take a leading role in the forthcoming Paris climate talks and after the lobby there was a large rally on Millbank.


New MPs Stand with Shaker

Parliament Square

Shaker Aamer, Raif Badawi & Climate Change - 2015

In 2015 the Free Shaker Aamer campaign was holding a lunchtime vigil on the pavement opposite Parliament every Wednesday when it was in session, calling for our government to urge the US authorities to release London resident Shaker Aamer still held in the illegal Guantanamo torture camp. Two newly elected MPs came to support the campaign.

Shaker Aamer, Raif Badawi & Climate Change - 2015
Labour MP for Norwich South, Clive Lewis, stands with Shaker Aamer

Aamer was one of the original residents brought to the camp in 2002 after being sold to the US Army by bandits in Afghanistan where he was working for a Muslim charity,. He was first cleared for release in 2007.

Shaker Aamer, Raif Badawi & Climate Change - 2015
Twickenham Conservative MP Tania Mathias in an orange jump suit

He remained held there years later, probably because he would be able to give evidence about his torture at Bagram and Guantanamo which would embarrass both US and UK security services. He was finally released in September 2015.

New MPs Stand with Shaker


Support Saudi blogger Raif Badawi

Downing St

Shaker Aamer, Raif Badawi & Climate Change - 2015
Women hold posters of Raif Badawi and his lawyer his lawyer Waleed Abulkhair, also in jail

Human rights organisations including Index on Censorship, English Pen and the Peter Tatchell Foundation held a rally and handed in a letter to PM David Cameron calling on him to urge the Saudi government to release Saudi Blogger Raif Badawi.

Badawi was arrested in 2012 and convicted for founding a liberal web site which was alleged to be insluting Islam. Hia sentence was increased in 2013 to a 1 million riyals (£175,000) fine, ten-year in prison and 1000 lashes, a punishment he was unlikely to survive.

Shaker Aamer, Raif Badawi & Climate Change - 2015
Andy McDonald MP, Mhairi Black MP, Mark Durkan MP, Caroline Lucas MP, Jo Glanville, English PEN, Natalie McGarry MP, and Stewart McDonald MP outside Downing St with letter to David Cameron and picture of jailed blogger Raif Badawi

Badawi was flogged 50 times on 9 January 2015 and was due to be given another 50 lashes every Friday until the total was reached. But further floggings had been postponed so far as he had not recovered sufficiently.

Threats of flogging continued until at least 2016, but were delayed on health grounds sometimes only hours before they were to be carried out in what seems to have been a deliberate psychological torture. Finally he was released in 2022 but with a ban on travelling abroad until 2032. His wife and children fled the country and were granted political asylum in Canada in 2013.

Support Saudi blogger Raif Badawi


Climate Coalition Mass Lobby on Climate Change

Westminster & Lambeth

Labour’s Rupa Huq, MP for Ealing Central and Acton in the centre of a large group from her constituency

Thousands came to lobby their MPs, who met constituency groups either inside the Houses of Parliament or in a series of meetings spread out in Victoria Gardens, across Lambeth Bridge and on along the Albert Embankment.

Some, like Tooting MP Sadiq Khan took advantage of the bicycle rickshaws to ferry them to the meetings

I listened in briefly to a number of these meetings as I was walking around to take pictures. Most MPs seemed aware of the need for action, but too many were making excuses for not being able to take the kind of urgent action needed, and some seemed to me to have a have a patronising attitude that would certainly have lost them my vote.

The only heated argument I saw was with Neil Coyle, MP for Bermondsey and Old Southwark. After talking with him on climate change, the conversation moved on to housing, with Coyle defending the indefensible actions of the Labour local authority in emptying out their council estates and handing them over to be developed for private sale.

Climate Coalition Mass Lobby


Climate Coalition Rally

Millbank

The crowd stretched a long way back on Millbank and there were more in Victoria Gardens
No to Austerity – Yes to a million climate jobs!’ is the message from the Trade Union Group of the Campaign against Climate Change

After the lobby, the crowds moved on to Millbank for a rally, though many who had come from more distant parts of the country had instead begun their long journeys home. As well as filling Millbank, others sat on the grass in Victoria Gardens, where they could hear the many speakers, though not see them or the giant screen on which they and some short films were shown.

Surfers Against Sewage stand with their boards

With more than a hundred organisations taking part in the lobby, there were rather too many speakers for me, along with a number of celebrities, some of whom had very little of substance to contribute.

People make hearts with their hands

But there were others certainly worth listening to – and I name some and there are some photographs on My London Diary. But for me it was only the closing speech by Asad Rehman of Friends of the Earth which made a real attempt to tackle the political issues that are central to any effective action on climate.

Many more photographs on My London Diary at Climate Coalition Rally.


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Diggers at Runnymede – 2012

Diggers at Runnymede: On Saturday 16th June 2012 I cycled to Runnymede in Surrey on the south bank of the Thames, a large area of National Trust land which was possibly the site where King John met the barons and agreed to the Magna Carta in 1215. There is a large area of meadow on both sides of the current course of the River Thames and the actual site of the meeting within this remains uncertain.

Diggers at Runnymede - 2012
I stepped back a couple of paces from the circle to take this picture

The meeting that I attended was close to the American Bar Association Magna Carta Memorial, unveiled here in 1957 – and almost certainly not where the 1215 meeting took place, but a short distance above the meadows on the slope of Coopers Hill.

There I met a group of ‘Diggers’ who were camping further up the hill, ecologists whose ideas mirror those of the original Diggers or ‘True Levellers’ founded by Gerard Winstanley in 1649 after the first English Civil War. He stated that “true freedom lies where a man receives his nourishment and preservation, and that is in the use of the earth” and that “England is not a free people, till the poor that have no land have a free allowance to dig and labour the commons.”

Diggers at Runnymede - 2012
Diggers at Runnymede - 2012

When food became horrendously expensive in 1649 the Diggers set up a camp on common land at St George’s Hill in Weybridge and began to grow vegetables there. The local landowners called in the army, who came and decided the Diggers were not harming anyone and told the landowners to take their case to court.

Instead the landowners paid a gang of ruffians to attack the Diggers, beating them up and burning down a house. Three years after the 2012 meeting, history repeated itself during the Magna Carta 800th anniversary celebrations, when police illegally invaded the Runnymede Eco-Village community set up by the new Diggers to stop their peoples’ celebration. The site is now occupied by luxury housing.

Diggers at Runnymede - 2012

The original Diggers based their ideas of sharing of property from the New Testament and early Christianity and also looked back to England before the Norman Conquest. After 1066 the Norman Conquerors took hold of the land and divided it between themselves and there has been remarkably little change in land ownership over the almost 950 years since then, with the same families still owning the great majority of English land; 0.65% of the UK population currently own more than two thirds of the UK land area.

Diggers at Runnymede - 2012

It was an interesting discussion with some very historically informed contributions about Magna Carta and the lesser-known but more relevant to the common man ‘Charter of the Forest‘ which was issued shortly afterwards as well as a discussion of current issues and some interesting proposals for the future. As well as hoping to use the Eco-village as a practical example of their philosophy they also decided to hold a people’s celebration of the 800th anniversary in 2015 to take place as well as the official events.

Diggers at Runnymede - 2012
At the end of the meeting people get up to go to the Diggers campsite

After a long meeting we walked up the hill to the Diggers camp close to the long disused Runnymede campus of Brunel University and I made a few pictures. The Eco-village was finally set up a few yards further down the slope.

You can read more about the Eco-Village and what happened in June 2015 in Police threaten Runnymede Magna Carta festival on My London Diary and my posts here on >Re:PHOTO Celebrating Magna Carta and Magna Carta Under Threat. The Diggers blog with information about the Eco-village – its last post made in April 2015 – remains online.

More about the 2012 meeting at Diggers at Runnymede.


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More From Brockley – 1990

More From Brockley: Pictures from my walk on 18th March 1990 in Brockley. The previous post on this walk was Nunhead and Brockley. The pictures in this post are all from a small area of Brockley.

Mantle Rd, Brockley, Lewisham, 1990, 90-3f-31
Mantle Rd, Brockley, Lewisham, 1990, 90-3f-31

Two men walk around a street corner into the sun, their shadows clean on the pavement behind them. Like many who lived# in the area the two men are black.

This Brockley Cross at the north end of Mantle Road and it slopes down under a railway bridge to Brockley Station. Two railway lines cross here and I think the 4 aspect signal was on the line from London Bridge to Brockley. The other line, according to Edith’s Streets, was a goods line and the area behind the hoardings was Martin’s sidings with room for 36 coal waggons. This was on land belonging to Martins Dairy at 4 Endwell Road, leased to leased to the London North West Railway and sub let to coal merchant Charrington Warren Ltd.

The steps at right lead to the side entrance to Endwell Court, a block features in my previous post.

Josies CAFE, Mantle Rd, Brockley, Lewisham, 1990, 90-3f-34
Josies CAFE, Mantle Rd, Brockley, Lewisham, 1990, 90-3f-34

Josies Cafe was next to the railway bridge on Mantle Road which is at the right of the picture. There was still a café here (no longer Josie’s) until around 2010, but since then this has been a small empty plot.

Josies CAFE, Mantle Rd, Brockley, Lewisham, 1990, 90-3f-23
Josies CAFE, Mantle Rd, Brockley, Lewisham, 1990, 90-3f-23

Josies Cafe seen from the opposite side of Mantle Road with the grassy bank leading up to the goods line which crosses Mantle Road here.

Brockley Paper Co, Mantle Rd, Brockley, Lewisham, 1990, 90-3f-35
Brockley Paper Co, Mantle Rd, Brockley, Lewisham, 1990, 90-3f-35

I think this building housing the Brockley Paper Co was next to Josies Cafe, and has been demolished and replaced by a block of flats with shops on the ground floor. One of these at 1a Mantle Road is now the London Print Shop.

O'Shea, Low Cost Flats, Mantle Rd, Brockley, Lewisham, 1990, 90-3f-36
O’Shea, Low Cost Flats, Mantle Rd, Brockley, Lewisham, 1990, 90-3f-36

This small row was just south of Foxwell Road and you can see the railway bridge in the distance at right and the sign for Josies Cafe.

This block which included The Maypole Inn whose sign can be seen was demolished before 2008 – the pub closed in 2006. A block of flats was built on the northern part of the site around 2012, but I don’t know where the ‘low cost flats’ advertised here were located.

Free Winston Silcott, Harefield Rd, Brockley Rd,  Brockley, Lewisham, 1990, 90-3f-24
Free Winston Silcott, Harefield Rd, Brockley Rd, Brockley, Lewisham, 1990, 90-3f-24

I walked to the other side of Brockley Station over the station footbridge and along Coulgate Street to Brockley Road and into Harefield Road. The building in the centre background is the back of a house on the corner of Foxberry Street and Coulgate Street,.

This post began with two men, so I’ll end it with two women who walked in front of me to cross the road as I was looking at the graffiti on the wall at the read of the corner shop.

This had the message ‘FREE WINSTON SILCOTT’ above a lot of less legible scrawls. Silcott was one of the ‘Tottenham 3‘ convicted in 1987 for the murder of PC Keith Blakelock on the Broadwater Farm Estate in Tottenham in October 1985, but had been nowhere near the scened. All three convictions were quashed in 1991 after it was found the police had fabricated their confessions. He remained in jail as he was convicted for an unrelated murder of a boxer and nightclub bouncer and was only released in 2003.

More from this walk in a later post.


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Carnival, Political Prisoners & Naked Bike Ride – 2008

Carnival, Political Prisoners & Naked Bike Ride: On Saturday 14th June 2008 I called in at Hampton Hill on my way into London for the 30th annual Hampton Hill & Hampton Carnival Parade, but it turned out to be a rather small event. In Trafalgar Square there was a protest outside South Africa House calling for the release of political prisoners held in prisons around the world and after this I went to Hyde Park for the start of the London World Naked Bike Ride.


Hampton & Hampton Hill 30th Anniversary Parade

Hampton Hill

Carnival, Political Prisoners & Naked Bike Ride - 2008

In Hampton Hill I found cows on the High Street and a large rabbit as well as a few cars and some people on foot including a gardener with a wheelbarrow, but it was a small and rather disappointing parade and I left to continue my journey to London as it made its way towards Hampton.

Hampton & Hampton Hill 30th Anniversary Parade


Free Political Prisoners – Break the Chains

South Africa House

Carnival, Political Prisoners & Naked Bike Ride - 2008

The protest here was also rather smaller than I had hoped but included a group of Kurds calling for the release of their leader, Abdullah Ocalan from a Turkish jail.

Carnival, Political Prisoners & Naked Bike Ride - 2008

Others called for the release of the Miami Five, Cubans who came to Miami to disrupt terrorist raids made by right-wing Cuban exiles living there against Cuba and imprisoned by the USA.


There were also calls for the closure of the illegal US prison camp at Guantanamo Bay and for an end to the continuing torture there and release of refugees and asylum seekers locked in detention centres in the UK.

Break the Chains -Free Political Prisoners


World Naked Bike Ride

London

Carnival, Political Prisoners & Naked Bike Ride - 2008

In 2008 the London World Naked Bike Ride began in Hyde Park, and I went there to photograph the riders getting ready and setting off. The start was very crowded mainly with tourists eager to view the spectacle.

Carnival, Political Prisoners & Naked Bike Ride - 2008

When all had left I took the tube to Westminster to photograph the ride going over Westminster Bridge and then as the ride regrouped I rushed to the footbridge into Waterloo Station (now demolished) for pictures from above as it came down York Road. As the last cyclist passed below me I walked into the station to catch my train home.

Carnival, Political Prisoners & Naked Bike Ride - 2008

As I commented “while bodies are very much on display environmental messages seemed at times to be rather well-hidden, leaving many of the public along the route bemused.” And on My London Diary I recount briefly the reactions of some of the people I talked to and heard as we watched the event.

Those organising the ride say it is a “peaceful, imaginative and fun protest against oil dependency and car culture. A celebration of the bicycle and also a celebration of the power and individuality of the human body. A symbol of the vulnerability of the cyclist in traffic.”

The annual ride continues to take place in London and in other cities. The 2026 London ride is today, Sunday 14th June 2026. Riders are starting from Clapham Junction, Croydon, Deptford, Hackney Wick, Kew Bridge, Regents Park, Tower Hill, Hyde Park Corner and all meeting up close to the south end of Westminster Bridge to ride together around Central London.

More on My London Diary at World Naked Bike Ride, London 2008.


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Arms Dealers, Dirty Oil and Pay – 2013

Arms Dealers, Dirty Oil and Pay: On Thursday 13th Jun 2013 a protest in the week before the G8 summit in Ireland targeted the offices of arms manufacturers in London. Unlike the previous day the protesters were not harassed and attacked by police and the protest remained peaceful.

Canadian prime minster Stephen Harper had been invited to address Parliament and there was a noisy protest against him over his support of the environmentally disastrous Canadian tar sands as well as a smaller group of Canadian Foreign Service Workers demanding equal pay with other Canadian government employees.

I also briefly photographed the continuing daily vigil calling for the release of Shaker Aamer from Guantanamo which I had written about earlier.


G8 Protest Against Arms Dealers

West End

Arms Dealers, Dirty Oil and Pay - 2013

Anti-G8 protesters continued their protests with a tour of the offices of companies making armaments in Central London. Today their peaceful protest, unlike yesterday’s, was not attacked by police, and there were no arrests.

Arms Dealers, Dirty Oil and Pay - 2013

As well as a group of protesters in black robes with ghost or skull masks and carrying mock scythes and a black banner with the message ‘Think we’re SCARY? You’ll find ‘ARMS DEALERS INSIDE‘, there were others calling attention to UK based arms companies including BAE and EDO and the huge DSEi arms fair held in London’s Docklands.

Arms Dealers, Dirty Oil and Pay - 2013

Some changed into white plastic overalls suitable for a ‘weapons inspection’ as the protest began outside the offices of UK’s largest arms manufacturer BAE in Carlton Gardens. BAE is the third largest arms company in the world and notable for several corruption cases – and they have been fined £48.7m by the US government for braking their military export laws. Speeches here gave brief details about their immoral and sometimes illegal activities.

Arms Dealers, Dirty Oil and Pay - 2013

The protest moved on to give similar performances outside the offices of other arms companies:

Arms Dealers, Dirty Oil and Pay - 2013
  • Thales, the world’s 11 largest arms company with a wide range of surveillance equipment, drones, armoured vehicles, missiles and more.
Arms Dealers, Dirty Oil and Pay - 2013
  • Lockheed Martin UK – the British arm of the world’s largest arms producer, making fighters, bombs, nuclear weapons and involved with the CIA and FBI.
  • Northrop Grumman UK, one of the world’s largest defence contractors and the largest builder of naval vessels
  • missile developer MBDA
  • QinetiQ, a major defence contractor which manufactures drones and armed robots used in Afghanistan and Iraq.

They also protested outside Charing Cross Police Station where those arrested at the previous day’s J11 Carnival against Capitalism had been taken.

More on My London Diary at G8 Protest Against Arms Dealers.


Harper, we don’t want your dirty oil!

Parliament Square

Canadian PM Stephen Harper was invited to address the UK Parliament as he had a special relationship with UK PM David Cameron, both trying with the support of British Oil companies such as Shell and BP to force the EU to accept oil from the Albertan tar sands. And this protest took place as he spoke.

Canadian campaigners say Harper “has spent the last few years promoting the destructive tar sands industry, eroding Indigenous rights, weakening environmental regulations, muzzling scientists, and helping keep the world fixed on a collision course with runaway climate change by pulling out of the Kyoto Protocol.” They say his “government is currently mired in scandal and sleaze” and ask: “What was the UK thinking in extending this invitation?”

The protest was supported by all the leading environmental groups in the UK, and around a hundred protesters came to chanted in protest as this ‘climate criminal, addressed the UK Parliament shouting slogans including “Don’t say no thank you! Say No Tar!” and “Stephen Harper off our soil; We don’t want your dirty oil!”

More at Harper, we don’t want your dirty oil!


Canadian Foreign Service Protest

Abingdon Street

A few yards down the road from Parliament Square a much smaller group of protesters had come to greet the Canadian Prime Minister, mainly dressed in suits.

The Professional Association of Foreign Service Workers representing men and women working for the Canadian Government here and around the world had come to demand demanding equal pay for equal work. They say other Canadian government employees doing the exact same jobs as them are paid up to $14,000 a year more.

Canadian Foreign Service Protest


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Brexit, Fair Tips & Deported Cleaners – 2018

Brexit, Fair Tips & Deported Cleaners: On Tuesday 12 June 2018 after photographing the Stand of Defiance European Movement continuing protest outside Parliament I went on to a protest at the Business ministry calling for restaurant staff to receive all of the tips that clients add to their bills. Finally I went to SOAS where a rally was taking place on the 9th anniversary of the management conspiring with the Border Agency in a despicable anti-union move to deport nine of the cleaners who worked there.


Stop Brexit ‘Pies Not Lies’

Old Palace Yard, Westminster

Brexit, Fair Tips & Deported Cleaners - 2018

Steven Bray’s Stand of Defiance European Movement, SODEM, were continuing their protests outside Parliament every day it was in session.

Brexit, Fair Tips & Deported Cleaners - 2018

This protest was a part of their ‘Pies Not Lies Remainathon‘ and was taking place as parliament were debating the European Union (Withdrawal) Bill.

Brexit, Fair Tips & Deported Cleaners - 2018

They continue to point out that he public was misled by deliberate lies and say that Brexit does not reflect the will of the people as few if any of the 52% actually voted for the kind of hard Brexit that the government is pursuing.

Stop Brexit ‘Pies Not Lies’


Unite TGI Fridays demand Fair Tips & Fair Pay

Dept of Business etc, Victoria St

Brexit, Fair Tips & Deported Cleaners - 2018

Striking Unite members from TGI Fridays along with others from the Unite Restaurant, Catering and Bar Workers Branch and Unite Community came to the Department of Business, Energy & Industrial Strategy to protest against restaurant owners taking part of the tips that customers give to staff on their credit cards.

Brexit, Fair Tips & Deported Cleaners - 2018

The workers say TGI Fridays use the tips to drive down the pay of staff in kitchens, and demand to keep the tips they have earned and for proper pay for all restaurant staff.

One of the protesters was dressed as a giant burger. After half an hour of noisy protest, a deputation tried to go in to deliver a letter to business secretary Greg Clark, but were stopped at the door, where their letter was taken with a promise it would be delivered to him.

Two years earlier then then Business minister Sajid Javid had promised to take action to end this malpractice but had done nothing. Five years later The Employment (Allocation of Tips) Act 2023 made it law that all tips should go to the workers and a code of practice for this was issued in July 2024.

I left as the protest at the ministry was ending and the group were going on to protest outside branches of TGI Fridays.

TGI Fridays demand Fair Tips & Fair Pay


‘SOAS 9’ deported cleaners remembered

SOAS University of London

On 12th June 2009, after the cleaners at SOAS had begun to campaign for the London Living Wage, SOAS managers called them to an ’emergency meeting’ at 6:30am.

Consuela, one of the cleaner’s shop stewards

A few minutes after the start of the ‘meeting’, agents of the UK Border Agency rushed in, handcuffed all the cleaners and held them for questioning. Nine were then deported.

The was part of the despicable ‘hostile environment’ for migrant workers, begun by the Labour government, but severely ratcheted up by Theresa May as Home Secretary.

People stood at the rally in front of SOAS holding the names of the 9 deported cleaners – Alberto, Carlos, Heidy, Laura, Lucia, Manuel, Marina, Milton and Rosa – while people told the story of that grim day and about the long fight by cleaners to get a Living Wage, decent conditions of service and to be treated with dignity and respect.

Sandy Nicoll, SOAS Unison Branch Secretary

In 2018 that ten year ‘one workplace, one workforce’ struggle to bring the cleaners ‘in house’, directly employed by the university, had just been won in principle and negotiations were continuing on its implementation.

Lenin, another cleaners shop steward

After the rally there was to be a showing of the documentary film ‘Limpiadores’ about the SOAS cleaners and the Borders Agency raid with a panel discussion, but I couldn’t stay. I don’t think the film is still available.

‘SOAS 9’ deported cleaners remembered


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News of the World & Police Forest Gate Raid – 2006

News of the World & Police Forest Gate Raid: On Sunday 11th June 2006 a protest took place outside the News International printing works in Wapping a week after its staff had tricked migrants in East London by making fake job promises and then transporting them by bus to an immigration detention centre. This was one of many outrages by the newspaper, which was finally forced to close in 2011 by the many revelations about its involvement in illegal phone hacking.

Later in the day there was a larger protest at New Scotland Yard against a massive police raid by 250 police on a home in Forest Gate in which one of two men arrested was shot and wounded by police. Police also forcefully raided a neighbouring house, and the whole local area was shut down for several days. Police were acting on a rumour that this was a terrorist bomb factory but no chemical materials were found and the two men were released seven days later without charge.

Here is what I wrote back in 2006 about these with some pictures from the protests.


No Borders Protest at Wapping

News of the World, Wapping

News of the World & Police Forest Gate Raid - 2006
Demonstrators outside the gate to Fortress Wapping

Last Sunday the ‘News Of The World’ bragged about how a team of its staff had made fake offers of work to migrants, picking on the weakest and most exploited people living here with us. They had then picked them up in a bus and taken them without their consent to the Colnbrook Detention Centre, where they were handed over to immigration officers and detained.

News of the World & Police Forest Gate Raid - 2006

I hope their actions will be condemned by my union (the NUJ) as a disgrace to journalism, and endangering relations between genuine reporters and migrants. Such deception should not be tolerated by anyone, and the would seem to amount to kidnapping.

All of us should be appalled that this was allowed to happen – and that apparently the authorities connived in it rather than turning the buses away as they should have done.

News of the World & Police Forest Gate Raid - 2006

Colnbrook detainees made their feelings about the person who organised the scam clear “You are a gutless, incompetent, bully” and pointed out that it was such “unfair ill-informed reporting” that was responsible for the adoption of inhuman policies that led to migrants not claiming asylum and hiding from the authorities, which left them open to exploitation by unscrupulous employers, with long hours, low pay and poor and dangerous working conditions.

A few more pictures


Rally For Justice – Forest Gate Raid

New Scotland Yard, Victoria St

News of the World & Police Forest Gate Raid - 2006
‘Intelligence or Negligence – That is the Question!’ read some of the placards

A crowd of several hundred demonstrators, mainly Muslim, gathered outside New Scotland Yard on Sunday afternoon, 11th June 2006, to voice their disquiet at the June 2nd police raid in Forest Gate.

News of the World & Police Forest Gate Raid - 2006
George Galloway speaks to reporters

Speakers from across the Muslim community as well as Respect MP George Galloway and Lindsey German of ‘Stop The War’ expressed their misgivings at the heavy-handed approach of the police and the targeting of Muslims. There were calls for the resignation of the Metropolitan Police chief, Sir Ian Blair. Many also called for Tony Blair to go.

News of the World & Police Forest Gate Raid - 2006

Certainly there should be some rapid re-thinking of how (and why) any further such raids are carried out. I’d always assumed that when the police kicked down my front door at 4 am they would at least shout out something like ‘Police – get on the floor’ as they stormed in rather than leave me to think they were an armed criminal gang. And while I might expect them to restrain me, shooting me or and kicking me in the head without very good reason surely should result in a criminal conviction?

A rather grudging apology dragged out over a week after the event isn’t good enough. Of course there are enquiries going on, but the police have to show some sensitivity. [Later the officers concerned were cleared of any “criminal or disciplinary offence“.]

Several speakers made the point that ‘police intelligence’ was in almost all respects woefully lacking. All of us are put at danger – as last year’s London bombings showed – because police waste time and resources on false rumours such as those behind this raid. One speaker went through a long, long list of such happenings around the country, including some the police still persist in believing despite having cases thrown out by the courts.

The event attracted major media attention; it was hard to get an accurate estimate of the number of demonstrators because there were so many reporters and photographers etc present. Along with a core of 250, representing the number of police involved in the raid, there were probably a hundred or more others.

More pictures begin here.


Wikipedia states:The Metropolitan Police revealed under freedom of information legislation that what was known as Operation Volga had cost £2,211,600, including £864,300 on overtime payments for the dozens of police officers involved, £90,000 on hotel bills, and £120,000 for repairs to the damage caused to the houses by the police.”


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