Just Stop Oil: Journalist Arrests Show How The Demonisation Of Protest Threatens Us All


(MENAFN- The Conversation)

At least have been detained while covering Just Stop Oil protests in recent weeks. Their press credentials ignored, the journalists (including an LBC reporter, a documentary filmmaker and a photographer) were held for hours, fingerprinted and DNA-swabbed. Their phones and cameras were confiscated and – – a journalist's home was searched.

Reasons for arrest and detention included“”, despite journalists taking no part in any aspect of the protests. This flies in the face of the UK 's policy. The college explicitly briefs its officers against such interference with the media in the pursuit of reporting news, advising that“facilitation of frontline media reporting during dynamic operations should be anticipated and planned for”.

So what explains the detention of reporters at recent protests – and what are the wider implications? initially said the protests were“fluid and fast-moving” and insisted that there were valid grounds to detain journalists“for questioning in order to verify their credentials”. But, following widespread condemnation from government ministers, Hertfordshire but also implied that not all journalists belong to“legitimate media”, and argued that those covering the protests were“”.

Such harassment of journalists is clearly wholly unacceptable: but to fully understand these incidents, we need to place them in their wider context.

Policing the highway to climate hell

World leaders have stressed the need for urgent action on climate change. The UN secretary general Antonio Guterres warned that the world is on a without it. The UK prime minister Rishi Sunak said that it is for the UK to honour its climate pledges at COP27.

Just Stop Oil's blocking of roads and motorways to draw attention to the lack of action despite widespread political rhetoric has proved highly controversial. There have been claims that road blockades have halted and prevented motorists from reaching or . The chaos has led some drivers to take the .

Activists recently occupied motorway gantries on the M25 in England, obliging police to stop traffic while they could be removed. Police have a , but must balance the rights of protesters with those of other citizens. Police action to remove protesters may be necessary and proportionate – but the same cannot be said of the decisions to arrest journalists who were nor obstructing a police operation. Preemptively limiting media access is the hallmark of an authoritarian rather than democratic state.


Just Stop Oil activists halt traffic on the M25 near Thorpe, November 8 2022.

We closely observed police operations during and found Police Scotland were accommodating to researchers and proactively engaged with the media. There was little confrontation and no more than a handful of arrests at COP26. But year on there are now serious questions about police responses to climate protests in the UK. Recent arrests need to be understood in light of discourses around protest in the press and parliament.

A hostile environment for protest

In 2021, the government was granted an injunction against road blocking by Insulate Britain, resulting in multiple . Similarly this year, politicians from different parties have supported legislation during 2022 to clamp down on disruptive or noisy protests. The (which was passed by parliament and is currently being scrutinised by a House of Lords committee) will criminalise locking on and“interfering with key national infrastructure”, and“extend stop and search powers for … protest-related offences”.

The Bill aims“to give police the tools they need to tackle dangerous and highly disruptive tactics, used by a small minority of protesters, to wreak havoc for people going about their daily lives”. At a time when UN chief Guterres says climate crisis presents the world with a choice between , UK leaders appear to be doubling down on punishing protesters rather than addressing the causes of global heating.

The home secretary, Suella Braverman, rails against the“”; the leader of the opposition, Keir Starmer, supports“ for those gluing themselves to roads and motorways”; the press sensationalises“”. The result is a hostile environment for protest.

joined those calling for press freedom in the wake of the arrests, conveniently forgetting the role of his government in demonising environmental activists. , professor of social psychology at the University of St Andrews, warned that the bill effectively“delegitimates protest in the eyes of the police” by presenting activists – and those surrounding them – as troublemakers to be controlled. As one :

Whatever one thinks about Just Stop Oil, antipathy towards radical environmentalism among politicians and the media is having wider consequences. A 2020 report by Oxford University academics described it as having a“” on what both police and the public see as legitimate protest, with serious consequences for democracy.

The harassment and detention of journalists doing their job shows that crackdowns on dissent don't only impact“eco-zealots”: they threaten everyone.


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