As Michael Gove launched his preposterous and dangerous new extremism definition, some of the groups he targeted have hit back â calling it a âdeep dive into authoritarianismâ and laying cover for the government âaiding and abettingâ Israelâs genocide in Gaza.
In The Canary
Following a pattern of jury acquittals of environmental defenders and anti-genocide activists, which exposes the media fiction that the British governmentâs âcrackdown on protestâ is in any way democratic, the Court of Appeal has today backed the Attorney Generalâs call to remove what was for many their last remaining line of legal defence.
It has ruled that mass loss of life from climate breakdown and the governmentâs failure to act on the science are irrelevant to the circumstances of an action, for the purposes of the defence of consent to damage to property (Criminal Damage Act 1971, s.5(2)(a)). That is â protesters deeply-held and factual beliefs are no defence.
[âŠ]
In the absence of any defence, some judges, such as Judge Silas Reid at Inner London Crown Court, have taken to banning activists from explaining their motivations to the jury and banning them from using words such as âclimate changeâ and âfuel povertyâ in their courtroom. Judge Reid has sent 3 people to prison just for using those words in court.
Such measures prompted an extraordinary intervention by the UN Special Rapporteur, Michel Forst, earlier this year:
"I was ⊠alarmed to learn that, in some recent cases, presiding judges have forbidden environmental defenders from explaining to the jury their motivation for participating in a given protest or from mentioning climate change at all.
"It is very difficult to understand what could justify denying the jury the opportunity to hear the reason for the defendantâs action, and how a jury could reach a properly informed decision without hearing it, in particular at the time of environmental defendersâ peaceful but ever more urgent calls for the government to take pressing action for the climate."
A new campaign calling for ten thousand people to stop paying their wastewater bills, to force companies to end the practice of pouring 11bn litres of raw sewage every year into UK rivers and seas, was launched on 15 November by Extinction Rebellion and local water action groups.
The Donât Pay for Dirty Water campaign, which targets all of the major water companies, kicked off with a splash, with campaigners swimming beneath the sewage outflow into the River Roding in East London.
The organisers vow to sign up at least ten thousand people to withhold the wastewater or sewerage part of their water bill. By collectively withholding millions of pounds, the boycotters hope to pressure water companies and the government to fast-track infrastructure upgrades and stop diverting ordinary billpayersâ money into massive profits for shareholders while billpayersâ local waterways are poisoned.