Sarah Everard vigil organiser blames ‘obstructive’ senior Scotland Yard officers for violent scenes

Sarah Everard vigil organiser blames ‘obstructive’ senior Scotland Yard officers for violent scenes that marred the event on Clapham Common, accusing them of bringing in male officers from other parts of London to arrest women

  • Anna Birley, of Reclaim These Streets, gave evidence to MPs about the clashes 
  • Accused senior officers of being ‘very obstructive’ despite efforts by organisers Said it was ‘very stark that the arrests seemed to be made by male officers’

The organiser of a vigil for Sarah Everard blasted ‘obstructive’ senior officers from Scotland Yard today over violent scenes, and suggested male officers were deliberately drafted in from other parts of London to arrest women.

Anna Birley, of Reclaim These Streets, accused the Metropolitan Police of having an illegal ‘blanket ban’ on protests as she gave evidence to MPs about the March 13 event. 

Reclaim These Streets had cancelled the event after Scotland Yard rejected their proposals for making it Covid secure, and a High Court judge refused to intervene in a legal battle launched by the organisers. 

But a crowd of around 1,500 people gathered on Clapham Common anyway, and scuffles broke out as police moved in to arrest speakers.

Ms Birley told the Home Affairs Committee that the organisers had a good relationship with local officers in Lambeth before the event.

But she added: ‘What changed was when it clearly went up a rung in the hierarchy of the Met Police and officers from New Scotland Yard said that they would not be willing to allow a vigil to take place. 

‘They were very obstructive despite the fact that we proactively reached out to them.’

Patsy Stevenson is pinned to the the floor by police at the Sarah Everard vigil, where scuffles broke out as police surrounded a bandstand covered in flowers left in tribute.

Anna Birley, of Reclaim These Streets, gave evidence to MPs about the clashes between Metropolitan Police officers on Clapham Common on March 13 that provoked a furious outcry.

Anna Birley, of Reclaim These Streets, gave evidence to MPs about the clashes between Metropolitan Police officers on Clapham Common on March 13 that provoked a furious outcry.

Anna Birley, of Reclaim These Streets, gave evidence to MPs about the clashes between Metropolitan Police officers on Clapham Common on March 13 that provoked a furious outcry.

Mourners wearing facemasks went to the common throughout the day on March 13, including the Duchess of Cambridge who paid a private visit to the makeshift shrine.

Mourners wearing facemasks went to the common throughout the day on March 13, including the Duchess of Cambridge who paid a private visit to the makeshift shrine.

Mourners wearing facemasks went to the common throughout the day on March 13, including the Duchess of Cambridge who paid a private visit to the makeshift shrine.

Labour councillor whose legal vigil attempt was thwarted by the courts 

Anna Birley is a Labour councillor in Lambeth, the borough of London where Sarah Everard disappeared.

She is also part of Reclaim These Streets, the organisation which attempted to organise an official vigil on Clapham Common on March 13 after the disappearance of Sarah Everard. 

She was one of four women who went to the High Court to overturn the Metropolitan Police’s decision to block the event using Covid regulations.

But the High Court ruled in favour of the police, and the official event was called off. However hundreds of women attended Clapham Common for an ad-hoc event. 

Ms Birley told MPs today she had not attended the event because she would have faced being hit with a £10,000 fine as the organiser of a prohibited event under emergency Covid laws banning mass gatherings.

As well as being a Labour councillor in the Tulse Hill area of Lambeth since 2015, she also works for its allied Co-operative Party as a policy officer.

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Ms Everard disappeared on March 3 after leaving a friend’s home. Her body was found in Kent woodland on March 10.

Mourners wearing facemasks went to the common throughout the day on March 13, including the Duchess of Cambridge who paid a private visit to the makeshift shrine.

But the vigil on Saturday night in Ms Everard’s memory descended into violence, culminating in police officers pinning protesters to the ground in images that appalled the nation.

Met Commissioner Dame Cressida Dick, 60, appears to have clung onto her job despite criticism of how her force policed the vigil.

Dame Cressida has said her officers were right to break up the event, which saw thousands of people – mainly women – gather on Clapham Common in south London, near to where Ms Everard was abducted.

But Ms Birley said that before pulling the plug on the official vigil her organisation they had offered to take extra steps to be Covid secure, including staggered start times.

However, she told MPs today that police believed ‘that essentially any form of gathering … would be unlawful, so a blanket ban’.

She added: ‘We had asked in advance that it be policed locally, that local police who understood the frustrations were feeling were policing it, and we also asked that they try and ensure as many female officers on site as possible.

‘Not having been there I cannot confirm the number of female officers but it is very stark that the arrests seemed to be made by male officers and my understanding is that non of the arresting officers were Lambeth officers, they were New Scotland Yard officers that came from elsewhere, so I don’t know whether that might have contributed.’

Peaceful protests will be explicitly allowed under a tweak to coronavirus rules that will come into force from Monday amid fury at the handling of the Sarah Everard vigil.

Updated public health regulations will contain a specific exemption for political demonstrations as of March 29.

The Health Protection (Coronavirus, Restrictions) (Steps) (England) Regulations 2021 contains an exemption to laws prohibiting mass public gatherings for demonstrations, as long as ‘it has been organised by a business, a charitable, benevolent or philanthropic institution, a public body or a political body, and … the gathering organiser takes the required precautions in relation to the gathering’.

The law has yet to be passed by MPs, with a hardcore of lockdown rebels threatening to vote against it. But with Labour set to back it, it is almost certainly to become law.  

Police across England and Wales are currently reviewing their preparedness for protests and ability to provide mutual aid to neighbouring forces.

The unrest in Bristol in recent days saw Avon and Somerset police joined by officers from British Transport Police, Devon and Cornwall, Dorset, Dyfed-Powys, Gloucestershire, Gwent and Wiltshire.

National Police Chiefs’ Council lead for public order and public safety, Chief Constable BJ Harrington, said: ‘In light of the recent protests that have taken place across the country in recent weeks, as well as the forthcoming changes to the regulations, we believe it is sensible for forces to review their protest policing plans.

‘We want to ensure that all forces have the capability to respond quickly and appropriately to any future protests, whether lawful or unlawful.

‘As such, the public may see more police presence in some areas, though this isn’t something to be alarmed about.

‘It isn’t based on any immediate danger or threat, but so we can be as prepared as possible.

‘Where lawful, we will seek to facilitate peaceful protests, but any violence will not be tolerated.’

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