Yes, that over
7 years!

 


The website of Brian Haw, peace protestor
and the Parliament Square Peace Campaign, supporting Brian
and defending the right to protest near Parliament

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As long as it takes
"I want to go back to my own kids and look them in the face again knowing that I've done all I can to try and save the children of Iraq and other countries who are dying because of my government's unjust, amoral, fear - and money - driven policies. These children and people of other countries are every bit as valuable and worthy of love as my precious wife and children."

How many must die?
Brian started his 24/7 vigil in 2001 to protest about the suffering of Iraqis during the 1990s because of economic sanctions. He continues because of all those who have, and continue, to suffer as a result of the invasion and occupation of Iraq. In Oct 2004 The Lancet estimated that 100,000 Iraqis have died. In Oct 2006 it was estimated that 655,000 people have died in Iraq as a result of the 2003 invasion (see more here). And how many millions of other lives have been blighted for ever?

Watch! Listen!
demonstration speeches: June 08, Oct 07

Brian's Christmas message
, Dec 2006

Brian on why he continues his protest
, 2005

Send Brian a postcard of support c/o Parliament Square, London SW1A


This photo was taken by Gemma Day in Dec 04 for an Independent on Sunday article. See all media articles.

Mark Thomas, comedian and campaigner, 2004
" ...Now they wish to evict Brian from his place of protest. Maybe because he is an embarrassment to such a war mongering government. Whatever their reason it is wrong. A democracy that can not stand one man and some placards outside its front doors doesn't seem to have much faith in itself. That is why I support Brian for Parliament."

The heroic Brian Haw
Letter in The Independent, 2 Aug 05

Sir: Brian Haw has struck a major blow for international peace in his passive defiance of government aggression in the face of his peace protest (report, 30 July). I cannot think of anyone who has sacrificed as much as he has on a personal level in the cause of peace in this country and I would like to see him being nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize.
Andrew Stephenson, Newhaven, East Sussex

return to press releases

IMMEDIATE PRESS RELEASE
30 March 2005

PARLIAMENT SQUARE PEACE CAMPAIGNER WINS APPEAL BUT FACES NEW LAW STOPPING PROTEST AT HEART OF GOVERNMENT

Brian Haw, the Parliament Square peace protestor, who has spent nearly 4 years in a continuous anti-war protest vigil opposite the Houses of Parliament (1), has won an appeal against a conviction of ‘failing to leave a cordoned area’.

Mr Haw was arrested and his extensive protest display removed in a sudden midnight police operation on 10 May 2004 (2). In December 2004 a magistrate dismissed the charge against Mr Haw of assaulting a police officer. At the trial the counsel for the defence had argued that there had been no evidence of a cordon being properly established and that the police had given conflicting accounts. Despite the supposed security threat the police van did not leave the scene for some time and, just after Mr Haw's arrest, the security cordon was lifted.

When witnesses for the prosecution did not turn up at court this morning the judge determined the case could not proceed and the CPS decided that it was no longer in the public interest to prosecute. The judge granted Mr Haw’s appeal against the conviction and awarded him defence costs.

Emma Sangster, a character witness for Mr Haw said that, “Brian’s protest has been accepted as lawful since he won his landmark High Court case in October 2002 (3). Rather, it is the actions of the police on more than one occasion that do not stand up in court. The fact that Brian keeps winning cases in the courts demonstrates the justice behind his protest. His is a message that the Government does not want to hear. In their increasingly desperate attempts to silence Brian, the Government is resorting to forcing through a new law, that will effectively stop most protest, whatever the issue, in the heart of London.”

The Serious Organised Crime and Police Bill is currently going through Parliament and will be debated in the House of Lords on 5th April (4). Liberty have said, “The right to peaceful protest goes to the heart of the British tradition of liberty. It is an indictment upon the Government that they seek to pass primary legislation which will end demonstrations near Parliament…It is difficult to see how clause 129 can be compatible with Article 11 Human Rights Act (the right to freedom of peaceful assembly and association).” (5)

For more information contact: Mike Schwarz at Bindmans Solicitors: 0207 833 4433
or info@parliament-square.org.uk

Notes:

1. Brian Haw has been in Parliament Square continuously since 2nd June 2001 in protest against the US/UK support of economic sanctions in Iraq, the invasion of Iraq and the on-going ‘war on terror’.
2. After the incident Mr Haw's protest placards were unnecessarily removed from the site but returned the next day and dumped on the pavement. He sustained wrist injuries and other bruising while being put into a police van and has filed a complaint to the police about the incident. See here.
3. On 4th October 2002 Westminster City Council's High Court proceedings against him for obstruction of the highway were dismissed on the grounds that Brian was exercising his freedom of expression and assembly under the Human Rights Act. See here.
4. One of the measures in the Serious Organised Crime and Police Bill is entitled ‘Behaviour in vicinity of Parliament’. See www.publications.parliament.uk/pa/cm200405/cmbills/044/05044rsp.htm, clauses 129 to 135.
5. See: www.liberty-human-rights.org.uk/issues/right-to-protest.shtml

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