Extinction Rebellion protesters tried to shut down and gag the BBC today after it broadcast an interview with a former police officer who has called for the group to be treated more seriously.
On the fifth day of mayhem caused by the climate activists in Central London, a group of demonstrators prevented journalists from entering the corporation’s New Broadcasting House at the top of Regent Street.
They are angry that BBC Radio 4’s Today programme interviewed former Scotland Yard Commander Richard Walton, who previously wrote a report saying the group should be treated as ‘anarchist extremists’ by police.
Former counter terrorism commander Mr Walton criticised the force in July for its ‘passive’ and ‘tolerant’ response to protests in April and recommended officers adopt a ‘proactive’ approach to stopping the group’s illegal tactics.
So far this week, more than 1,100 activists have been arrested after protests in Trafalgar Square and Whitehall, outside Government departments and at City Airport – just shy of the total arrested during the action in April.
Extinction Rebellion protesters found a new target this morning when they picketed the BBC’s New Broadcasting House HQ
Police officers stand behind protesters as they block the entrance of the BBC New Broadcasting House in London today
Police officers arrest a protester during the Extinction Rebellion demonstration outside the BBC offices in London today
The group claim the BBC is not giving enough airtime to the issue of climate change or reporting enough on their protests
Police officers stand next to protesters as they block the entrance of the BBC offices in London this morning
Protesters blocking the entrance to the BBC New Broadcasting House in London during the protest this morning
A group spokesman said: ‘We were disheartened this week to see the BBC’s flagship radio programme Today has once again platformed … Richard Walton on the first day of our International Rebellion.
‘This is the very same man that authored the propaganda report on XR by the opaquely-funded free-market think tank, Policy Exchange, which we now know to be receiving money from some of the UK’s leading energy firms.
‘The report sought to portray our deeply non-violent and non-ideological movement as ‘extremist’, in order to justify the introduction of harsher laws on peaceful protest.’
BBC Home Affairs correspondent Dominic Casciani tweeted: ‘BBC colleagues reporting on climate change can’t do their job if they’re blocked by, er, climate protesters.
‘The BBC devotes an enormous amount of energy reporting the facts. From Attenborough to local online stories. XR’s Rupert Read was even on BBC Question Time last night.’
A flag placed on the statue of George Orwell outside the BBC New Broadcasting House in London this morning
Climate activists protest at the BBC offices during the fifth day of demonstrations by Extinction Rebellion this morning
Police officers stand next to protesters as they block the entrance of the BBC offices during the protest this morning
Climate activists protest at the BBC offices during the fifth day of demonstrations by Extinction Rebellion today
Journalists and broadcasters said they were locked out of their workplace in London today by a group of around 40 activists
Financial journalist Paul Lewis tweeted that he was among those ‘locked out’ out of the building. It comes after activists tried to shut down City Airport yesterday, with one protester managing gluing himself on top of a plane.
As two flights were grounded and 50 protesters arrested, Scotland Yard’s top officer warned that the climate change campaigners are taking officers away from tackling crime across the country.
Dame Cressida Dick urged Extinction Rebellion to ‘protest lawfully or go home’ after a day of chaos at the airport, which also saw campaigners gluing themselves to the terminal floor, clambering on to roofs and blocking traffic.
The British Airways plane heading for Amsterdam yesterday was delayed at City Airport after a protester evaded security and clambered up the fuselage to glue himself on top for an hour.
Protesters hold a placard outside the BBC’s New Broadcasting House during an Extinction Rebellion demonstration today
A Welsh faction of the group unveiled a banner claiming the BBC’s ‘silence’ is ‘deadly’
Metropolitan Police head of media Chris Greenwood tweeted these photographs yesterday of a thank you note and flowers for staff at Brixton police station in South London from an XR protester
Concerns were raised over how partially blind Paralympian James Brown, 43, managed the feat, which came after he was arrested for an alleged drone plot at Heathrow Airport just a month ago.
Dame Cressida, the Metropolitan Police Commissioner, branded the stunt ‘reckless, stupid and dangerous’ as she admitted the protests had taken their toll on her force.
With more than 1,000 arrests so far, hundreds of officers have been drafted in from every police force around the country to help deal with the planned two-week protests in London.
She said: ‘We are taking people away from keeping people safe in local areas and putting them into central London.’
Extinction Rebellion activist James Brown sits on top of the roof of a British Airways plane at London City Airport yesterday
The Paralympian took part in the stunt today, one month after being arrested for allegedly flying a drone over Heathrow
Although Extinction Rebellion did not fulfil its ambition of closing London City Airport entirely, its activists caused chaos both inside and outside the terminal throughout the day.
Several smartly dressed protesters managed to get inside and glue themselves to the floor, while others blocked the entrance by lying on the pavement outside the main doors.
Despite the heavy security presence, with the number of officers almost equalling the number of protesters, two men were also able to clamber on top of the roof at the entrance.
Mr Brown, who won bronze for Ireland at the London 2012 Paralympics but was later banned from athletics for doping, could face a lengthy spell in prison after the stunt on top of the BA flight bound for Amsterdam.
Once in place he broadcast a five-minute Facebook Live video about climate change, adding that he was ‘scared of heights’ and felt ‘shaky’.
As security guards approached, the stunt turned to farce as he told viewers: ‘I don’t know how they’re going to get me down, but I hope it’s soon… it’s scary up here, and a bit cold.’
Hours earlier, a protester delayed an Aer Lingus flight to Dublin. During the pre-flight safety demonstration, the smartly dressed middle-aged man got up and began roaming the cabin and lecturing passen-gers on climate change.
He told passengers: ‘I don’t wish to travel but I don’t wish to get off. I’m sorry, I’m very sorry, I’m extremely sorry for the inconvenience.’
As the plane turned back from the runway to have the man removed, the pilot told passengers he would have to take on more fuel to replace what had been used up during the protest.
Deputy Assistant Commissioner Laurence Taylor, of the Metropolitan Police, said: ‘Targeting an airport and travellers in this way is wholly unacceptable and irresponsible.’
Addressing the Extinction Rebellion activists, Dame Cressida said yesterday: ‘Protest lawfully or go home. You have caused disruption to many people and caused misery to some people’s lives.
‘We have cleared you away again and again, and now secured the sites you wanted to occupy. You have a place to protest. Go and protest there.’
Extinction Rebellion at Trafalgar Square yesterday, where police stood around a group who climbed a structure
Meanwhile in central London, tents had been cleared away from roads leading into Parliament Square as the police appeared to have contained the protests in Trafalgar Square.
However, Scotland Yard faced embarrassment after activists set up a ‘mini Glastonbury’ under their noses in one of London’s royal parks.
More than 300 tents were illegally pitched in St James’s Park, with a space for artistic performances.
Police have been put under further pressure as activists who had been arrested earlier in the week returned to the protests after being released.
Yesterday, veteran campaigner Phil Kingston, 83, was arrested for the third time.
The retired probation officer from Bristol was arrested last Thursday for spraying fake blood on the walls of the Treasury, on Monday for spray-painting a slogan on the same building and yesterday at London City Airport.
Jeremy Corbyn yesterday praised Extinction Rebellion for ‘educating us’ and claimed its activists were so virtuous they may one day appear on stamps.
The Labour leader suggested that the protest group, which has brought parts of London to a standstill, could be commemorated in future years like the oncevilified suffragettes.
Speaking at a rally in Northampton, Mr Corbyn said: ‘To have any hope of keeping global temperature rises to a manageable level, we need immediate and radical action.
‘I’d like to thank groups like Extinction Rebellion for educating us and pushing the issue to the top of the agenda.’
Mr Corbyn pointed out that antiestablishment groups had in the past become celebrated as times changed. He said: ‘Every time anyone condemns people for protesting they should think for a moment where protest can lead.
‘Those women who stood up for the right to vote, the suffragettes, were condemned mercilessly by almost every newspaper in the country – they’re now on postage stamps.
‘So let’s just remember the right to free speech, the right to protest, the right to be heard in a peaceful way, is a precious right.’
The suffragette movement featured on Royal Mail stamps last year to commemorate 100 years since women were given the vote.
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