'Not my king': anti-monarchist arrests spark criticism in Britain

'Not my king': anti-monarchist arrests spark criticism in Britain

World

'Not my king': anti-monarchist arrests spark criticism in Britain

LONDON (AFP) - British police faced criticism from civil liberties groups on Tuesday over their treatment of anti-monarchy protesters who have publicly challenged King Charles III s accession to the throne.

Footage went viral on social media on Monday of a woman demonstrator holding a "Not My King" protest placard being confronted by at least four officers outside the UK parliament in London.

She was seen being escorted away from the spot, and was reportedly made to stand at another location away from the gates of parliament.

Lawyer and climate activist Paul Powlesland also revealed on Twitter that he had been warned by an officer that he risked arrest after he held up a blank piece of paper opposite parliament.

"He confirmed that if I wrote,  Not My King  on it, he would arrest me under the Public Order Act because someone might be offended," Powlesland wrote alongside video footage showing him talking to an officer.

Britain is in national mourning for Queen Elizabeth II, with the death of the 96-year-old monarch provoking a rare moment of national unity amid an outpouring of sympathy for the royals.

But it has also raised questions about the space for dissent, with several civil liberties groups warning that police are failing to respect the rights of the small minority of anti-monarchists.

"If people are being arrested simply for holding protest placards then it is an affront to democracy and highly likely to be unlawful," Big Brother Watch said in a statement.

"Police officers have a duty to protect people s right to protest as much as they have a duty to facilitate people s right to express support, sorrow, or pay their respects."

In another incident, a 45-year-old man was arrested in Oxford in southern England on Sunday after he shouted "Who elected him?" during a public proclamation of Charles III s accession.

Jodie Beck, from the Liberty campaign group, said the right to protest was "a vital part of a healthy and functioning democracy".

"It is very worrying to see the police enforcing their broad powers in such a heavy-handed and punitive way to clamp down on free speech and expression," she said in a statement.

-  Fundamental right  -

London s Metropolitan Police force appeared to acknowledge the over-zealous actions of some officers late on Monday.

"The public absolutely have a right to protest," said deputy assistant commissioner Stuart Cundy.

"We have been making this clear to all officers involved in the extraordinary policing operation currently in place and we will continue to do so."

The queen s coffin was put on public display for the first time on Monday in Edinburgh following a silent procession that saw a young man shout out at Prince Andrew, the queen s second son, as he marched behind the hearse.

The heckler, who called Andrew a "sick old man" in reference to his links to American paedophile financier Jeffrey Epstein, was shown being bundled away and escorted by police.

Scottish police confirmed that two people had been arrested and charged on Monday for public order offences.

Another woman who held an "abolish monarchy" sign at a proclamation ceremony for King Charles III in Edinburgh on Sunday has also been charged, reports said.

"Obviously this is a period of national mourning for the majority, the vast, vast majority of the country," a spokesman for Prime Minister Liz Truss told reporters in London on Tuesday.

"But the fundamental right to protest remains a keystone of our democracy."

- Police powers -

The 1986 UK Public Order Act gives the police powers of arrest for people judged to be guilty of causing "harassment, alarm or distress" through "threatening words or behaviour, or disorderly behaviour", including by holding up signs.

The right-wing Conservative government faced severe criticism from civil liberties groups over a new policing law earlier this year which increased the power of security forces to restrict protests.

The staunchly pro-monarchy public mood reportedly also saw British broadcaster Sky cut queen-related jokes made by US-based British comedian John Oliver in his show "Last Week Tonight" on Monday evening.

In the left-wing Guardian newspaper titled "Britain likes to consider itself the cradle of free speech -- until someone heckles Prince Andrew", columnist Marina Hyde said democracy was being tested.

"Unfortunately, we are only a few days into the official mourning period, and various tests are being failed," she wrote.

Anti-monarchists are a fringe group in Britain, with 13 percent of respondents viewing the monarchy as "bad for Britain" according to a poll in May this year by the YouGov survey group.

A total of 54 percent viewed it as "good" for the country.

 




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