Opinion

Fracking: How The Police Response Is Threatening The Right To Protest

By Will Jackson, Senior Lecturer in Criminology, Liverpool John Moores University 11 Nov 2019

The UK government has announced an immediate moratorium on fracking. The decision came after new scientific analysis concluded it was not possible to “rule out future unacceptable impacts”.

Opponents of the controversial process of shale gas extraction have long argued that it is inherently risky. Since exploratory drilling began in the UK in 2011, campaigners have highlighted the risk of seismic instability, harm to the environment and human health, and the implications of opening up new fossil fuel reserves in the face of a global climate emergency.

The strength of opposition has meant significant conflict in recent years. Drilling operations have been the target of major protests around England since the first community blockade in Balcombe, West Sussex in 2013.

The scale and impact of these protests meant that they were the focus of large and costly policing operations, resulting in hundreds of arrests and complaints about the police response. And now, new research by myself and colleagues suggests protests which seek to move beyond a purely symbolic show of opposition are being policed as though they are dangerous.

‘Violence, Intimidation And Aggression’

Image Credit: Pixabay.

I have been examining the development of both police policy and practice in relation to fracking since 2013, as part of a team of researchers who study the policing of protest. Our first study of protests at Barton Moss in Salford in Greater Manchester identified serious issues with the nature of the police operation, highlighting protesters’ routine experience of police violence.

We have since visited protest sites across England – in Lancashire, Yorkshire, Sussex, and Surrey. At these sites, we observed the protests and their policing, and conducted in-depth interviews with protesters. We have just published a national study based on this research.

Our work echoes many of the concerns that we raised in relation to Barton Moss, and questions the extent to which lessons were learned by police from earlier operations. Protesters alleged they experienced violence, intimidation, and aggression from police officers at multiple fracking sites across the country.

This was most prevalent during intense and extended protest situations where protesters used forms of direct action to try to disrupt fracking. These included slow marches or blocking roads to delay deliveries; “lock-ons” where protesters lock themselves together to block an entrance to a drilling sit; and “truck-surfing”, where protesters jump on top of trucks making deliveries so that they can’t be moved.

In response, police operations focused on preventing or limiting disruption. In many cases, this involved very physical interventions to remove protesters or block them from sites. We spoke to people who reported being pushed, shoved and knocked to the ground on numerous occasions in ways that were understood by protesters to be unnecessary acts of aggression, rather than responses to a threat.

This type of response has also been highlighted by other observers and has led to calls for a review of policing at anti-fracking protests by Keith Taylor MEP. We also heard from women who accused police of groping and manhandling them in ways that left them feeling violated and frightened.

Protesters said the large number of police and their physical response was excessive, and many told us it felt like an attack on the right to protest. This in turn has exacerbated a breakdown in trust between protesters and police.

Our report concludes the police response since 2016 to peaceful – albeit disruptive – forms of non-violent direct action has been disproportionate. We agree with the protesters that it has had the effect of undermining the right to protest.

Our report details police definitions of “protester”, “activist”, and “extremist” that have been developed to guide its responses to protest. We suggest these definitions – which include the construction of activism as synonymous with criminality – are inaccurate, but they appear to be informing police responses on the ground. It would appear that in police policy and practice there is an increasingly clear view only non-disruptive protest is considered legitimate.

We also document the chilling effect of protest injunctions, sought by fracking companies from the High Court to prohibit various protest and campaigning activities. Taking these issues together, our findings echo comments by other observers about the criminalisation of non-violent protest in the UK.

Anti-Fracking Protesters Aren’t ‘Domestic Extremists’

geograph-fracking

Image Credit: Geograph

We also interviewed a diverse cross section of protesters, to understand who is involved in anti-fracking protests. In part we wanted to critically examine the routine labelling, by police, of those involved as “domestic extremists”. This label, in our view, misrepresents who is involved and what motivates them (the UN Special Rapporteur also raised concerns about this labelling).

In fact, many we spoke to were new to protest and saw it as a last resort – the only option available when other forms of opposition had been closed down. We did also speak to many experienced campaigners who travelled to protests, but again the label of “domestic extremist” misrepresents their motivations, and creates a false divide between local residents and a wider anti-fracking movement. We found that participants of different ages, levels of experience, and political backgrounds were united by a concern with both local impacts of fracking and with the global climate emergency.

The National Police Chiefs Council has recently conducted a public consultation on how protests should be policed. Organisations such as the Network for Police Monitoring are right to call for a review; our findings suggest the voices of the full range of protesters must be taken seriously.

As the climate change movement grows in this country, we have to give serious thought to the available means by which communities are able to protest.

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This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

Featured Image: Lee Walsh, Katrina Lawrie and Christopher Wilson were given suspended prison sentences for breaching an injunction banning protest at a Lancashire fracking site run by Cuadrilla.