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Black Lives Matter supporters at a ‘kill the bill’ protest in London
Black Lives Matter supporters at a ‘kill the bill’ protest in London on 17 April. Photograph: Anadolu Agency/Getty Images
Black Lives Matter supporters at a ‘kill the bill’ protest in London on 17 April. Photograph: Anadolu Agency/Getty Images

BLM groups play key role in May Day ‘kill the bill’ UK protests

This article is more than 3 years old

Black activists say they are alarmed by powers contained in the police, crime, sentencing and courts bill

Black activists have played lead roles in the “kill the bill” coalition, which has led thousands of people to march through London and thousands of others to join protests in cities around the country against the police, crime, sentencing and courts bill on Saturday.

Organisers hope they will be the biggest demonstration yet of public opposition to the bill, which would grant the police a range of new discretionary powers to shut down protests.

More than 600 civil society and protest groups have called for the government to drop the legislation, and a planned quick passage through parliament has already been delayed.

Among those leading protests have been a number of groups that were instrumental in organising the UK’s Black Lives Matter marches last summer. Recent kill the bill protests in London have been led by BLM banners and have been addressed by a number of speakers aligned to the movement, particularly black women.

'Kill the bill': thousands march through London in protest against policing bill – video

Phoen!x Tha Rude Boii, of Black Music Movement, who helped to organise BLM protests last summer, said he felt motivated to begin a conversation among black activists around the crime bill because of persecution he had faced from police due to his activism.

“Instead of changing any laws or doing anything about the issues we raised [with BLM], they’re just trying to shut down protest,” said Pheon!x, who preferred to use his artist name. He said black activists were particularly alarmed by the discretionary powers the new bill would hand to police.

“It’s just playing into that cycle of racism. It’s so obvious how that’s going to be used because it’s up to the police and home secretary to decide what protests are bothering people or not. Obviously [black] people just walking down the street is bothering to police because they try to stop and search us.”

Marvina Eseoghene Newton at a protest in London on 17 April. Photograph: Jacob King/PA

Marvina Eseoghene Newton, the founder of United for Black Lives and co-founder of BLM Leeds, said it was important to highlight that a range of activists and activist groups were involved in the movement against the crime bill. She said the leading role played by black women had given the movement an intersectional character that made it inclusive to all groups.

“We think about inclusion more than anyone else, because we know what intersectionality looks like,” said Newton, who compered two recent rallies in London. “The only way we can all be liberated is if we all liberate each other and be the best allies we can be to each other. So I can see my Roma brother and I can see my Muslim brothers and sisters and I can see my trans community and say: you matter, I see the pain.”

Participating in protests holds particular risks for black activists, who have sometimes found themselves singled out by police. After one recent rally in Parliament Square, BLM activists issued a statement accusing police of targeting black protesters in an effort to flush them out – targeting that they said was not experienced by white activists.

“Protesting while black is different, and no one really tells that story,” Newton said. “Our right to protest comes with a lot of fear, a fear of being put on Redwatch [a far-right site targeting leftwing activists], a fear of being put on the EDL [English Defence League] pages, or of being targeted on the day of the march.”

Aima: ‘My problem is getting the white people to listen.’ Photograph: Alberto Pezzali/AP

Aima, of All Black Lives, who has spoken at several kill the bill protests in London, prefers not to give her surname to journalists after a Daily Mail story that outed her as an organiser of BLM protests led to her receiving torrents of abuse. “Especially in this country, when black people speak out about the racism they have suffered from people, British people start getting defensive,” she said.

In her experience, black people better understood the wide-ranging implications of the bill, Aima said. “My problem is getting the white people to listen,” she said. “Because I’m a creator on TikTok, I speak to a lot of leftist creators around the world, and the black people in America that I know are speaking more about this than white leftists in this country.

“Black people will be fearful to go out and protest when this bill passes, because when it passes our voices will not be heard at all.”

In London, protesters are due to gather in Trafalgar Square from midday, with marches beginning earlier in Brixton and Elephant and Castle in south London aiming to join them. In total, 46 kill the bill protests are expected across the UK.

A Home Office spokesperson said: “The right to protest is a cornerstone of our democracy, but over recent years we have seen an increase in the use of disruptive and dangerous tactics.

“It is totally unacceptable to smash up private property, block emergency vehicles and prevent the printing press from distributing newspapers. The government will not stand by as the rights and freedoms of individuals, businesses and communities are trampled upon by a minority.

“These new measures will not stop people from carrying out their civic right to protest and be heard, but will prevent large-scale disruption – enabling the silent majority to get on with their lives.”

This article was amended on 1 May 2021 to add a response from the Home Office received after first publication.


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