Just Stop Oil: Home Secretary Suella Braverman announces plans to crackdown on climate protests

Just Stop Oil are carrying out a month of action in October
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Suella Braverman has unveiled plans for a major crackdown on the kinds of protests favoured by climate activists.

The Home Secretary has pledged to stop demonstrators holding the public “to ransom”. She will give the police new powers to take a more “proactive” approach to some protests, with some of the measures specifically targeted at the tactics used by some environmental groups.

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Just Stop Oil and Extinction Rebellion activists have staged various protests and demonstrations in recent months, causing disruption to commuters and traffic in central London. A van was filmed driving at protesters in Shoreditch on Saturday (15 October) sparking outrage.

Here is all you need to know about the Home Secretary’s announcement, including the measures planned:

What has Suella Braverman said?

Ms Braverman had already voiced her opposition to the type of protest favoured by some environmental activists, telling the Tory conference earlier this month there is “not a human right to vandalise property”.

Accusing protesters of draining police resources, Ms Braverman will use the Government’s Public Order Bill to allow secretaries of state to apply for injunctions in the “public interest” where protests are causing or threatening “serious disruption or a serious adverse impact on public safety”.

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Ms Braverman said: “I will not bend to protestors attempting to hold the British public to ransom. Preventing our emergency services from reaching those who desperately need them is indefensible, hideously selfish and in no way in the public interest.

“This serious and dangerous disruption, let alone the vandalism, is not a freedom of expression, nor a human right. It must stop.”

More than 350 Just Stop Oil protesters have been arrested in London since the start of October, according to Home Office figures. The Home Secretary and Mayor of London Sadiq Khan are set to attend a meeting chaired by Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster Nadhim Zahawi, where the recent protests are expected to be discussed.

Home Secretary Suella Braverman said it was her 'dream' to see a newspaper photograph of a plane taking off to Rwanda with asylum seekers on board (Picture: Leon Neal/Getty Images)Home Secretary Suella Braverman said it was her 'dream' to see a newspaper photograph of a plane taking off to Rwanda with asylum seekers on board (Picture: Leon Neal/Getty Images)
Home Secretary Suella Braverman said it was her 'dream' to see a newspaper photograph of a plane taking off to Rwanda with asylum seekers on board (Picture: Leon Neal/Getty Images)

What measures have been announced?

According to the Home Office, this measures will include protecting access to “essential” goods, services and “key” infrastructure. The proposed public order legislation would create a new criminal offence of interfering with infrastructure such as oil refineries, airports, railways and printing presses.

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Such an offence would carry a maximum sentence of 12 months in prison, an unlimited fine, or both. “Locking on” or “going equipped to lock-on” to other people, objects or buildings to cause “serious disruption” could see people imprisoned for six months or hit with an unlimited fine.

A new criminal office of tunnelling to cause serious disruption is also being created, which will carry a maximum penalty of three years’ imprisonment as well as the potential for an unlimited fine. An offence of going equipped to tunnel will also be created.

The Public Order Bill will return to Parliament next week and Ms Braverman said it is “high time” MPs back it. She added: “The police need strengthened and tougher powers to match the rise in self-defeating protest tactics and that’s what the Public Order Bill will do. It’s high time Parliament got behind it and put the law-abiding majority first.”

The Home Office is also promising that stop-and-search measures and new serious disruption prevention orders will support the police, with the latter targeting those repeatedly convicted of protest-related offences.

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