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Heavy handed police action at Quaker Meeting House.

(255 Posts)
Nandalot Fri 28-Mar-25 17:57:01

The police broke down the door at the Westminster Meeting House. Apparently there were between twenty and thirty of them, some with tazers, who then went on to arrest 6 young people holding a meeting in a rented room. These were a youth group who were organising protest against what is happening in Gaza. You might agree with stopping protests designed to cause disruption but would you feel happy if this was your church, synagogue or mosque?
www.quaker.org.uk/news-and-events/news/quakers-condemn-police-raid-on-westminster-meeting-house

Wyllow3 Sun 30-Mar-25 14:46:27

I think I will too Grammaretto the final straw was realising there was a doorkeeper and building supervisor on site who would have opened the doors, but they broke the doors down as if it were a drugs raid when it was an arrest for suspicion of conspiracy to cause public nuisance.

Anniebach Sun 30-Mar-25 13:41:55

Some may think differently if their husband had been killed on a drugs raid, leaving a grief stricken 33 year old wife and two little girls . He had the cheek to raid not announce his visit

Grammaretto Sun 30-Mar-25 13:35:24

Thanks for the clarification Wyllow but some people are never satisfied and can keep going on their mission to justify the police actions ad nauseum.

One thing this discussion has done is to motivate me to write to my MP who generally toes her Labour party line. So thanks for that!

Wyllow3 Sun 30-Mar-25 13:25:58

(the article also covers a Trevor Phillips report and reactions from Yvette Cooper, a former Downing Street director of communications, and the Met police.)

Wyllow3 Sun 30-Mar-25 13:21:08

This report in Sky News isnt without its moment of amusement, when the Quaker in charge of the building at the time refused to make the police a cup of tea in protest. There were other groups in the building at the time, a counselling group and a life drawing group, and the Quaker added "but they didnt see the model".

The breaking in was quite unnecessary as the Quaker in charge of lettings could have opened the doors to them but they did not ring or knock

news.sky.com/story/ridiculously-heavy-handed-metropolitan-police-criticised-after-raid-on-quaker-meeting-house-to-arrest-protesters-13338603

CariadAgain Sun 30-Mar-25 13:04:29

So yep...Lathyrus - you are correct...

CariadAgain Sun 30-Mar-25 13:02:14

Quakers do believe there is good in everyone. It's called the "Inner Light" or "that of God in everyone".

Part of the reason why I personally describe myself as an "ex-Quaker" - is because I've realised that there are some people who really don't seem to have that and are just purely and simply about themselves only and will only think of what they personally want regardless of any individual, society or whatever they encounter. Many people will also "run with the crowd".....rather than figuring out their own opinion.

So yep...there can be/sometimes are people that have a "road to Damascus" moment and do drop being a fighter, thief, bully, etc and become normal. Hence I personally talk about "thieves" on the one hand and "normal people" on the other hand.

A very very "learning experience" I had decades back was getting given a right talking-to by a friend who shared the same employer I did - in which he gave me a lecture of "The trouble with you is you are a nice person - and so you think they will treat you the way you would treat you in reverse. You are wrong - they won't". At which point that was about a "last straw" thing to me - as at every point thereafter I thought "What I would do is x...that's the correct thing to do" and then went on to think "If I were them - and I was nasty/dishonest/couldnt give a monkeys about me personally then I would do y instead". I got it right every single time as to what they would do next to me and, as an exterior onlooker said to me "You are two steps ahead of them now and get it right as to what they will do next to you".

So yep and I have a personal philosophy now of thinking "What would a nice person do/should they do?" and then thinking "What would a nasty person do?" and I wish I weren't right so often when I think "I reckon they are going to do the second option" about a person/firm/government....

So - yep.....Quakers do indeed believe people will "think/do/be the right thing" because of this belief in the innate goodness of people. Not saying they're perfect - as I've encountered a few that are "as bad as many other people"...but hey.....

Lathyrus3 Sun 30-Mar-25 12:50:25

Wyllow3

friendshouse.co.uk/friends-house-letting-policy/

also gives guidance about how its decided if a group is OK to hire a room and also circumstances where they could be banned.

Oh yes, sorry. I somehow missed that post and was relying on the previous one that wasn’t quite as full😳

Wyllow3 Sun 30-Mar-25 12:41:03

Lathyrus3 it gives grounds for refusal or cancellations if you re-read that section so yes any hiring group can be reviewed and cancelled.

Allira Sun 30-Mar-25 12:40:58

that .........

Allira Sun 30-Mar-25 12:40:40

Lathyrus3

Wyllow3

Lathyrus3 the reference I have just given above gives guidelines about refusing or terminating use of a room.

It says what is expected of hirers.

But not what the Quakers would do n discovering the hirers don’t fit those expectations.

I’m always interested in how people apply their beliefs and their conscience to the tangled ways of everyday life.

So Quakers would weigh the good that protests might do against the harm that they would do and decide whether to give space to the group or not? According to conscience?

I think Quakers believe good of everyone, that everyone has an inherent goodness.

Thst might be naïve but if they believe thst, then they would hope thst everyone might be redeemed.

Anniebach Sun 30-Mar-25 12:31:41

Should a sacred place be used to cause harm, distress, death ?

CariadAgain Sun 30-Mar-25 12:28:49

Lathyrus3

I’d like a rational explanation of why a building where people meet to share a belief (a religious building) is held to be outside the law. A sacred space.

Does it matter whether the violence is planned for immediate action or for next week?

It's my understanding that religious buildings - across different faiths - are held to be "sacred spaces". A place that is supposed to transcend more "earthly" type considerations and we can remember who we really are so to say.

From memory I believe Anglican churches, for instance, are supposed to be "safe spaces" - though I guess we've all read our history about soldiers breaking into one to murder someone some centuries back at a king's behest.

I would hazard a guess that it's pretty much communally accepted that there needs to be "somewhere" people can go free of earthly considerations and undertake some quiet contemplation (or, in this case, a meeting) and it's a useful reminder that "Earthly society with all its conflicts" isn't all-there-is. My own personal take is that there is always/always fighting going on on Earth - whether physically, mentally or whatever. Countries fight and argue, people fight and argue and that's basically what life on earth so often consists of.

I don't think it's unreasonable to have a widespread recognition that there are "sacred spaces" we can go in and there not be all this "fighting, grabbing and arguing" that typifies a life on this warlike planet we call Earth.

Lathyrus3 Sun 30-Mar-25 12:21:16

Wyllow3

Lathyrus3 the reference I have just given above gives guidelines about refusing or terminating use of a room.

It says what is expected of hirers.

But not what the Quakers would do n discovering the hirers don’t fit those expectations.

I’m always interested in how people apply their beliefs and their conscience to the tangled ways of everyday life.

So Quakers would weigh the good that protests might do against the harm that they would do and decide whether to give space to the group or not? According to conscience?

Anniebach Sun 30-Mar-25 12:20:09

Quote Allira Sun 30-Mar-25 12:13:11
Anniebach
Police must wait until a.crime is being committed !
We don't know what they were planning.

Many terrorist plots have been discovered and prevented over the years, the public is probably unaware of how many and what they were.

True we don’t know what they were planning yet the police are
criticised for taking precautions which may save lives.

Allira Sun 30-Mar-25 12:13:11

Anniebach

Police must wait until a.crime is being committed !

We don't know what they were planning.

Many terrorist plots have been discovered and prevented over the years, the public is probably unaware of how many and what they were.

Lathyrus3 Sun 30-Mar-25 12:12:58

I’d like a rational explanation of why a building where people meet to share a belief (a religious building) is held to be outside the law. A sacred space.

Does it matter whether the violence is planned for immediate action or for next week?

CariadAgain Sun 30-Mar-25 12:08:24

Wyllow3

The action taken were only made possible by the very controversial Public Order Act 2023.

It is designed to stop actions such as the motorway blocking, and major disruption, however the extent of the powers do threaten the ability to carry out normal peaceful demonstrations.

The bill and the critique

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Public_Order_Act_2023#cite_note-theguardian-badshah-6

Worth reading to see what its intended to cover and the powers it gives the police.

""it is concerned the offence could encompass demonstrators who simply link arms with each other, and that it should be amended. [...] The committee said measures relating to the obstruction of major transport works covered actions that were not intended to cause significant disruption, while those related to interference with key national infrastructure covered those that were neither "key" nor "national". The proposed serious disruption prevention orders could prevent people being able to exercise their right to protest, the committee said, and represented a "disproportionate response" to any resulting disruption.

It also expressed concerns about the extension of stop and search powers,

allowing police to carry out searches where there were no reasonable grounds for suspicion.

The definitions of "serious disruption" are very broad indeed.

So under that 2023 law the police didn't even need "reasonable grounds".

I definitely think there were no grounds for the police to forcibly enter the building as there was no imminent law breaking whatsoever: they could have waited for the meeting to end.

A pre-emptive strike like this against the suspicion of law breaking is very dangerous imo

Quite! I certainly realised that one pronto....

....yep......ex-Quaker here in my case.

Anniebach Sun 30-Mar-25 12:06:14

Police must wait until a.crime is being committed !

CariadAgain Sun 30-Mar-25 12:04:27

M0nica

It is not a question of who these people were, or why they were meeting. It is a queston of whether they were an immediate threat to public order. By that I mean; were they about to come out of the room, go outside and start to vandalise cars, throw paint at people etc etc.

They were not, the building was a religious space. The police action was unjustified until proved otherwise.

Quite!

That's a first there - we've agreed about something.

As you say - "sacred space" and very doubtful they were planning to come out the door and head up the road for instant violence or anything.

Galaxy Sun 30-Mar-25 11:57:39

Pretty much every protest on earth is disruptive to someone.

Wyllow3 Sun 30-Mar-25 11:57:13

Lathyrus3 the reference I have just given above gives guidelines about refusing or terminating use of a room.

Wyllow3 Sun 30-Mar-25 11:55:51

friendshouse.co.uk/friends-house-letting-policy/

also gives guidance about how its decided if a group is OK to hire a room and also circumstances where they could be banned.

Galaxy Sun 30-Mar-25 11:55:33

I don't think it is a case of bring used, from what I can see the right to speech and disagreement is a key tenet of their beliefs, I may join themsmile

Lathyrus3 Sun 30-Mar-25 11:55:06

Thank you for that Wyllow.

Would they then refuse to let a room to those who were holding meetings to plan disruption and harm?

Or knowing that that was the case would they still let the room saying it was a matter of conscience?

It seems to me that if they knowingly provide the space for planning harmful activities they are supporting those activities.

The statement they released, to me, appeared to focus on the action of the police , with no reference to the intentions of the renters of the room and whether the Quakers had knowingly given them space to plan disruptive action.