Dear Leftlinkers,
I thought this following piece was worth passing on, since S11 is so near. 
It's a good read, and names could be changed to reflect the situation in 
Australia. If you've already seen it, press delete now!
Cheers
--------------------------------------------


June 30, 2000

Who is Policing the Police?

By Debi Brock <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, York University (Canada)

Policing is and always has been a para-military form of organization. 
However, police practices have become noticeably less restrained since the 
election of the Harris government. Conservative ideologies and policies 
have stripped basic rights from tenants, workers, and the poor, while 
creating zero tolerance policies and boot camps which focus on punishment, 
and ignore the social causes of crime.  At its annual meeting this week, 
the Ontario Association of Chiefs of Police is proposing that civilian 
investigators from the Special Investigations Unit (whose task it is to 
investigate police conduct) be replaced by police officers.  Now that a 
government is in power which lacks the most basic understanding of 
political rights and favours authoritarian forms of governing, who is 
policing the police? It is not only in Ontario that police power is 
expanding.  Former New York City Mayor Randolph Giuliani's clean up 
campaign has been lauded on both sides of the border for its 'get tough on 
crime' successes, despite accusations of brutality on the part of the NYPD. 
And last week, the federal liberal government tabled a Bill that would 
allow police forces across Canada greater latitude in breaking the law in 
the line of duty.

The policing of public demonstrations has also rapidly changed. Remember 
'Peppergate', when a public investigation was launched after police pepper 
sprayed demonstrators during the APEC meetings in Vancouver in 1997? Since 
that time, pepper spraying demonstrators has become a routine practice in 
crowd control, as we have seen in Seattle, Washington, Windsor, and now 
Toronto. Yet when demonstrators show up prepared with vinegar soaked 
bandanas and swimming goggles, this is interpreted as them looking for 
trouble, rather than attempting to protect themselves against a now routine 
form of police assault.

I went to Queen's Park on Thursday June 15 as part of a demonstration 
against the provincial Tory government's agenda-an agenda which is killing 
people daily, on the streets, in the hospitals, and in Ontario communities 
like Walkerton, where people risk their lives when they turn on a kitchen 
tap. The demonstration was organized by the Ontario Coalition Against 
Poverty, and endorsed by numerous unions and community organizations. Trade 
unionists, university professors, and church groups were among those who 
marched from Allan Gardens to Queen's Park with marginally housed and 
homeless people, demanding to be heard. What happened that day can only be 
described as a 'police riot'. At Queen's Park, Ontario Coalition Against 
Poverty spokesperson John Clarke addressed the crowd, stating that the 
victims of poverty and homelessness should be able to speak to the 
legislature. He announced that those who had elected to attempt to do so 
should proceed. Some of the demonstrators then moved forward and attempted 
to remove barricades to the entrance to the legislature, chanting 'Whose 
house, our house!' to signal that people facing poverty and homelessness 
were being ignored and denied access to elected officials.

The police, in full riot gear, on horseback, in uniform, were out in force, 
standing behind a barricaded entrance to the legislature, while undercover 
officers were planted among the demonstrators. They were prepared for a 
riot to happen-they had apparently been training for it for weeks-and they 
immediately put that training into practice, thereby actually creating the 
situation that they were there to control. They immediately attacked 
demonstrators with truncheons and pepper spray. Lines of riot gear clad 
police surged forward, beating everyone within reach. When they reached my 
location, well back from the front of the demonstration, a friend and I 
jumped up on to a statue and watched the people who had been standing 
immediately in front of us, doing nothing, set upon and repeatedly clubbed 
by groups of police, even after they were prostrate on the ground. People 
were running in every direction, as they were charged by police on massive 
horses sweeping from the sides and down the middle of the park, in full 
gallop.  Riot police paused periodically, only to renew their assault on 
the crowds with a frenzy that conveyed a loss of control within an 
orchestrated assault. During one of the pauses, a police officer directly 
in front of me (since ordered off of the statue) yelled at a woman standing 
beside me (not to me-was I too well dressed?), 'why aren't your working?' I 
asked him what having a job had to do with citizenship rights. His reply 
was one of those very deliberate smiley sneers that I recall the villains 
making on the Saturday morning cartoons I watched as a kid.

Police are trained to respond to dissent by containing and de- escalating 
it. From a policing perspective, it would have been appropriate to do so 
when demonstrators broke down the barricades. That is not what happened. 
Instead, police resorted to tactics which escalated the situation, and 
provoked anger and sometimes violence from the crowd in response. Everyone 
who attended that demonstration was treated as an enemy of the public. 
Some, like me, were so outraged by police actions that we refused to turn 
and run.  Others not only refused, but fought back.

In media accounts that I have seen and read, it was reported that police 
responded to rioting protestors throwing stones, sticks (from protest 
signs), horse dung, yellow paint, and a Molotov cocktail. Yet this occurred 
only after police began their assault on the crowd. The first items to be 
thrown by some of the protestors were protest signs and horse dung. As the 
police attack continued, the response escalated. About 25 minutes after 
police began their assault I saw a few young men break up a brick sidewalk 
to fight back against police truncheons. (A friend saw some disapproving 
women protestors picking up the loosened bricks and putting them in their 
purses, to prevent the bricks from being used as weapons.)

It took approximately 45 minutes to clear the demonstration from Queen's 
Park. We were pushed out onto the street at the south east corner of 
Queen's Park, at which point OCAP made the request that we march back to 
Allan Gardens.  Police followed us to Allan Gardens, and continued to 
attack and arrest people. I witnessed the arrest of Magaly San.  Martin, a 
community worker at Parkdale Community Legal Services and doctoral student 
at the Ontario Institute for Studies in Education. Magaly is a founder of 
the Latin American Coalition Against Racism, and has worked for police 
accountability. She was among those who participated in a campaign to 
remove police association posters in the TTC depicting Latin Americans as 
criminals. Magaly was charged with participating in a riot and assaulting a 
police officer, both indictable offences. An officer stated that she had 
thrown 15 stones at police (her friends denied this), while the Crown 
Attorney and Justice of the Peace at her bail hearing both assumed her 
guilt, and moreover described her as the clever ringleader of a riot. The 
JP stated that 'Maybe she thinks that she can get away with that kind of 
thing in Chile, but in Canada we don't allow that sort of thing.' Magaly's 
family had fled Pinochet's military junta when Magaly was 13. She is 
familiar with a police state, and she has worked with determination to 
ensure that civil rights are protected and police are accountable. And like 
me, Magaly had simply come to Queen's Park to signal her opposition to Tory 
government policies.

Another casualty of the police riot that day was Toronto councillor and 
member of the Police Services Board, Olivia Chow. Olivia Chow and 
Councillor Jack Layton had arrived at the south east corner of Queen's Park 
on their bicycles, and witnessed police charging into the crowd on 
horseback. Chow has been a tireless social justice advocate and has in the 
past not been afraid to be critical of the police. She chose to work within 
the system in order to ensure its accountability. For merely daring to 
question police conduct, she was forced to resign her position on the 
Police Services Board.

In the days immediately following the demonstration, mainstream media 
accounts were virtually unanimous in declaring that what happened at 
Queen's Park was a riot by protestors, which injured numerous police and 
their horses (the many protestors injured by police are incidental in these 
accounts). Police statements in media accounts indeed garnered public 
sympathy by reporting injuries to horses from thrown objects. When will 
police be held accountable for using the horses as weapons, thereby placing 
them at risk?

A 'riot by protestors' has come to be understood as the 'factual' account 
of what happened at Queen's Park; one that most people who only learned of 
what happened June 15 by reading their newspapers or watching their 
television news reports might reasonably assume to be true. Even allies 
like Sid Ryan, the president of CUPE-Ontario, and anti- poverty writer Pat 
Capponi have interpreted these media accounts as truth, and condemned the 
demonstrators.  These now 'factual' accounts and the public condemnation 
for the demonstrators that is produced out of these accounts then organize 
consent for an expansion of repressive police powers and for more of the 
iron fist policies that the provincial Tory government have been putting 
into place since they came to power.

OCAP did declare that a war was going on, but it was a war by the 
government against the poor. Some supporters did attempt to breach police 
barricades. Some did fight back against police with whatever they could lay 
their hands on (and yes, at least one came prepared for a fight with yellow 
paint, and another with a molotov cocktail). But I do not want this to 
imply that there were respectable and unrespectable protestors in Queen's 
Park, with the orderly and respectable being hurt as a result of the 
actions of the unruly, as some might charge. This government has chosen to 
completely ignore democratic political protest-hundreds of thousands of 
Ontario residents have to date marched on Queen's Park, only to be 
dismissed as marginal or unrepresentative of legitimate Ontario citizens. 
The mainstream media has become so used to frequent protests that they no 
longer constitute a newsworthy event. Some activists have recognized that 
the only way to capture media and public attention, and to try to stem the 
tide of deaths of the homeless on Toronto streets, is to engage in actions 
like attempting to enter the Ontario legislature to confront the 
government-for which they will likely be arrested. While this is not my 
choice of tactics, I cannot blame them for choosing it. These are desperate 
times, and this kind of reaction pales in comparison to the extent of the 
crisis facing so many Ontario residents, as the gap between the rich and 
the poor widens. This government must be called to account. Given the 
events that I witnessed in Queen's Park last week, so must the police.


Debi Brock teaches crime and social regulation in the Department of 
Sociology, York University. Copyright � 2000 Debi Brock. All Rights Reserved.

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