MAN ARRESTED, VIKINGS INVADE BRITISH MUSEUM

Around 200 people -- many dressed as Vikings -- create
mobile longship in Great Court of Museum in vocal
performance protest Today, hundreds of people invaded the
British Museum to stage a Viking "flash-horde", complete
with a 15-metre longship. The performance was organized by
theatrical protest group "BP or nor BP?" in protest at BP"s
sponsorship of the Museum"s popular Vikings exhibition.
Around 200 people, many of them dressed as Vikings, gathered
in the Great Court of the Museum at 3.15pm. Several actors
were prevented from entering the building by security, but
the vast majority of participants entered without a problem,
despite bag searches by security leading to long queues
outside the Museum. One man, who was carrying a cardboard
Viking shield painted with a large BP logo, had his shield
confiscated by security guards outside the Museum. Several
witnesses describe how he handed the shield over calmly, but
was then approached by several police officers who told him
he was breaching the peace. He asked, calmly, what exactly
he was doing to breach the peace; he was simply standing
quietly in a queue. Two officers then grabbed him, pushed
him against a wall and arrested him without explaining
exactly what offence he had allegedly committed. An observer
asked the arresting officer to give his name, but the
officer refused. One witness described the event as "clearly
an unlawful arrest". The man was held for a few hours and
released without charge. The group have held a large number
of theatrical protests in the past, including six at the
British Museum. None have ever resulted in arrests before
Meanwhile, inside the building the flashmob was launched
with a series of co-ordinated "Viking poses", which saw the
crowd wielding imaginary swords and shields against BP.
Fifty members of the crowd then used pre-painted props and
banners to erect a fabric longship, in order to give two
BP-branded Vikings a "Viking funeral".

The longship was decorated with a series of shields,
graphically depicting BP's misdeeds around the world: oil
spills, tar sands extraction, climate change, human rights
abuses, and blocking clean energy and environmental laws.

The longship and the rest of the funeral procession then
moved around the Museum, singing and chanting, watched by
hundreds of surprised museum-goers. Hundreds of leaflets
were distributed to the public, and a solemn ceremony was
held to "sink the ship" and commemorate all the damage done
by BP around the world. The protesters then re-erected the
ship outside in the courtyard and spent a long time singing,
chanting and cheering about BP's demise, in front of a large
crowd on onlookers. Sarah Horne, who took part in the
flash-horde, said: "Despite over-the-top security and an
outrageous and unnecessary arrest, we sent a clear message
to the British Museum today: we will not sit by and let our
cultural institutions be used as a cheap PR tool by
destructive companies. BP provides less than 1% of the
annual income of the British Museum, and yet gets enormous
branding and public relations benefits in return, allowing
it to hide its real activities around the world."

She continued: "We're shocked about the extraordinary and
unprecedented arrest - this has never happened at one of our
performances before. Are the Museum so scared of people
hearing the truth about their sponsor that they're willing
to condone these kinds of police tactics?"

The flash-horde had been advertised in advance with the
public invited to take part. Many people heeded this call,
and a large proportion of those who attended the protest had
never been involved with the BP or BP? group before.

This was the latest in a series of performance protests by
the group, who have also made a spoof Viking film based on
the exhibition's promotional trailer, launched a petition
against the sponsorship deal and invaded the Museum itself
three other times whilst dressed as Vikings and Norse gods.
The first of these performance, on April 27th, was the
subject of in-depth coverage by Channel 4 News.

The British Museum continues to defend its controversial
sponsorship relationship with BP, despite the Deepwater
Horizon drilling disaster, the company's decision to start
extracting highly polluting and destructive tar sands oil in
Canada, its enormous contribution towards climate change,
and its recently-announced partnership with Russian
state-owned oil company Rosneft in order to exploit the
hazardous and vulnerable Arctic.

BP provides less than 1% of the British Museum's annual
income. The company receives a large amount of high-profile
branding in return, as well as the use of the largely
publicly-funded Museum for its corporate events. Pressure on
cultural institutions to consider the ethics of their
sponsorship deals is currently high. The veteran human
rights campaigner Archbishop Desmond Tutu recently said
"People of conscience need to break their ties with
corporations financing the injustice of climate change".
Following months of pressure, the Southbank Centre suddenly
ended its long-running sponsorship deal with Shell earlier
this year. Pressure is also growing on the Tate over its
refusal to reveal details of its BP funding, and last month,
a new group called "BP Out Of Opera" (BOOO) performed a
surprise flashmob dance against BP sponsorship at a Royal
Opera House screening in Trafalgar Square. Meanwhile,
campaigners from the Reclaim Shakespeare Company believe
that their onstage protests contributed to the recent
downgrading of BP's sponsorship of the Royal Shakespeare
Company.

Help remove the taint of destruction from our national
treasures - join us as we tell the British Museum to end its
sponsorship deal with BP!


/:b


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