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Brown 'to change' protests laws | Brown 'to change' protests laws |
(about 1 hour later) | |
The laws which restrict the right to demonstrate in Parliament Square need to be changed, Gordon Brown has said. | The laws which restrict the right to demonstrate in Parliament Square need to be changed, Gordon Brown has said. |
The PM said change was needed to balance "the need for public order with the right to public dissent". | |
He said he would consult with police, Parliament, civil liberty groups and Westminster council. | |
A 2005 law created an "exclusion zone" inside which all protests required police permission. Critics say it curbs the right to spontaneous protest. | A 2005 law created an "exclusion zone" inside which all protests required police permission. Critics say it curbs the right to spontaneous protest. |
The requirement for police permission was introduced in the Serious Organised Crime and Police Act 2005. | |
Peaceful protests | |
It was partly a response to anti-war protester Brian Haw, whose round-the-clock vigil in Parliament Square, using placards and loudspeakers had annoyed MPs and peers. | |
The Home Office has also said the law was necessary for security reasons - it had been argued that a bomb could be left beneath Mr Haw's signs. | |
But while Mr Haw remains in the square, having been granted police permission for a reduced protest, many other unauthorised, peaceful, protests have been broken up. | |
The restrictions have been heavily criticised and the subject of several unauthorised protests themselves. | |
In January Lib Dem Baroness Miller said the 2005 Act had had a "chilling" effect on demonstrations, as many people believed they were totally banned. |
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