Filed under: Political Protest Project | Tags: Al Quds Day, anti-war, Hezbollah, International al Quds Day, Iran, Islamists, Muslim, Muslims, Palestine, Palestinians, Political Islam, Right-Wing Political Islam
LONDON, UNITED KINGDOM – 28.09.08. A boy wearing a Hezbollah baseball cap joins supporters of Palestine in Trafalgar Square for the annual International al Quds Day on Sunday 28 September 2008 London, England. International al Quds Day is an annual solidarity event that highlights the plight of the Palestinians people. The event originated in Iran after the 1979 Islamic Revolution and some of the organisations that support and promote the event receive support from the Iranian government. (Photo by Marc Vallée/marcvallee.co.uk) (c) Marc Vallée, 2008.
Clients : Click on the images above and below to view a slideshow from the set and click on the link below for rights managed editorial licensing. High resolution images are available on request.
Images: “International al Quds Day – 28.09.08″
Archive Link : www.archive.marcvallee.co.uk
LONDON, UNITED KINGDOM – 28.09.08. A young man holds up a Hezbollah flag as supporters of Palestine congregate in Trafalgar Square for the annual International al Quds Day on Sunday 28 September 2008 London, England. International al Quds Day is an annual solidarity event that highlights the plight of the Palestinians people. The event originated in Iran after the 1979 Islamic Revolution and some of the organisations that support and promote the event receive support from the Iranian government. (Photo by Marc Vallée/marcvallee.co.uk) (c) Marc Vallée, 2008.
Filed under: Political Protest Project | Tags: Academy, Academy School, ARK, Arki Busson, Education, Hedge Fund, Privatization, Teachers, Teaching, Trade Union
LONDON, UNITED KINGDOM – 26.09.08. Teachers and supporters demonstrate outside the headquarters ARK an education charity on Friday 26 September 2008 London, England. ARK is an international children’s charity funded by a multi-billion pound hedge fund run by Arki Busson. Teachers and campaigners called for an end to the privatization of the UK education system via the government’s academy program. (Photo by Marc Vallée/marcvallee.co.uk) (c) Marc Vallée, 2008.
Clients : Click on the image above to view a slideshow and click on the link below for rights managed editorial licensing. High resolution images are available on request.
Images: “Anti-Academy School Protest – 26.09.08″
Archive Link : www.archive.marcvallee.co.uk
Filed under: Political Protest Project | Tags: Apprentice Boys, Apprentice Boys of Derry, Band, Demonstration, England, london, Loyalist, Loyalists, March, Marching, Northern Ireland, Parade, Protestant, Protestantism, Right-wing, Troubles, Ulster Volunteer Force, UVF
LONDON, UNITED KINGDOM – 20.09.08. Members of the Ulster Volunteer Force regimental band prepare to march in the Apprentice Boys of Derry parade in London, England on Saturday 20th September 2008. In 1912 the Ulster Volunteer Force was set up as a Protestant militia by Unionist leader Lord Edward Carson to oppose Home Rule for Ireland. (Photo by Marc Vallée/marcvallee.co.uk) (c) Marc Vallée, 2008.
“Timeline: A history of violence” – The Guardian.
Clients : Click on the images above and below to view a slideshow from the set and click on the link below for rights managed editorial licensing. High resolution images are available on request.
Images: “Apprentice Boys of Derry Parade – 20.09.08″
Archive Link : www.archive.marcvallee.co.uk
LONDON, UNITED KINGDOM – 20.09.08. Members of the Ulster Volunteer Force regimental band prepare to march in the Apprentice Boys of Derry parade in London, England on Saturday 20th September 2008. In 1912 the Ulster Volunteer Force was set up as a Protestant militia by Unionist leader Lord Edward Carson to oppose Home Rule for Ireland. (Photo by Marc Vallée/marcvallee.co.uk) (c) Marc Vallée, 2008.
Filed under: Political Protest Project | Tags: Bolivia, Bolivian, Coup, Evo Morales, Hugo Chavez, US ambassador, US Embassy, USA, Venezuela, Venezuelan
LONDON, UNITED KINGDOM – 17.09.08. The front of the US Embassy as protesters picket the Embassy in solidarity with the Venezuelan government of Hugo Chávez and the Bolivian government of Evo Morales on Wednesday 17th September 2008 London, England. Last week President Hugo Chávez ordered the US ambassador to leave Venezuela and accused the US government of fomenting a coup against the Venezuelan government. President Evo Morales has also expelled the US ambassador from Bolivia after accusing him of supporting opposition forces in the county after violent riots against the government. (Photo by Marc Vallée/marcvallee.co.uk) (c) Marc Vallée, 2008.
“Expulsions stoke US-LatAm dispute” – BBC News.
“Evo Morales Accuses Right-Wing Governors of Trying to Stage Violent Coup; 30 Dead, Many Still Missing in Pando” – democracynow.org
Clients : Click on the images above and below to view a slideshow from the set and click on the link below for rights managed editorial licensing. High resolution images are available on request.
Images: “Venezuelan and Bolivian Solidarity Protest – 17.09.08.”
Archive Link : www.archive.marcvallee.co.uk
LONDON, UNITED KINGDOM – 17.09.08. A young male protesters wears a pro Hugo Chavez t-shirt on a picket of the US Embassy in solidarity with the Venezuelan government of Hugo Chávez and the Bolivian government of Evo Morales on Wednesday 17th September 2008 London, England. Last week President Hugo Chávez ordered the US ambassador to leave Venezuela and accused the US government of fomenting a coup against the Venezuelan government. President Evo Morales has also expelled the US ambassador from Bolivia after accusing him of supporting opposition forces in the county after violent riots against the government. (Photo by Marc Vallée/marcvallee.co.uk) (c) Marc Vallée, 2008.
Filed under: Journalism, NUJ | Tags: Free Press, Freedom of the Press, Gyorgy Gongadze, IFJ, International Federation of Journalists, Jeremy Dear, Journalism, Law, National Union of Journalists, NUJ, Press Freedom, Ukraine, Ukraine Embassy
LONDON, UNITED KINGDOM – 16.09.08. Jeremy Dear, General Secretary of the National Union of Journalists leads a delegation for a meeting at the Ukraine Embassy on the anniversary of the murder of journalist Gyorgy Gongadze London, England on Tuesday 16th September 2008. The headless body of Gongadze was found in a ditch outside Kiev in 2000. Despite the arrest of three people in connection with the killing press freedom campaigns hold the view that the people who ordered the killing have evaded justice. (Photo by Marc Vallée/marcvallee.co.uk) (c) Marc Vallée, 2008.
“Ukraine journalist killers jailed” – BBC News.
“IFJ Welcomes European Parliamentarians’ Call for Justice for Slain Ukrainian Journalist Gongadze” – International Federation of Journalists.
“Ukraine’s government falls apart” – BBC News.
Clients : Click on the images above and below to view a slideshow from the set and click on the link below for rights managed editorial licensing. High resolution images are available on request.
Images: “Anniversary of the murder of journalist Gyorgy Gongadze – 16.09.08.”
Archive Link : www.archive.marcvallee.co.uk
LONDON, UNITED KINGDOM – 16.09.08. Jeremy Dear, General Secretary of the National Union of Journalists leads a delegation for a meeting at the Ukraine Embassy on the anniversary of the murder of journalist Gyorgy Gongadze London, England on Tuesday 16th September 2008. The headless body of Gongadze was found in a ditch outside Kiev in 2000. Despite the arrest of three people in connection with the killing press freedom campaigns hold the view that the people who ordered the killing have evaded justice. (Photo by Marc Vallée/marcvallee.co.uk) (c) Marc Vallée, 2008.
Filed under: Political Protest Project | Tags: Allseas UK, Environment, Environmental, Hunger Strike, Ireland, Irish Embassy, Maura Harrington, Pipeline, Rossport, Shell, Shell EP Ireland, Shell Gas, Shell Oil, Shell to Sea
LONDON, UNITED KINGDOM – 15.09.08. Irish environmental activists and supporters demonstrate outside the Irish Embassy in London against Shell EP Ireland’s plans to lay an onshore high pressure pipeline in the Republic of Ireland on Monday 15th September 2008 London, England. Protesters congregated in support of Maura Harrington (55) the Principal of Inver National School who is on hunger strike in her locked car at Glengad, Ireland the site of the landfall for the controversial pipeline project. (Photo by Marc Vallée/marcvallee.co.uk) (c) Marc Vallée, 2008.
“Corrib situation critical” – The Mayo News.
“Bomb left outside Shell’s Dublin office” – The Times.
“Calm urged by both sides in Corrib pipeline dispute” – The Irish Times.
Clients : Click on the images above and below to view a slideshow from the set and click on the link below for rights managed editorial licensing. High resolution images are available on request.
Images: “Shell Pipeline Protest – 15.09.08.”
Archive Link : www.archive.marcvallee.co.uk
LONDON, UNITED KINGDOM – 15.09.08. Irish environmental activists and supporters demonstrate outside the registered office of Allseas UK an offshore pipelay and subsea construction company on Monday 15th September 2008 London, England. Shell EP Ireland is building an onshore high pressure pipeline in the Republic of Ireland and protesters congregated in London to show support for Maura Harrington (55) the Principal of Inver National School who is on hunger strike in her locked car at Glengad, Ireland the site of the landfall for the controversial pipeline project. (Photo by Marc Vallée/marcvallee.co.uk) (c) Marc Vallée, 2008.
Filed under: Journalism, NUJ, Political Protest Project | Tags: FIT, Forward Intelligence Team, Free Press, IFJ, International Federation of Journalists, Media Freedom, Media Restriction, Metropolitan Police, National Union of Journalists, Police Surveillance, Press Freedom, Surveillance
“EFJ Supports NUJ Campaign against “Terrorising” Journalists in the UK” – International Federation of Journalists.
Today the International Federation of Journalists President Jim Boumelha wrote to the UK Minister of State for Security, Counter-Terrorism, Crime and Policing Tony McNulty on the issue of police surveillance and harassment of working journalists.
Jim Boumelha said, “I am writing on behalf of the International Federation of Journalists and its affiliates worldwide to express our concern about the serious situation arising in the UK over the surveillance and harassment of journalists by the police.”
You can read the full letter via this link (pdf).
Filed under: Journalism, Political Protest Project | Tags: BECTU, Broadcast, Broadcasting, Camp for Climate Action, Climate Camp, Free Press, Freedom of the Press, ITV, Media Freedom, Media Workers, Press Freedom, Stage Screen & Radio Magazine

Tearsheet : Cover of Stage Screen & Radio Magazine. September 2008. Published here by kind permission of the Stage Screen & Radio Magazine. (c) Stage Screen & Radio Magazine 2008.
It’s always good to get a a cover picture published, add’s to the tearsheet archive and the larger fee is always a bonus! On the day I took these images I was assaulted, stop & searched and filmed when filing at a local McDonalds (free WiFi) by the police. So let’s just say it’s a pretty good feeling to get this cover after a day like that. In fact Stage Screen & Radio Magazine took not only the picture for the cover but took six more pictures for a 3 page cover story inside the magazine and the article that goes with it is very good as well. It’s my understanding that the article may go up the BECTU site later this week. If so I will post the link when I have it.
Stage Screen & Radio Magazine is the journal of the Broadcasting Entertainment Cinematograph & Theatre Union (BECTU)

KINGSNORTH, KENT, UNITED KINGDOM - 08.8.08. Police stop and search an ITV (Meridian) Broadcast Crew outside the main gate of the Camp for Climate Action Hoo, Kent, England on Friday 8th August 2008. The broadcasters had just left the climate camp when member of west Yorkshire police stopped and searched them under Section 60 of the Criminal Justice and Public Order Act. (Photo Marc Vallée/marcvallee.co.uk) (c) Marc Vallée, 2008.
Images: Camp for Climate Action – Broadcast Crew – Stop and Search – 08.08.08.
Filed under: Journalism, NUJ | Tags: Add new tag, FIT, Forward Intelligence Team, Free Press, Freedom of the Press, Jason N. Parkinson, Jeremy Dear, Marc Vallée, Metropolitan Police, Police, Police Surveillance, Police Violence, Press Freedom, Press Freedom Collateral Damage, Riot Police, Serious Organised Crime and Police Act, State Repression, Surveillance, Trade Union Congress, TUC
LONDON, UNITED KINGDOM – 02.05.08. A civilian police photographer films and photographs working journalists outside City Hall on Friday 2 May 2008 in London, England. (Photo by Marc Vallée/marcvallee.co.uk) (c) Marc Vallée, 2008.
Film: Press Freedom: ‘Collateral Damage’ – Current TV.
“NUJ film shows police obstruction of journalists” – National Union of Journalist.
Yesterday Jeremy Dear the General Secretary of the National Union of Journalists (NUJ) moved a motion at the Trade Union Congress (TUC) live on the BBC Parliament Channel (59 minutes into this clip) in Brighton on the issue of civil liberties and police surveillance and harassment of working journalists.
In his speech Jeremy Dear said: “This isn’t over-zealous policing this is a co-ordinated and systematic abuse of media freedom – and we must expose it, challenge it and act against those who undermine the rights of photographers, journalists and media workers”.
Along side this the NUJ has released a short film called Press Freedom “Collateral Damage” which tackles the issue of police surveillance of bona fide journalists who document political dissent.
The film, written and directed by my good friend and colleague Jason N. Parkinson, is a damming account of the Orwellian techniques and methods of the Metropolitan Police Forward Intelligence Team (FIT) over the last few years. The film is 9 minutes long and starts with footage of the 2006 Camp for Climate Action and ends with footage from the 2008 Camp for Climate Action. This film includes evidence of the FIT targeting working journalists and footage of police attacking journalist when covering protests. The film also has an interview with Jeremy Dear and photographers outside New Scotland Yard, the headquarters of the Metropolitan Police.
(At this point I should declare an interest as I’m the producer of the film and one of the photographers featured in it.)

PHOTOJOURNALIST Marc Vallée is interviewed outside New Scotland Yard at the Press Freedom Protest organised by the NUJ. Published here by kind permission of Jonathan Warren 2008. (c) Jonathan Warren 2008.
The FIT is a police unit that is trained to gather evidence at football matches, political protests and over the last year it has been used by officers in some parts of the country to target local youth on council estates for alleged anti-social behaviour.
Speaking after the TUC vote, Jeremy Dear, said: “Journalism is facing grave threats in an age of intolerance. Whilst on the streets dissent is being criminalized, independent journalism is being increasingly caught in the civil liberties clampdown.”

PHOTOJOURNALIST Marc Vallée lies injured on the ground after the police forcibly cleared the road during the “Sack Parliament” demonstration on the 9th October 2006 at the opening of parliament, Westminster, London. Published here by kind permission of Jess Hurd. (c) Jess Hurd/reportdigital.co.uk. 2006.
Below is the full text of the speech by Jeremy Dear.
“If you log on to the BBC’s website you can watch an excellent and dramatic picture gallery of Chinese police and soldiers physically restraining journalists and photographers, violently preventing them from working, preventing them accessing designated protest zones. Numerous stories across the media highlight China’s continuing denial of basic media freedoms.
“We welcome such abuses being highlighted, but they don’t just happen in China.
“If any of the media would like, I have a film here – a film which shows the abuses happening daily in the UK, in a society where protest is increasingly criminalized, where dissent is increasingly outlawed, where laws designed to tackle terrorism are increasingly used to undermine civil liberties.
“This film documents examples of police abusing their powers, of arbitrary arrest and detention, of photographers being physically attacked, of stop and search, of data and equipment being confiscated, of journalists and camera crews under surveillance by anti-terror teams – examples of the forces of an authoritarian government and the abuse and misuse of the law.
“The terrorising of journalists isn’t just done by shadowy men in balaclavas but also by governments and organisations who use the apparatus of the law or state authorities to suppress and distort the information they do not want the public to know and to terrorise the journalists involved through injunctions, threats to imprisonment and financial ruin.
“The use of the Terrorism Act and SOCPA increasingly criminalize not just those who protest but those deemed to be giving the oxygen of publicity to such dissent. Journalists’ material and their sources are increasingly targeted by those who wish to pull a cloak of secrecy over their actions.
“And so NUJ member Shiv Malik is woken by armed police, dragged to court, subjected to a production order and instructed to hand over his notes. His crime? He dared to interview a former member of an alleged terrorist organisation, dared to get behind the spin, to serve the public by exposing the truth – for that he is criminalized.
“Another member: Sally Murrer’s home was bugged, her computer seized by police. She was arrested, dumped in a cold cell for 24 hours, then strip searched. She faces the potential of years in jail.
“Sally’s crime? Nothing more than talking to a contact in the police force who told her about a prisoner released early who boasted of becoming a suicide bomber.
“The real crime is that the police have spent hundreds of thousands of pounds on a malicious prosecution. If they win it will become a crime for journalists to report what a police officer or any other public official tells them without authorisation. If they lose it will be a victory for free reporting and independent journalism.
“And photographers covering the climate camp just a few weeks ago, including some of those sat down here, are stopped and searched three times in one day, are followed by officers from the Forward Intelligence Team, subjected to intimidation and arbitrary and intrusive surveillance. Their crime? Simply documenting the activities of environmental campaigners.
“This isn’t over-zealous policing this is a co-ordinated and systematic abuse of media freedom – and we must expose it, challenge it and act against those who undermine the rights of photographers, journalists and media workers.
“And we must do so because if whistleblowers and sources fear speaking out, if photographers and journalists cannot probe the dark corners of business, politics or human rights, the ability of the media – already under threat from concentration of ownership and cost-cutting – to hold power to account, to expose wrongdoing, to provide the information on which citizens can make informed decisions about their lives will be seriously compromised.
“The Terrorism Act and SOCPA are not sophisticated security policies – they are the blunt instruments of an intolerant government.
“As if in some Orwellian nightmare the Ministry of Freedom tells us that the price we must pay for peace and liberty at home is not just a war in Iraq – not just the billions spent on war – but, in the wake of the London bombings, is the fingerprinting of council workers and the covert surveillance of M&S workers. It is ID cards and 42-day detention. It is curbs on the right to protest, the civil contingencies act and it is the extension of the Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act, a snoopers’ charter giving access to personal texts, emails and internet use.
“The price is too high. Less liberty does not imply greater security. It never has.
“Our movement has been at the forefront of the great struggles for human and civil rights over the past century. In this age of intolerance new struggles must be waged and we must lead that fight.
“Support the motion.”
You can watch this via the BBC Parliament Channel (59 minutes into this clip).
Filed under: Political Protest Project | Tags: Animal rights, Animal Testing, Herefordshire, Laboratory, Ledbury, Right to Protest, Sean Kirtley, Sequani Ltd, Serious Organised Crime and Police Act, Vivisection
LEDBURY, HEREFORDSHIRE, UNITED KINGDOM – 06.09.08. Animal rights activists demonstrate against an animal testing laboratory on Saturday 6th September 2008 in Ledbury, Herefordshire. Protesters congregated to demonstrate against Sequani Ltd an animal testing laboratory in Ledbury, Herefordshire and to show support for a local man, Sean Kirtley, a lifelong opponent of animal testing who is currently serving a four-and-a-half-year prison term at HMP Blakenhurst. Mr. Kirtley is the first person to stand trial for conspiring to interfere with an animal research establishment under the Serious Organised Crime and Police Act. Supporters of Mr. Kirtley say that the longest animal rights trial in legal history, at a cost of £4.5m, failed to establish that Sean Kirtley was guilty of anything more serious than running a website publicising legal protests. (Photo by Marc Vallée/marcvallee.co.uk) (c) Marc Vallée, 2008.
“Judge who sentenced animal rights activist was fan of blood sports” - The Independent.
Clients : Click on the images above and below to view a slideshow from the set and click on the link below for rights managed editorial licensing. High resolution images are available on request.
Images: “Carnival Against Vivisection Protest – 06.09.08″
Archive Link : www.archive.marcvallee.co.uk
LEDBURY, HEREFORDSHIRE, UNITED KINGDOM – 06.09.08. A female activist wears a mask with the words “Freedom to Proetst 2008″ on it as animal rights activists demonstrate against an animal testing laboratory on Saturday 6th September 2008 in Ledbury, Herefordshire. Protesters congregated to demonstrate against Sequani Ltd an animal testing laboratory in Ledbury, Herefordshire and to show support for a local man, Sean Kirtley, a lifelong opponent of animal testing who is currently serving a four-and-a-half-year prison term at HMP Blakenhurst. Mr. Kirtley is the first person to stand trial for conspiring to interfere with an animal research establishment under the Serious Organised Crime and Police Act. Supporters of Mr. Kirtley say that the longest animal rights trial in legal history, at a cost of £4.5m, failed to establish that Sean Kirtley was guilty of anything more serious than running a website publicising legal protests. (Photo by Marc Vallée/marcvallee.co.uk) (c) Marc Vallée, 2008.














