Police Worldwide Criminalize Dissent, Assert New Powers in Crackdown on Protests
By Democracy Now!, Amy Goodman, Juan Gonzalez, Abby Deshman, Anthony Romero, Hossam Bahgat
October 10, 2013
| In
a major new report, the International Network of Civil Liberties
Organizations details a global crackdown on peaceful protests through
excessive police force and the criminalization of dissent. The report,
"Take Back the Streets: Repression and Criminalization of Protest Around
the World," warns of a growing tendency to perceive individuals
exercising a fundamental democratic right — the right to protest — as a
threat requiring a forceful government response. The case studies
detailed in this report show how governments have reacted to peaceful
protests in the United States, Israel, Canada, Argentina, Egypt,
Hungary, Kenya, South Africa and Britain. The report’s name comes from a
police report filed in June 2010 when hundreds of thousands of
Canadians took to the streets of Toronto to nonviolently protest the
G-20 summit. A senior Toronto police commander responded to the protests
by issuing an order to "take back the streets." Within a span of 36
hours, more than 1,000 people — peaceful protesters, journalists, human
rights monitors and downtown residents — were arrested and placed in
detention. We are joined by three guests: the report’s co-editor, Abby
Deshman, a lawyer and program director with the Canadian Civil Liberties
Association; Anthony Romero, executive director of the American Civil
Liberties Union; and Hossam Bahgat, an Egyptian human rights activist
and the founder and executive director of the Egyptian Initiative for
Personal Rights.
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