[D66] Privacyschending brandt beter

Antid Oto protocosmos66 at gmail.com
Tue Aug 9 09:30:31 CEST 2011


On 9-8-2011 8:56, Henk Vreekamp wrote:
> Democs,
>  
> Met verbazing zag ik de massale binnenstadbranden in London etc. op de immer
> degelijke BBC. Dan ontluikt de vraag: waarom nu?

> Wat herinneren we ons van recent wangedrag in Brittannie? Het zedenloos
> afluisteren door massakranten en de corruptie bij de politie. De gegoede
> burgerij en miljardairs krijgen zo een koekje van eigen deeg.
>  
> Of eigenlijk niet, want wat fikte waren vooral rabatzaken in koopgoten met oude
> panden. En de migranten-twintigers die plunderden liepen vooral weg met rommel,
> zoals apparaatjes en textiel.
>  

Vreekamp ziet weer voornamelijk migranten als daders. Maar waar baseert hij dit
op? Naar aanleiding van de beelden kun je die conclusie helemaal niet trekken
mijn beste mc-journalist. Dan de vraag: licht een allochtoon op de BBC eerder op
dan een roodharige?




The News Line: News Monday, 8 August 2011

'POLICE REFUSED TO LISTEN!'

Police have sealed off a major section of the Tottenham High Road in
the wake of Saturday’s uprising
THE people of Tottenham were yesterday considering the implications of
the explosive uprising that took place on Saturday night.

The reverend Nims Obunge said: ‘I was here for five hours before this
incident kicked off; I was here with the families, I was here with the
communities.

‘Now something did happen here on Thursday, a man was shot in our
community and the community cried out for justice. it was right that
the community cried out for justice, we cannot play that down.

‘We must recognise the voice of this community and the fact that
someone in our community was killed and the family came over here to
say “give us answers as to why this happened,” – they didn’t get the
answers to what has happened.

‘They came and they said “why was our family not supported having had
the death in our family,” they did not receive the proper support. For
five hours they stood outside doing nothing.

‘Now what I want to acknowledge is what we see behind us is the very
people, the heart of our community which has been ripped out and some
people have come in to escalate the situation.

‘But what we must recognise is that the people who came here, peaceful
protesters, people saying “give us answers for what has happened two
days ago”, they didn’t get those answers four or five hours later.

‘Now I think that we’ve got to recognise we need justice, that’s what
they’re crying out for. what you hear over there is what people need,
they’re crying for justice, and we can’t ignore that.’

Local workers and youth spoke to News Line at the scene yesterday.

Stephen Bill said: ‘None of this would have happened if the police
were listening, there were two hundred people here but no-one would
come out. One police officer told the BBC they were gangsters and
cannot be talked to.’

He stressed: ‘It wasn’t a race thing, it has nothing to do with race
this time. The young people feel they are not being listened to,
sometimes police stop a young man in the street, take him to the
police station and take his fingerprints and DNA.

Worried

‘All these boys are hurt, they are really worried about what is going
on.’

Ruby Holness, 21, said: ‘I live just off the High Road. I understand
the anger at the police. Why didn’t they shoot that man in the arm or
leg, they shouldn’t have killed him. But things went too far after
that.’

Her friend Shakira Williams, 19, added: ‘They’re cutting everything,
even the youth club, there’s nothing for young people, they’re cutting
the EMA, people have got no money. I understand why people are angry.’

Ruby added: ‘I saw the march, it was peaceful, people were just
standing there.’

One local resident told News Line: ‘What about us who live here,
police are always putting pressure on young people, my daughter told
me that. And they shouldn’t have brought in so many Territorial
Support Group and the dogs and horses.’

Dion King from east London was among the crowd gathered at the scene,
he told News Line: ‘I’ve come here to have a look and see the damage
for myself. They’ve made a lot of fuss about it, there’s not a lot of
small shops damaged it’s the massive commercial ones.

‘I feel sorry for the family who lost their relative the other day,
it’s not a race issue. Everybody is frustrated with the current
climate. There’s no jobs, people don’t have a future at the moment.’

News Line received reports yesterday afternoon that the police were
telling employers to send workers home early, as there would be more
fighting in the evening.

http://www.wrp.org.uk/news/6605


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