Did you hear about the man
outside Downing Street
His lone dissenting voice
was far to loud it seems
Calling an end to war
Standing up for peace
got Brian Haw
arrested by the police
Declaring his feelings
What he thought about the war
So they came and
bundled him away
'Cause, what he said
Might incite the crowd
seems that dissension's
No longer allowed
Truth can be denied
Can't hold back the tide
You can shut up one man
Hold a trial do him down
You cannot fool us all
All of the time
And many feel this war
is a crime.
But that single lonely voice
is not now alone
Behind them there are so
many more ..
And his single lonely call
it echoes wall to wall
Listen carefully
You may hear them roar
So before you shut him up
Send him down and lock him up
This government that sent our troops to war
Calling for loyalty
From all...well...perhaps
They had better
Make damn sure
Truth can be denied
Can't hold back the tide
You can shut up one man
Hold a trial do him down
You cannot fool us all
All of the time
And many feel this war
is a crime.
There's a shared point of view
By so many in this land
Among so many who doubt
and recoil
Who see their loved ones
being killed and maimed
And wonder if the whole bloody thing
Was for oil
Truth can be denied
Can't hold back the tide
You can shut up one man
Hold a trial do him down
You cannot fool us all
All of the time
And many feel this war
is a crime.
outside Downing Street
His lone dissenting voice
was far to loud it seems
Calling an end to war
Standing up for peace
got Brian Haw
arrested by the police
Declaring his feelings
What he thought about the war
So they came and
bundled him away
'Cause, what he said
Might incite the crowd
seems that dissension's
No longer allowed
Truth can be denied
Can't hold back the tide
You can shut up one man
Hold a trial do him down
You cannot fool us all
All of the time
And many feel this war
is a crime.
But that single lonely voice
is not now alone
Behind them there are so
many more ..
And his single lonely call
it echoes wall to wall
Listen carefully
You may hear them roar
So before you shut him up
Send him down and lock him up
This government that sent our troops to war
Calling for loyalty
From all...well...perhaps
They had better
Make damn sure
Truth can be denied
Can't hold back the tide
You can shut up one man
Hold a trial do him down
You cannot fool us all
All of the time
And many feel this war
is a crime.
There's a shared point of view
By so many in this land
Among so many who doubt
and recoil
Who see their loved ones
being killed and maimed
And wonder if the whole bloody thing
Was for oil
Truth can be denied
Can't hold back the tide
You can shut up one man
Hold a trial do him down
You cannot fool us all
All of the time
And many feel this war
is a crime.
inviata da giorgio - 6/6/2022 - 09:30
×
Lyrics by Roger Antony Carter
Music & performed by Barry David Butler
is no longer allowed ..”
The song is dedicated to Brian Haw, a great and indomitable British pacifist, famous for protesting against the Afghanistan and Iraq wars, unfortunately died in Berlin from lung cancer in 2011 ...
Brian William Haw (7 January 1949 – 18 June 2011) was an English protester and peace campaigner who lived for almost ten years in a peace camp in London’s Parliament Square from 2001, in a protest against UK and US foreign policy. He began the Parliament Square Peace Campaign before the 2001 United States attacks, and became a symbol of the anti-war movement over the policies of both the United Kingdom and the United States in Afghanistan and later Iraq. At the 2007 Channel 4 Political Awards he was voted Most Inspiring Political Figure. Haw died of cancer in Berlin, where he had been receiving medical treatment.
Haw was born on 7 January 1949, in Wanstead Hospital, in Woodford Green, Essex a twin and the eldest of five. He grew up in neighbouring Barking and in Whitstable, Kent.
His father, Robert William Haw (1925–1964), served as a sniper in the Reconnaissance Corps in the Second World War, and had been one of the first British soldiers to enter the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp. He later worked as a railway clerk, and also worked in a betting office.
He committed suicide by gassing himself when Haw was 13. Haw’s mother was Iris Marie Haw (née Hall).
Haw’s family were involved in an evangelical Christian church in Whitstable, which Haw joined when he was aged 11. Haw was apprenticed to a boat-builder from the age of 16 and then entered the Merchant Navy as a deckhand. He travelled widely before spending six months at evangelical college in Nottingham, after which he preached world peace. Haw visited Northern Ireland in 1970 during The Troubles, as well as the Killing Fields of Cambodia in 1989.
Back in London, he worked as a removals man and as a carpenter. He married his wife Kay in Redbridge in June 1977, and they lived in Redditch with their seven children until he left them in 2001 to begin his Parliament Square protest. The couple divorced in 2003. Haw worked with troubled youngsters in Redditch, Worcestershire.
On 2 June 2001, he began camping in Parliament Square in central London in a one-man political protest against war and foreign policy (initially, the Economic sanctions against Iraq). By his own account, he was first inspired to take up his vigil after seeing the images and information produced by the Mariam Appeal, an anti-sanctions campaign. Haw justified his campaign on a need to improve his children’s future. He only left his makeshift campsite to attend court hearings, surviving on food brought by supporters.
Support for Haw’s protest came from former Labour cabinet minister Tony Benn and activist/comedian Mark Thomas.
Among the artwork displayed was a Banksy stencil of two soldiers painting over a peace sign and Leon Kuhn’s anti-war political caricature 3 Guilty Men, which, together with Kuhn’s The Proud Parents, Mark Wallinger later displayed in his recreation at the Tate in 2007.
He originally camped on the grass in Parliament Square, but the Greater London Authority took legal action to remove him, so he relocated to the pavement, which was administered by Westminster City Council instead. In October 2002 Westminster City Council attempted to prosecute Haw for causing an obstruction to the pavement, but the case failed as Haw’s banners did not impede movement. The continuous use of a megaphone by Haw led to objections by Members of Parliament who had offices close to Haw’s protest camp. The House of Commons Procedure Committee held a brief inquiry in summer 2003 which heard evidence that permanent protests in Parliament Square could provide an opportunity for terrorists to disguise explosive devices, and resulted in a recommendation that the law be changed to prohibit them. The Government passed a provision banning all unlicensed protests, permanent or otherwise, in the Serious Organised Crime and Police Act 2005 (sections 132 to 138); however, because Haw’s protest was on-going and residing on Parliament Square prior to the enactment of the Act, it was unclear whether the Act applied to him.
In the 2005 general election Haw stood as a candidate in the Cities of London and Westminster in order to further his campaign and oppose the Act which was yet to come into force. He won 298 votes (0.8 percent), making a speech against the ongoing presence of UK troops in Iraq at the declaration of the result.
As preparation for implementing the new Serious Organised Crime and Police Act 2005 began, Haw won an application for judicial review on 28 July 2005, successfully arguing that a technical defect in the act meant it did not apply in his case. The act states that demonstrations must have authorisation from the police “when the demonstration starts”, and Haw asserted that his demonstration had begun before the passage of the act, which was not made retrospective. Although the commencement order made to bring the act into force had made reference to demonstrations begun before the act came into force, there was no power for the commencement order to extend the scope of the act.
The government appealed against the judgement, and on 8 May 2006 the Court of Appeal allowed the appeal and therefore declared that the act did apply to him.
The court found that the intent of parliament was clearly to apply to all demonstrations in Parliament Square regardless of when they had begun, saying “The only sensible conclusion to reach in these circumstances is that Parliament intended that those sections of the Act should apply to a demonstration in the designated area, whether it started before or after they came into force. Any other conclusion would be wholly irrational and could fairly be described as manifestly absurd”.
In the meantime, Haw had applied for permission to continue his demonstration, and received it on condition that his display of placards was no more than 3 metres (9.8 ft) wide (among other things). Haw was unwilling to comply and the police referred his case to the Crown Prosecution Service; a number of supporters began camping with him in order to deter attempts to evict him.
Foreign Policy 2000, a painting by Abby Jackson – one of the items confiscated by the police.
In the early hours of 23 May 2006, 78 police arrived and removed all but one of Haw’s placards citing continual breached conditions of the Serious Organised Crime and Police Act 2005 as their reason for doing so. Ian Blair (head of the Metropolitan Police at the time) later said that the operation to remove Haw’s placards had cost £27,000. The actions of the police were criticised by members of the Metropolitan Police Authority at its monthly meeting on 25 May 2006. Haw appeared at Bow Street Magistrates’ Court on 30 May, when he refused to enter a plea. The court entered a not guilty plea on his behalf, and he was bailed to return to court on 11 July 2006. At a licensing hearing at Westminster City Council on 30 June 2006, Haw was granted limited permission to use a loudspeaker in the space allowed to him.
On 22 January 2007 Haw was acquitted on the grounds that the conditions he was accused of breaching were not sufficiently clear, and that they should have been imposed by a police officer of higher rank. District Judge Purdy ruled: “I find the conditions, drafted as they are, lack clarity and are not workable in their current form”. At the 2007 Channel 4 Political Awards Haw was voted Most Inspiring Political Figure.
Haw was featured in several documentaries including 2003’s “As Long As It Takes” (Raj Yagnik) and the 2006 documentary, TerrorStorm. Director and narrator Alex Jones interviewed Haw and even joined in his protest of Parliament by answering Haw’s inquiry, via megaphone, about the Statue of Liberty by saying she had been picked up on suspicion that she was a member of Al-Qaeda. Haw was briefly portrayed in the 2007 drama The Trial of Tony Blair.
Haw was filmed for many months by independent documentary maker Senara Wilson during the buildup to war in 2003. Her film Life of Brian (produced and edited by Matthew Platts-Mills) was selected for the Commonwealth Film Festival. A short version of this documentary is available here. A Man Called Brian was a 2005 documentary film by Mahmoud Shoolizadeh about Haw and his ten-year, 24/7 anti-war protest in Parliament Square.
Haw was featured with activist Mick Meaneyin a documentary by British independent news agency RINF, in which for the first time in the media he stated that he believed “9/11 was an inside job”.
In the case of Director of Public Prosecutions v Haw, the judgement of the court, delivered by Lord Phillips CJ, included the following:
3. The issues raised by the case stated are as follows:
• ii) Whether the conditions imposed on Mr Haw were ultra vires, or incompatible with Articles 10 and 11 of the European Convention on Human Rights (‘ECHR’), as unreasonable or insufficiently clear.
Haw sought a large number of directions from the court on 18 November 2008. After some delay the directions of the court were eventually published in March 2009:
The case of Tucker v Director of Public Prosecutions, 2007 was an appeal by way of case stated.
The appellant, Barbara Tucker, was convicted under Section 132 (1)(c) of the Serious Organised Crime and Police Act 2005 (SOCPA), of being within the jurisdiction of the Central Criminal Court, and carrying on unauthorised demonstration by herself in a public place in a designated area, namely Parliament Square. Her defence was that Haw had invited her to join him in his demonstration. He gave evidence on her behalf to that effect.
The magistrate said: “Had I accepted this evidence (which I did not) it would have been argued that the allegation that she had ‘carried on an unauthorised demonstration by herself ...’ could not have been made out, and furthermore (in my view incorrectly) that it would provide a defence by saying that as Mr Haw is safe from prosecution anyone who joins him is also safe”. The question posed by the magistrate was: “Was it lawful under section 6 (1) HRA to convict the appellant?”
The Administrative Court held that SOCPA was not incompatible with the European Convention on Human Rights (specifically, Articles 10 (freedom of expression) and 11 (freedom of assembly)), and that Tucker’s conviction was therefore lawful.
On 12 January 2008, Haw was observing a protest against the Serious Organised Crime and Police Act outside Downing Street. Seven people were arrested including Haw, who said “I was filming the students lying down in the road when one officer stepped forward, as I was walking back, and pushed the camera with his hand. It struck my face”. He used “violent and humiliating force”.
In December 2007 press releases stated that Haw had declared himself a candidate in the London Mayoral Elections in May 2008, but eventually he did not stand. On 17 April 2008 he gave his support to the Christian Choice candidate Alan Craig.
On 25 May 2010 the day of the State Opening of Parliament for the new Conservative-Liberal Democrat coalition government, Haw was arrested at 8:30 am.
In September 2010 Haw was diagnosed with lung cancer. On 1 January 2011 he left England to receive treatment in Berlin. Haw, who was described as a chain smoker, continued to smoke cigarettes until his death.
Brian Haw died in Germany in the early hours of 18 June 2011 of lung cancer. He is survived by seven children.
Reacting to news of Haw’s death, Tony Benn said “Brian Haw was a man of principle ... his death marks the end of a historic enterprise by a man who gave everything to support his beliefs”. At his death Al Jazeera described him as an “unsung hero”. Mark Wallinger said “I admired [Haw’s] single-minded tenacity. His rectitude was a mirror that the people in the building opposite couldn’t bear. ... Now that he’s gone, who else have we got?”. The British MP John McDonnell has called for a statue of Haw to be assembled to celebrate peace. British artist Banksy honoured Haw with a tribute on his website.
London Assembly Member Jenny Jones called for Westminster Council to erect a blue plaque for Brian Haw immediately, bypassing English Heritage’s criteria that the person commemorated should have been dead for two decades or passed the centenary of their birth, whichever is the earlier.
In January 2007, former Turner Prize nominee Mark Wallinger recreated Brian Haw’s Parliament Square protest in its entirety as an exhibition at Tate Britain, titled State Britain. Running the length of the Duveen Gallery, State Britain was a painstaking reconstruction of the display confiscated by the Metropolitan Police in 2006. It included 500 weather-worn banners, photos, peace flags, and messages from well-wishers collected by Haw over the duration of the Peace Protest, as well as his self-constructed shelter. In December 2007 Wallinger’s work won the Turner Prize.
Haw was featured in the short length documentary Maria: 24hr Peace Picket by Iranian film director Parviz Jahed, about fellow peace campaigner Maria Gallastegui.
In 2009, Youth Music Theatre UK developed the music theatre production According to Brian Haw... based on reactions by young people to Haw’s life, 9/11 and the Iraq war. This was performed at the Barbican Theatre, Plymouth. This production was again performed in 2012 at Square Chapel Centre for the Arts in Halifax with a new cast of young people. It was developed from a concept by Eddie Latter, music by James Atherton, book and lyrics by Sarah Nelson, directed by Ellie Jones, movement by Eddie Latter, designed by Hannah Boothman.
Zia Trench’s debut play, The State We’re In, based on Haw’s life, was performed for the first time at the 2009 Edinburgh Fringe, featuring Michael Byrne in the lead role and directed by Justin Butcher.
From Wikipedia