New Website – MASSOBS: mass observation movement

February 20, 2012 in Custody Deaths & Abuse, Film & Media by 4WardEverUK

originally by: 4WardEver UK
published: 20th February 2012

A new website has been launched which contains speeches and interviews with those who took part in the 2011 United Families and Friends Campaign and its thirteenth annual march.

Massobs.co.uk is a site that postgraduate students are involoved with. The material and projects have been influenced, both in approach and spirit, by the mass observation movement formed by Harrison, Madge and Jennings, in their initial projects in “Worktown”. Their aim was to create “an anthropology of ourselves”.

Visit the website here >

The website was developed with the support and assistance of Ken Fero (Migrant Media), co-producer of the film INJUSTICE.

Migrant Media on Vimeo >
Documentary Filmmaker, Ken Fero from Migrant Media, discusses his documentary called ‘Newspeak’ which was the last film to be broadcast by Press TV on 20th January 2012. The film questions the relationship between Ofcom, the independent regulator and competition authority for the UK communications industries, and power.

Also see Migrant Media Filmography >

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Police lose immunity plea in Azelle Rodney gun death inquiry

February 10, 2012 in Breaking News, Custody Deaths & Abuse by Zinzi Eka-Naphtali

originally by: BBC News
published: 9th February 2012

Scotland Yard has lost a court bid for firearms officers to be allowed to give evidence from behind a screen at an inquiry into a fatal police shooting. Police lawyers had asked the High Court to quash the inquiry chairman’s refusal to allow them to be screened from view.

Azelle Rodney, 24, was in a car when an officer fired [a fatal shot] in Edgeware, north London, in April 2005.

The High Court ruled only the officer who fired the shots could be screened, not the 13 other officers involved. Police said the officers were fearful of potential “revenge attacks”. Scotland Yard barrister Jason Beer QC said showing the officers could expose them to potential harm, and jeopardise future police work.

He said the public inquiry’s chair, retired High Court judge Sir Christopher Holland, had failed to consider the officers’ rights under the European Convention on Human Rights when he ruled at a preliminary hearing last month that they had to give evidence in public.

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Unproven science used to ‘explain’ custody deaths

February 1, 2012 in Breaking News, Custody Deaths & Abuse, Home Feature by 4WardEverUK

originally by: TBIJ  
published: 31st January 2012

A controversial unproven syndrome with roots in the US is being used in British coroners’ courts to explain why people die after police restraint. 

‘Excited delirium’ or ‘sudden-in-custody-death-syndrome’ is a niche diagnosis not yet recognised by the World Health Organisation or any international authority. A number of leading pathologists have expressed concern about the use of the term in inquests. Listen to Programme >

Individuals in the throes of  excited delirium are described as aggressive, agitated, displaying bizarre behaviour, insensitive to pain and with superhuman strength until they collapse and die

But research by the Bureau has found that the ‘condition’ has been used by coroners to explain 10 restraint-related deaths that occurred in police custody in England and Wales since the late 1990s.

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