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Protesters on the roof of the Commons
Security breach: Protesters on the roof of the Commons

Commons protest: Inside job

Evening Standard
27 Feb 2008


The hunt is on for the insider who helped demonstrators get on the House of Commons roof.

Five activists made a mockery of intense security as they unfurled giant banners next to Big Ben protesting against the expansion of Heathrow.

The three men and two women then handcuffed themselves to the building as police with boltcutters, forbidden by health and safety rules to tackle them, looked on helplessly from a gangway.

One of the women wore a miniature head camera and provided video pictures of the stunt to news channels. A colleague gave media interviews from the roof on his phone boasting about how easy it had been.

On Monday a group from Greenpeace climbed onto a passenger jet at Heathrow in protest at plans to build another runway.

An MP or researcher is suspected of guiding today's protesters, from pressure group Plane Stupid, through a warren of corridors and getting their equipment past security scanners.

It was the worst breach of Commons security since Otis Ferry, son of Bryan, led a group of five pro-hunt protesters onto the floor of the Commons in 2004.

Police quickly concluded that today's breach, like the Ferry protest, was an inside job that was set up by someone with intimate knowledge of Parliament and an official security pass.

A police source said: “Their banners were far too big to take through the security scanners for visitors. That means they must have been carried in by a passholder.

“What really irritates us that someone whose life we protect has done something that will encourage further attempts to penetrate security, perhaps by groups that are dangerous.”

Gordon Brown told MPs in the Commons: “The message should go out very clearly that decisions in this country should be made in the chamber of this House and not on the roof of this House.”

The incredibly complicated route taken by the group to reach the roof involved a labyrinth of corridors and staircases that an outsider could not have navigated without help. They are thought to have used a doorway that only a passholder with an official “swipecard” could have opened.

Speaking to the Standard from the roof, Richard George, 27, from Wimbledon, claimed they simply walked in posing as members of the public wanting to watch a debate. “We went up to the Upper Committee Corridor and found a fire escape that led onto the roof. We went up in a lift and walked out on to the roof. It was as simple as that.”

The group said they managed to carry out a reconnaissance mission in advance. Fellow protester Leo Murray said: “It was surprisingly uncomplicated. We found there is an area of the roof where some civil servants sneak out for a cigarette and it's out of the way.”

The timing was chosen to cause maximum embarrassment for Mr Brown during the weekly Prime Minister's Questions at noon. It marked the end of an official consultation on Heathrow expansion which Mr George claimed was rigged to suit the air industry.

From their perch above Parliament Square, clearly visible to thousands of commuters and tourists, the five threw paper darts made from a document, obtained by Greenpeace under Freedom of Information laws.

Mr George said it showed that BAA, who run Heathrow, wrote parts of the Government consultation document. The protesters agreed to come down only when the Prime Minister passed below them on his way in.

Matthew Knowles, spokesman for the Society of British Aerospace Companies, said: “These stunts are becoming tiresome and do nothing more than peddle inaccurate propaganda.”

Michelle Di Leo, director of FlyingMatters, a coalition of unions, business, tourism groups and farmers, commented: “Today's action by Plane Stupid is misjudged, misdirected, and irresponsible.

“Aviation is responsible for two per cent of global carbon emissions and is growing at a slower global rate than power generation and industry. If they are serious about climate change, they should engage in a proper debate.”

Reader views (6)

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If 3 protesters could turn the tide in the UK of the selfish addiction to flying, then they should have their chance, because 12 years of this government has done nothing to make the UK public less selfish.

- Gs, London, 28/02/2008 11:48
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I am glad they made it to the roof and brought publicity to the cause. But in a way I am sad that this is what it has come to. People should be able to have a rational debate about a matter as serious as this, but the consultation document is so biased and confusing many have not felt empowered to fight it through the usual channels. Direct action, it seems, is all that's left to us. The government has stopped listening to its people. Any one for a march like the Poll Tax march?

- Angela Sharp, Hounslow, UK, 27/02/2008 22:09
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Come on, surely you all can not be so naive - you have been had by NuLiebour. Thousands of people on the ground protesting the failure to give the promised referendum on the EU Treaty, and five people get led inside to spare Gordon's blushes, as the compliant BBC once again fail to report the real news.
You couldn't make this up, it's is the death of democracy by a thousand cuts. Wake up people.

- Michael Llewellyn, Bridgetown, 27/02/2008 22:05
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No-one hurt or killed, everyone will hear about the protest. Good on them. Democracy in action... what ought to be going on in the first place within Parliament buildings.

- Mj, Felixstowe, UK, 27/02/2008 17:03
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Lengthy jail terms should sort these yobs out.

- Greg, St Helens, 27/02/2008 16:56
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What a pleasure in a sea of political rubbish! I hope they can put the cost of doing it on expenses. Perhaps they could get an allowance for having a second home on top of Westminster. Whatever happens, they should at least be given a free limo ride home. And some air miles to go and do it again in Scotland.

- John Problem, winchester uk, 27/02/2008 16:17
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