The Guardian, Frances Wright: But seeking a judicial review of the way the 1 April protests were policed is unlikely to be an easy process.

The Climate Camp went to the European Climate Exchange in Bishopsgate on 1 April to highlight the failure of carbon trading as a solution to climate change. We were met by the same kind of heavy-handed policing as at previous Climate Camps - but for once, the outrageous behaviour of the police has been reported widely in the mainstream media. This gives us a welcome opportunity to challenge and debate the way protest is now being policed in the UK.

After the Kingsnorth Climate Camp, the legal team were so frustrated at the pre-emptive policing - involving blanket searches and seizures of people’s possessions - and the lack of ways to effectively hold the police to account for their actions, that we produced a report and film to document what had happened.

After the G20 Climate Camp, we did the same.

Last week as the author of this report I appeared as a witness before the joint parliamentary select committee on human rights and the home affairs select committee. While it is positive that there is parliamentary interest, we are worried that the only detailed inquiry being undertaken into the policing of the G20 protests is being carried out by HM inspectorate of constabulary.

This is hardly independent, but rather the police reviewing their own performance against their own standards; an exercise in damage limitation at best.

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Daily Telegraph, John Bingham: Police have arrested 114 environmentalists suspected of preparing an attempt to shut down one of Britain’s biggest power stations. In what is thought to be one of the first cases of its type, the demonstrators were rounded up 10 miles away from the likely target - the Ratcliffe-on-Soar coal fired power plant, Notts - before any protesters had reached the site.

The group, from across Britain, were seized as they gathered inside a Steiner school in Nottingham.

E.ON’s 2,000 megawatt plant at Ratcliffe-on-Soar is capable of powering up to two million homes.

But, unknown to environmentalists, it had been taken out of action over the Easter weekend because of lower demand on the National Grid.  Two years ago 11 environmentalists from a group called Eastside Climate Action were arrested after breaking into the site - also over Easter - hoping to shut it down.  The group said it was not involved in the latest protest.

Police had been monitoring organisers for several days and had warned power plants across the Midlands and north of England in advance that a protest was being planned.

Officers from five police forces descended on the Iona School, in Sneinton, Nottingham, just after midnight on Sunday.

Nottinghamshire Police, which led the operation, said that they had been arrested on suspicion of “conspiracy to commit aggravated trespass and criminal damage.”

Superintendent Mike Manley said the protesters would have posed “a serious threat” to the safe running of the power station.

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