[CJA statement]
Posted on 12th December 2009
Danish police have indiscriminately arrested hundreds of climate justice activists during a climate change protest made up of 100,000 people that took place today in Copenhagen. Questions have been raised about the fact that the arrests occurred in a different time and place to where some trouble had momentarily flared earlier in the day. Journalists have been restricted from reporting at the site of the arrests since 1800hrs.
It’s estimated that 100 people are still being held on the road in extremely cold weather, cuffed and forced into seated positions in lines. They have expressed severe physical discomfort and have no access to water, medical attention or toilet facilities since 1530hrs. Many activists are reported to have urinated themselves while detained on the ground.
An estimated 200 have been removed from the site and taken away in coaches. Several people are reported to have fainted around 1945hrs.
Helga Matthiassen, who was detained for an hour before being released due to an injury she had recently sustained, said, “Of course we’re angry – people all over the world are angry about being lied to by governments who are making a corporate deal at the climate talks, and now when we try to protest against this on the streets we are randomly held by police.
“Not only have we been denied the right to protest, but our basic human rights have also been ignored in this ludicrous, staged police exercise. It seems Danish Police have a new motto: why just criminalise protesters, when you can dehumanise them too?”

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Personal account of today's arrest
Udgivet / published: Saturday 12 December 2009 23:01 af / by Imcdk
Tagget som / tagged as: arrest cop15 d12 mass
Område / neighbourhood:
A personal account of what happened before, during and after the mass arrest at the COP15 demo today (Dec 12). The report was relayed to IMC DK moments after they were released, and is published pretty much verbatim.
"I was part of a Libertarian Socialist bloc in the "System Change, Not Climate Change" section. We'd reported our demo (from Kgs Nytorv to the large demo at Christiansborg Slotsplads) to the police well in advance. We met as planned and marched with our red-black flags and banners - with a Christiania bike serving coffee and tea. When we reached Christmas Møllers Plads there were different groups marching around us. Some Trotskyites ahead of us, some Greenpeace people and some Hare Krishna to the right and some black bloc like people behind us."
"Having just passed Christmas Møllers Plads we're on the first part of Amagerbrogade when suddenly a lot of people run through our bloc from behind. We're confused and stop to find what's going on. Soon police cars cut off the road ahead from a side street and the same behind us. The people who ran through our bloc have mostly escaped, but we're left bewildered and confused. So the police have us closed in and we don't know what to do. We just stand there, hoping they'll realize their mistake. I tell a police officer that we are a legally reported bloc and show him our permit (of which I have a copy). He says: "Just sit down!" in a harsh tone. So we sit down, and at this point I call the dispatch phone."
"We're sure they'll realize their mistake and let us going - seing as they've captured Greenpeace and Hare Krishna alike. But instead they start hand-cuffing us all and putting us on the cold ground in "trains". And there we sit for 3½ hours - literally freezing our asses of, not to speak of the pain from the all too tight plastic cuffs. People wet their pants and faint. There are many hundreds. Even the Krishna people get put on the cold ground, wearing thin robes and all. As time passes and nothing happens, people are becoming more and more hypothermic and chanting "This is torture!" and "This is what democracy looks like!""
"After sitting for what seems like forever on the freezing tarmac, I was put into a bus and driven off to Valby. (Retortvej, where the makeshift detention has been set up.) Still arms cuffed behind my back - 4½ hours of pain ... It hurt so bad. When we got there, we were just left sitting in the bus. There were many buses waiting."
"At one point, two policemen come into the bus I'm in at the front and when they come to me, they ask: "Do you have any ID?" I answer in the affirmative, and they ask me to come outside. I show them my ID and they ask me to tell what happened. I do, and they say: "Ah, well, unfortunate mistake. We're sorry about that. Sometimes the wrong people get caught. You're free to go." They let me out. These policemen are very apologetic - I assume they're from a different assignment and not used to such brutality."
"I go down to the bus stop where ABC is waiting with food, tea and coffee in thermos. I hang out there for a while, trying to understand what just happened and how they can innocent innocent put people through that ... Then the police come over to bully the ABC crowd around and they shove them away from the bus stop. They move on to the S-train station. Later the police bully them away from there as well."
"I had a copy of the permit for the demonstration. But the people who released me from the bus probably didn't know that when they picked me out. It'd been hours since I'd shown it to a different officer who took no notice of it."
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