logo
#

Latest news with #LouiseLancaster

‘Compassion and care are being stripped away': a Just Stop Oil activist on her time in prison
‘Compassion and care are being stripped away': a Just Stop Oil activist on her time in prison

The Guardian

time2 hours ago

  • Politics
  • The Guardian

‘Compassion and care are being stripped away': a Just Stop Oil activist on her time in prison

Louise Lancaster, 59, was one of a group of Just Stop Oil activists given the longest-ever UK sentences for peaceful protest for planning disruption on the M25 in November 2022. This year, she wrote a diary for the Guardian, detailing her first six months behind bars. Here, written before her release on 8 April and after her sentence was reduced on appeal, she reflects on her final months of incarceration. At the start of the year, I turned a corner and encountered a new emotional landscape. Transfer to open prison and the sentence appeal were on the horizon. Change, out of my control, was brewing. Open prison, a surveilled environment without bars or locks, intended as a stepping stone to community reintegration, is a goal for many in closed prison. But, heartwrenchingly, it is only a pipe dream for the more troubled inmates – those who struggle to adhere to the strict behavioural rules, so often due to fragile mental health, complex psychological or neurodivergent needs, which there is scant provision to cater for. Every day, I try to engage with Tina, whose internal distress can result in loud, anguished outbursts in the night and repetitive calls for help. She regularly finds herself punished for these, with downgraded conditions, locked in her cell for days without TV, phone or association time with others. Prison is no fit place for Tina. This morning, I call my daughter, Verity, but first pick up a message she left a few days before. I would have loved to have phoned her at the time, to share and support. I feel a pang of guilt and the chasm between us. Today is her birthday. It is also the day Cressie, Lucia (her co-defendants Lucia Whittaker De Abreu and Cressida Gethin) and I are assembled in HMP Send's video room for our appeal hearing. Two foot-thick tomes of court papers weigh down the table. Next to them, a cup of delicious flapjacks Lucia has made, that happily we are allowed to share. The legal arguments went on for two days and we strained to hear, but we are sustained by the knowledge that thousands gather outside the court, to peacefully and insistently make their support known. And we're uplifted to see (co-defendants) Daniel (Shaw), Roger (Hallam) and appellants from the other three trial groups, via the video-link system, on the screen. The verdict will take four to eight weeks. We are not holding our breath. News in the UK and abroad is getting grimmer by the day. Surreal stuff. Trump's tornadoes of turmoil, world temperatures tipping 1.75C above pre-industrial levels, 35% of Los Angeles engulfed by wildfires, and Storm Éowyn, listed as a real danger to life in the UK, is ripping the covers off polytunnels where I work in the prison gardens. I and those working with me there are also being scattered, reassigned to different work or education. This can happen without warning. It's very unsettling for the many neurodivergent people who make up nearly half the prison population. Appealing against the moves is futile. I have just been put on a 12-week education course, which I'm already qualified for and which I will never complete, as I move prison in three weeks. Given how much information the prison system amasses on us, it is such a waste that inmates' time is not more intelligently managed. There is little follow-through after courses, aside from links established by altruistic staff, with outside trusts and employers that boost the hopes and dreams of a few. Pre-empting the move to open prison, I prepare cards and little gifts for all I've built relationships with here. I feel sheepish letting Ava know. As a foreign national, she is barred from open prison, despite attending every course asked of her over the many years and giving much to the prison community. Today is grey and drizzly. Cressie and I cross the exercise yard with our plastic boxes to collect lunch. An officer spots us and cheerily announces we are moving to East Sutton Park open prison tomorrow. We exchange puzzled looks. We are the lucky ones. Mina, a fellow transferee, only finds out in the morning. Every time you move prisons, all your possessions must be checked out, one by one. In reception, we dutifully pick items out of our plastic bags, which get placed in new, sealed ones. We are surprised to discover that we will travel by car rather than prison vans, aptly named sweat boxes. This seems weird. Stranger still is the environment we arrive at – a manor house and grounds akin to the ones I used to visit with my parents on a day out as a kid, with functional interiors reminiscent of outward-bound centres I stayed at in school groups. The communal rooms are beautiful and filled with books. Food is a step up. There's a well-run gym, relaxed, supportive staff and the shared bedrooms have barless garden views, which cheer up the same prison furniture. Sadly, the mattresses are even poorer – within a week, Lucia's back is in chronic pain. Although beautiful, the house has many steps – a nightmare for less mobile prisoners, and all work programmes require a level of physical fitness some just don't have. Prison causes deterioration of health for many inmates. Those who struggle are either assigned work that exacerbates their condition or are paid a third of the meagre wage if they cannot work as hard as other people. The individual needs of those brought here can surely be better considered and provided for. Meals at East Sutton Park are communal events. We eat with prison friends from HMP Send. These are releases on temporary licence (RoTLs), a common topic of discussion. As with enhancements and open prison, they are a privilege and largely favour those who already possess the skills to access work in the community. RoTLs generally include day release, work outside the prison and gradually increasing numbers of nights at home. With only two female open prisons in the UK, many people are far from home. Newly proposed guidelines are set to reduce financial support for travel for those on RoTL, which could limit access for poorer inmates and exacerbate discrimination. Over lunch, news reached us that HMP Send may be the one women's prison James Timpson plans to close to trial out alternative forms of 'punishment and rehabilitation'. Send may convert into one of the 14 new male prisons the government insists on building. We all share our concerns for those left behind. Some will move to alternate, non-custodial community provision, therapy centres or drug and alcohol rehabilitation. It's definitely reform on the right trajectory – but others will surely be transferred. Send is one of the better closed prisons. What will be their fate? Today, our fate has been decided. Cressie, Lucia and I walk in the unseasonably warm sun to the video room, where our lawyers will inform us of the verdict of our appeal. It is almost shocking to receive a reduction in sentence when 10 other appellants do not. We take time to process the new reality. As well as pleasure, a range of emotions and thoughts spring to mind. Not insignificantly, the unpredictable danger of curfew tag error, triggering recall to prison; harsh licence conditions regarding participation in events and internet use; and restrictions that will prevent us contacting each other and so many others. But when I phone my family to break the news, they are already celebrating the year off of my sentence and that I could be released on curfew tag within weeks. Our sentences are still manifestly excessive, of course. The real injustice is not their length but that citizens engaging in nonviolent civil resistance are incarcerated by a legal system that outlaws consideration of the deep wrongs that compel their action. The 1,000 people who sat silently on the road and stayed there for 90 minutes, despite pressure from the police to move, are in my view the catalysts for the reduction in sentences. My thanks goes out to them; we must never underestimate the power of such collective action. That night I reread Martin Luther King Jr's letter from a Birmingham jail. I quote: 'Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere. We are caught in an inescapable network of mutuality, tied in a single garment of destiny. Whatever affects one directly, affects all indirectly.' In these rapidly shifting sands of global instability, compassion and care are being stripped away. Injustice is increasing. We cannot let this happen. The names of inmates Tina, Ava and Mina have been changed to protect their identities. Additional reporting by Matthew Taylor

‘Compassion and care are being stripped away': a Just Stop Oil activist on her time in prison
‘Compassion and care are being stripped away': a Just Stop Oil activist on her time in prison

The Guardian

time6 hours ago

  • Politics
  • The Guardian

‘Compassion and care are being stripped away': a Just Stop Oil activist on her time in prison

Louise Lancaster, 59, was one of a group of Just Stop Oil activists given the longest-ever UK sentences for peaceful protest for planning disruption on the M25 in November 2022. This year, she wrote a diary for the Guardian, detailing her first six months behind bars. Here, written before her release on 8 April and after her sentence was reduced on appeal, she reflects on her final months of incarceration. At the start of the year, I turned a corner and encountered a new emotional landscape. Transfer to open prison and the sentence appeal were on the horizon. Change, out of my control, was brewing. Open prison, a surveilled environment without bars or locks, intended as a stepping stone to community reintegration, is a goal for many in closed prison. But, heart-wrenchingly, it is only a pipe dream for the more troubled inmates – those who struggle to adhere to the strict behavioural rules, so often due to fragile mental health, complex psychological or neurodivergent needs, which there is scant provision to cater for. Every day, I try to engage with Tina, whose internal distress can result in loud, anguished outbursts in the night and repetitive calls for help. She regularly finds herself punished for these, with downgraded conditions, locked in her cell for days without TV, phone or association time with others. Prison is no fit place for Tina. This morning, I call my daughter, Verity, but first pick up a message she left a few days before. I would have loved to have phoned her at the time, to share and support. I feel a pang of guilt and the chasm between us. Today is her birthday. It is also the day Cressie, Lucia (her co-defendants Lucia Whittaker De Abreu and Cressida Gethin) and I are assembled in HMP Send's video room for our appeal hearing. Two foot-thick tomes of court papers weigh down the table. Next to them, a cup of delicious flapjacks Lucia had made, that happily we are allowed to share. The legal arguments went on for two days and we strained to hear, but we are sustained by the knowledge that thousands gather outside the court, to peacefully and insistently make their support known. And we're uplifted to see (co-defendants) Daniel (Shaw), Roger (Hallam) and appellants from the other three trial groups, via the video-link system, on the screen. The verdict will take four to eight weeks. We are not holding our breath. News in the UK and abroad is getting grimmer by the day. Surreal stuff. Trump's tornadoes of turmoil, world temperatures tipping 1.75C above pre-industrial levels, 35% of Los Angeles engulfed by wildfires, and Storm Éowyn, listed as a real danger to life in the UK, is ripping the covers off polytunnels where I work in the prison gardens. I and those working with me there are also being scattered, reassigned to different work or education. This can happen without warning. It's very unsettling for the many neurodivergent people who make up nearly half the prison population. Appealing against the moves is futile. I have just been put on a 12-week education course, which I'm already qualified for and which I will never complete, as I move prison in three weeks. Given how much information the prison system amasses on us, it is such a waste that inmates' time is not more intelligently managed. There is little follow-through after courses, aside from links established by altruistic staff, with outside trusts and employers that boost the hopes and dreams of a few. Pre-empting the move to open prison, I prepare cards and little gifts for all I've built relationships with here. I feel sheepish letting Ava know. As a foreign national, she is barred from open prison, despite attending every course asked of her over the many years and giving much to the prison community. Today is grey and drizzly. Cressie and I cross the exercise yard with our plastic boxes to collect lunch. An officer spots us and cheerily announces we are moving to East Sutton Park open prison tomorrow. We exchange puzzled looks. We are the lucky ones. Mina, a fellow transferee, only finds out in the morning. Every time you move prisons, all your possessions must be checked out, one by one. In reception, we dutifully pick items out of our plastic bags, which get placed in new, sealed ones. We are surprised to discover that we will travel by car rather than prison vans, aptly named sweat boxes. This seems weird. Stranger still is the environment we arrive at – a manor house and grounds akin to the ones I used to visit with my parents on a day out as a kid, with functional interiors reminiscent of outward-bound centres I stayed at in school groups. The communal rooms are beautiful and filled with books. Food is a step up. There's a well-run gym, relaxed, supportive staff and the shared bedrooms have barless garden views, which cheer up the same prison furniture. Sadly, the mattresses are even poorer – within a week, Lucia's back is in chronic pain. Although beautiful, the house has many steps – a nightmare for less mobile prisoners, and all work programmes require a level of physical fitness some just don't have. Prison causes deterioration of health for many inmates. Those who struggle are either assigned work that exacerbates their condition or are paid a third of the meagre wage if they cannot work as hard as other people. The individual needs of those brought here can surely be better considered and provided for. Meals at East Sutton Park are communal events. We eat with prison friends from HMP Send. These are releases on temporary licence (RoTLs), a common topic of discussion. As with enhancements and open prison, they are a privilege and largely favour those who already possess the skills to access work in the community. RoTLs generally include the day release, work outside the prison and gradually increasing numbers of nights at home. With only two female open prisons in the UK, many people are far from home. Newly proposed guidelines are set to reduce financial support for travel for those on RoTL, which could limit access for poorer inmates and exacerbate discrimination. Over lunch, news reached us that HMP Send may be the one women's prison James Timpson plans to close to trial out alternative forms of 'punishment and rehabilitation'. Send may convert into one of the 14 new male prisons the government insists on building. We all share our concerns for those left behind. Some will move to alternate, non-custodial community provision, therapy centres or drug and alcohol rehabilitation. It's definitely reform on the right trajectory – but others will surely be transferred. Send is one of the better closed prisons. What will be their fate? Today, our fate has been decided. Cressie, Lucia and I walk in the unseasonably warm sun to the video room, where our lawyers will inform us of the verdict of our appeal. It is almost shocking to receive a reduction in sentence when 10 other appellants do not. We take time to process the new reality. As well as pleasure, a range of emotions and thoughts spring to mind. Not insignificantly, the unpredictable danger of curfew tag error, triggering recall to prison; harsh licence conditions regarding participation in events and internet use; and restrictions that will prevent us contacting each other and so many others. But when I phone my family to break the news, they are already celebrating the year off of my sentence and that I could be released on curfew tag within weeks. Our sentences are still manifestly excessive, of course. The real injustice is not their length but that citizens engaging in nonviolent civil resistance are incarcerated by a legal system that outlaws consideration of the deep wrongs that compel their action. The 1,000 people who sat silently on the road and stayed there for 90 minutes, despite pressure from the police to move, are in my view the catalysts for the reduction in sentences. My thanks goes out to them; we must never underestimate the power of such collective action. That night I reread Martin Luther King Jr's letter from a Birmingham jail. I quote: 'Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere. We are caught in an inescapable network of mutuality, tied in a single garment of destiny. Whatever affects one directly, affects all indirectly.' In these rapidly shifting sands of global instability, compassion and care are being stripped away. Injustice is increasing. We cannot let this happen. The names of inmates Tina, Ava and Mina have been changed to protect their identities. Additional reporting by Matthew Taylor

M25 protester sorry for delays but has no regrets
M25 protester sorry for delays but has no regrets

Yahoo

time09-07-2025

  • Yahoo

M25 protester sorry for delays but has no regrets

A former teacher who was jailed for bringing the M25 to a standstill said she was sorry for holding people up but "it was the right thing to do". Louise Lancaster from Grantchester, Cambridgeshire, was sentenced to four years in prison after being convicted of conspiracy to cause public nuisance in July 2024, one of Britain's longest ever sentences for peaceful protest. The 59-year-old joined the Just Stop Oil protest in 2022, which prosecutors said cost the police more than £1m and caused about 50,000 hours of delays to motorists. Lancaster, who had her sentence reduced on appeal and is now out on licence, is the subject of a new Radio 4 documentary, Crossing the Line. The climate activist was one of five jailed for their involvement in bringing part of the M25 to a standstill over four days in November 2022. Forty-five Just Stop Oil protesters climbed gantries on the motorway, forcing police to stop the traffic, in an attempt to cause gridlock across southern England. People missed flights, medical appointments and exams, two lorries collided and a police motorcyclist came off his bike during one of the protests on 9 November. Speaking on BBC Radio Cambridgeshire Lancaster told presenter Dotty Mcleod: "It was an experience and one I was prepared to do for what I was passionate about and what I believe was a right thing to do. "I don't agree that the government should put people who protest in prison but that's the case at the moment, and I was prepared to take that." Lancaster served nine and a half months of her four-year jail sentence at HMP Bronzefield. An activist can be charged with causing public nuisance if they do something that causes "serious harm" to the public, which is defined by Parliament as causing "serious annoyance" and "serious inconvenience". But the law says that someone cannot be found guilty of causing a public nuisance if they had a reasonable excuse for what they did. The M25 protesters have repeatedly said their reasonable excuse was they were drawing attention to their fears for the planet, but judges said this was not a legal defence - as sitting in the road was not necessary to do this. "Other methods of protesting like petitions and standing with placards was just not cutting it," Lancaster added. "You've got to think what is happening in the news massive floods have been killing people in Texas, we have had floods and wildfires in this country... people are dying because of those things. "It was always a balance between what we could do, which would hopefully not hurt or damage anyone's life, to mitigate the threat to life that is coming down the road," she said. Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer has previously criticised the group's actions and said protesters must face the full force of the law. Lancaster had rented a safe house for activists due to take part in the M25 demonstrations, and bought climbing equipment. The judge sentencing Lancaster said: "Each of you has some time ago crossed the line from concerned campaigner to fanatic. "You have appointed yourselves as the sole arbiters of what should be done about climate change, bound neither by the principles of democracy nor the rule of law." The Radio 4 documentary by journalist and producer, Patrick Steel, explored how Lancaster went from a special educational needs teacher, to law-breaking direct action eco-activist and criminal. Lancaster said: "For each individual person who was held up I am very, very sorry they were held up and caught up in that, which was basically targeted on the government to try and get them to the table, to try and get them to take positive action to mitigate climate breakdown." The Department for Energy Security and Net Zero has been contacted for comment. Follow Cambridgeshire news on BBC Sounds, Facebook, Instagram and X. Anger flares at Just Stop Oil 'last day of action' Why Just Stop Oil's long jail sentences could embolden some activists Just Stop Oil protesters jailed after M25 blocked

M25 protester from Cambridge sorry for delays but has no regrets
M25 protester from Cambridge sorry for delays but has no regrets

BBC News

time09-07-2025

  • BBC News

M25 protester from Cambridge sorry for delays but has no regrets

A former teacher who was jailed for bringing the M25 to a standstill said she was sorry for holding people up but "it was the right thing to do".Louise Lancaster from Grantchester, Cambridgeshire, was sentenced to four years in prison after being convicted of conspiracy to cause public nuisance in July 2024, one of Britain's longest ever sentences for peaceful protest. The 59-year-old joined the Just Stop Oil protest in 2022, which prosecutors said cost the police more than £1m and caused about 50,000 hours of delays to who had her sentence reduced on appeal and is now out on licence, is the subject of a new Radio 4 documentary, Crossing the Line. The climate activist was one of five jailed for their involvement in bringing part of the M25 to a standstill over four days in November Just Stop Oil protesters climbed gantries on the motorway, forcing police to stop the traffic, in an attempt to cause gridlock across southern missed flights, medical appointments and exams, two lorries collided and a police motorcyclist came off his bike during one of the protests on 9 on BBC Radio Cambridgeshire Lancaster told presenter Dotty Mcleod: "It was an experience and one I was prepared to do for what I was passionate about and what I believe was a right thing to do. "I don't agree that the government should put people who protest in prison but that's the case at the moment, and I was prepared to take that." Lancaster served nine and a half months of her four-year jail sentence at HMP Bronzefield. An activist can be charged with causing public nuisance if they do something that causes "serious harm" to the public, which is defined by Parliament as causing "serious annoyance" and "serious inconvenience".But the law says that someone cannot be found guilty of causing a public nuisance if they had a reasonable excuse for what they M25 protesters have repeatedly said their reasonable excuse was they were drawing attention to their fears for the planet, but judges said this was not a legal defence - as sitting in the road was not necessary to do this."Other methods of protesting like petitions and standing with placards was just not cutting it," Lancaster added."You've got to think what is happening in the news massive floods have been killing people in Texas, we have had floods and wildfires in this country... people are dying because of those things. "It was always a balance between what we could do, which would hopefully not hurt or damage anyone's life, to mitigate the threat to life that is coming down the road," she said. Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer has previously criticised the group's actions and said protesters must face the full force of the law. Crossed a line Lancaster had rented a safe house for activists due to take part in the M25 demonstrations, and bought climbing equipment. The judge sentencing Lancaster said: "Each of you has some time ago crossed the line from concerned campaigner to fanatic."You have appointed yourselves as the sole arbiters of what should be done about climate change, bound neither by the principles of democracy nor the rule of law."The Radio 4 documentary by journalist and producer, Patrick Steel, explored how Lancaster went from a special educational needs teacher, to law-breaking direct action eco-activist and said: "For each individual person who was held up I am very, very sorry they were held up and caught up in that, which was basically targeted on the government to try and get them to the table, to try and get them to take positive action to mitigate climate breakdown."The Department for Energy Security and Net Zero has been contacted for comment. Follow Cambridgeshire news on BBC Sounds, Facebook, Instagram and X.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store