Many, indeed most, of my readers attended the demonstrations at the G20 summit in London, taking part in the action known as "Climate Camp in the City." As is well known, this camp was broken up after roughly 12 hours of occupation. The police methods were brutal, with the single goal of removing the protesters from the streets of London.
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Riot_Act
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http://www.lectlaw.com/def2/q053.htm
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But that's the thing. Your definition is what people imagine when they think riot. It is NOT the legal definition of a riot, that the police have to satisfy. You CAN have a "peaceful" riot.
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And like you said, while other have come up with great definitions of a riot, ones in which the unrestrained and brutal attacks perpetrated by the police upon PEACEFUL PROTESTERS would be classed as a riot (rather than the other way around), try as we might those definitions have no sway. The killing of a man outside the Bank of England is going to absorb all of the public outcry. Whether the police were right to charge in the first place? That is a non-issue.
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