‘The party was chilled until police sent in the riot squad’: when a Dorset free rave turned violent (www.theguardian.com)
from HellsBelle@sh.itjust.works to world@lemmy.world on 11 Apr 15:04
https://sh.itjust.works/post/58356645

A couple of thousand ravers were given the secret location for one of the annual highlights of the free party scene – the Easter bank holiday weekend Eggtek event.

The sun was shining and they arrived at a field on Ministry of Defence land in Lulworth, Dorset in a state of high excitement about a weekend of dancing to techno music playing from a variety of different stages and sound systems in the heart of the countryside.

They knew that police were likely to arrive and intervene at some point because raves are illegal under the Criminal Justice and Public Order Act, which prohibits gatherings of more than 20 people on open land where the music played consists wholly or predominantly of “a succession of repetitive beats”. But they hoped to get a day or two of partying in before being moved on.

What happened next is disputed by police and ravers.

Police say the ravers threw plastic bottles and drink cans at them and that their response to being assailed by these “missiles” using officers with batons, riot shields, dogs and pepper spray was proportionate.

#world

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HellsBelle@sh.itjust.works on 11 Apr 15:04 next collapse

ACAB truly is universal.

Salamanderwizard@lemmy.world on 11 Apr 19:59 collapse

Now you got me wondering what’s the alien version of ACAB.

yabbadabaddon@lemmy.zip on 11 Apr 20:44 collapse

fuck off, we don’t want no association with anything coming from Earth

Nacktmull@lemmy.world on 11 Apr 16:51 next collapse

Pigs doing pig stuff

marxismtomorrow@lemmy.today on 11 Apr 17:57 next collapse

“They knew that police were likely to arrive and intervene at some point because raves are illegal under the Criminal Justice and Public Order Act, which prohibits gatherings of more than 20 people on open land where the music played consists wholly or predominantly of “a succession of repetitive beats”. But they hoped to get a day or two of partying in before being moved on.”

The worst Young Adult novels, the worst fanfictions, the worst grade-school rip-off essays targeting Dirty Dancing could not ever get away with such incredibly uninspired plot points as it would be considered far too unrealistic for any government or authority-bearing entity to be this specifically obtuse and uselessly restrictive.

And yet, for some reason, the UK sets the bar below what any fourth grader could ever vaguely plagiarize.

Fuck all the other stuff, this alone is why empires are bad, this is what they turn into after they fall.

x00z@lemmy.world on 11 Apr 20:46 collapse

Raves get heavy police responses in other countries too. Especially in France. I’ve also known it to happen in Belgium and the Netherlands.

deadcream@sopuli.xyz on 11 Apr 20:57 collapse

It’s not a real rave unless it’s illegal. You are not punk of you are a rule abiding citizen.

x00z@lemmy.world on 11 Apr 21:03 collapse

Uhm sure. I’m only talking about how the police responds, not its legality.

In Czechia I’ve had the best raves. Police don’t really care.

jtrek@startrek.website on 11 Apr 20:23 collapse

prohibits gatherings of more than 20 people on open land where the music played consists wholly or predominantly of “a succession of repetitive beats”

This is a monstrous law and everyone involved in its passage should be barred from politics and positions with decision making power.

webp@mander.xyz on 11 Apr 21:08 collapse

Yeah what the fuck is that. Policing music.

EtAl@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 12 Apr 01:18 collapse

a succession of repetitive beats

So this covers pretty much all music.