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British students clash with police at second fees protest
AFP - Thursday, November 25
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LONDON (AFP) - – Angry students attacked a police van and clashed with officers Wednesday as thousands of people marched through London in protest at government plans to triple university fees.
An estimated 10,000 people took part in the second mass protest in London this month, but demonstrations also took place across Britain on Wednesday.
Some 3,000 students marched in both Manchester and Brighton and around a thousand vented their anger in Cambridge, home to one of the world's most prestigious universities.
In London, where an estimated 10,000 people took to the streets, an angry mob besieged a police van parked on the march route and tried to overturn it, smashing the windscreen and jumping on the roof.
Other students daubed the white walls of the Foreign Office headquarters with graffiti reading "Revolution" and "Smash The Cuts", while a handful jumped over barriers to try to enter buildings housing the Ministry of Defence.
"We're here to show the government how angry we are when we rise up," one student told AFP after climbing on a windowsill of the Foreign Office building and trying to break in.
"I want to go to university, I want to do something good with my life but these cuts will make it almost impossible," said 15-year-old Bethany Hawker, who admitted skipping school to attend the London protest with two friends.
Still wearing her black school uniform with a blue striped tie, she said: "My mum is on benefits and struggles to make do as it is."
But unlike the violent protests two weeks ago when Scotland Yard admitted to being caught off guard, hundreds of police were on duty Wednesday to contain the crowds and at one point beat back demonstrators with batons.
As darkness fell and temperatures plummeted, frustration grew among a group of students who were penned in by a police cordon. A bus stop was set alight on Whitehall, the London street which houses many of the government's major departments.
Thirty-two people were arrested and two police officers were injured, one with a broken arm and the other was knocked unconscious, police said. Fifteen members of the public suffered minor injuries.
Students are furious at plans by Prime Minister David Cameron's coalition government for a sharp rise in university fees as part of a programme of deep public spending cuts intended to pay off a record deficit.
Up to 50,000 young people protested against the cuts on November 10, but an otherwise peaceful march degenerated into riots as dozens of students ransacked the lobby of the offices of Cameron's Conservative party.
On Wednesday, the London protest began peacefully and some demonstrators remonstrated with those who were smashing up the police van to calm down.
As the crowd progressed towards the Houses of Parliament, brandishing placards reading "Tory Scum Here We Come" and "Fight The Cuts", police surrounded them and forced them to a halt in a controversial tactic known as "kettling".
"The police are really badly organised," 21-year-old student Hannah Capella, who was held inside the police line for six hours, said.
"It's freezing, there was a guy who was trembling who had to go out and I had to help someone with an asthma attack. There's no-one to help anyone inside the crowd," she added.
Cameron's spokesman condemned the violence, saying: "People obviously have a right to engage in lawful and peaceful protest, but there is no place for violence or intimidation."
Protesters Wednesday intended to deliver a letter to the offices of the Liberal Democrats, the junior coalition partners, to demand the fees policy be changed.
Lib Dem leader, Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg, has become a focus of anger because the party promised to oppose any increase in tuition fees in campaigning ahead of May's general election, only to make a u-turn once in office.
On Tuesday, demonstrators hanged an effigy of Clegg as he gave a speech in London.
"Of course I massively regret finding myself in this situation," the deputy leader admitted. "Sometimes you are not fully in control of all the things you need to deliver those pledges."
"I'm developing a thick skin," he added.
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