UK: Five activists sentenced to prison for vandalizing Buckingham Palace fountain
The British judiciary has sentenced five animal rights activists to prison for pouring red dye on the fountain in front of Buckingham Palace, according to “Agence France-Presse.”
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Lewis McKichney (23), Christopher Bennett (33), Riley Ings (27), Claire Smith (26), and Rachel Steele (48) were convicted of causing damage exceeding £7,000 ($9,135) to the Queen Victoria Memorial in August 2021.
Members of the group “Animal Rebellion,” later renamed “Animal Rising,” sought to create an “impression of a bloodbath” by pouring dye into the water and staining the marble walls of this large fountain red.
It took more than two days to clean the monument.
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Christopher Bennett, already in custody for a previous offense, was sentenced to 18 months in prison. The other four were given 18-month suspended sentences, with three of them receiving fines.
All pleaded not guilty. One of their lawyers stated during the trial that the activists were young at the time of the events and that there was no “advanced level” of planning.
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In delivering the sentences, the judge at Southwark Crown Court in London said they were “only interested in promoting” their cause without any consideration of the “consequences” of their actions, and that they showed “a lot of arrogance” in defending the legitimacy of their act.
The “Animal Rising” organization
“Animal Rising” advocates for a shift towards a plant-based diet and claims to promote its ideas through non-violent civil disobedience actions.
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In a statement, the organization’s spokeswoman, Orla Coghlan, explained that the fountain in front of Buckingham Palace was chosen because “the royal family could help change the UK’s poor environmental record,” particularly by banning hunting on its estates.
She calls on King Charles III, a passionate advocate for the environment, to commit to this.
Other environmental activists, especially from the “Just Stop Oil” group, have also been sentenced to prison for actions in the UK, including road closures or protests at the “National Gallery” in London.